WisdomTree: The Anatomy of a Simple ETF Spread | ETF Trends

I wanted to spend some time talking about exchange-traded fund (ETF) spreads, because they are often a topic of concern for investors. A spread is merely the difference between where a market maker will buy and sell an ETF.

As a former ETF trader, market maker and arbitrageur, I can tell you that there is a mathematical reason for an ETF spread, and each trader out there is taking into consideration costs they have to incur in order to facilitate liquidity. First, let’s clarify that when a market maker facilitates liquidity, they look to hedge that resulting position and then flatten their position either by unwinding in the secondary market (ETF on-screen liquidity) or by using the primary market (creation/redemption with the ETF issuer). So if a market maker buys an ETF, they are now long the ETF and have to sell something to hedge that position. If they sell the underlying basket of securities, their choices to unwind that position are to buy back that basket in increments as they sell the ETF in the secondary market, or to redeem the ETF to the issuer (send the ETF to the fund and receive the basket of stocks in return).

Each ETF has a maximum cost structure that a trader will have to pay to hedge their position and subsequently flatten it, and that cost structure will dictate where the spread of an ETF with low volume will start out. As volume and interest in an ETF increase, the spread of that ETF will decrease. This is because the more secondary volume there is, the higher the probability that the market maker can liquidate their position without incurring some of those costs.

Below is a list of costs that would be included in a simple spread. The term “simple” is used because this example assumes that the underlying basket of securities is trading at the same time as the ETF and the market maker is able to perfectly hedge their ETF positions with it.

Underlying Securities Bid/Ask Spread is the actual bid/ask spread of the stocks in the underlying basket that traders pay when trading this as a perfect hedge.
Create/Redeem Fees are flat administrative costs that are incurred when using the creation/redemption facility (cost exclusive to primary market). The term “flat” means that this fee is the same irrespective of the number of units the authorized participant is creating/redeeming. Keep in mind that spreads of ETFs on-screen posted by market makers are for smaller sizes—usually 1,000 shares or fewer—and thus all calculations are done based on one unit.
Brokerage Fees are costs associated with trading in the underlying securities. If a trader has to buy the 500 names in the S&P Index, there are commission costs that have to be paid to their market access point or electronic platform. In the U.S., these fees can be minimal, but they increase as the asset class becomes more esoteric or harder to access.
Taxes in the Underlying Basket are imposed transaction taxes on certain securities in certain countries. They do not exist in the U.S., but in the U.K. , for example, regulators have imposed a .50% buy-side stamp tax for equity purchases. That means that when buying a UK equity, the buyer has to pay an additional .50% on top of the purchase price. That cost will be included in a maximum-cost scenario and thus the spread of any ETF that holds UK equities.
Market Maker “Profit and Loss”, or P&L is a built-in commission if there is no agreement to explicitly charge for the service of providing liquidity.

Below is a visual of what the building blocks of a spread look like. All the costs a market maker would incur in selling an ETF are above “Ask Price,” and the costs associated with buying an ETF are above “Bid Price”; both are added to the underlying bid/ask spread. The sum of all those costs is the bid/ask spread of the ETF.