What Index ETFs Can Do For You | ETF Trends

Index-based exchange traded funds are an easy-to-use investment vehicle that provides investors exposure to diversified and targeted markets around the globe.

Most ETFs on the market passively follow the performance of an underlying index or benchmark, typically providing investors with broad exposure to a large portfolio of stocks or securities at a very low price, writes Sheyna Steiner for Bankrate.

An index is the broad representation of a set of companies in a particular market segment or entire market. For instance, the most popularly observed indices in the U.S. include the Standard & Poor’s 500 index, the Nasdaq Composite and the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

There are broader and narrower indices that investors can focus on. The Wilshire 5000 is a broader index that measures the performance of all stocks actively traded in the U.S. In contrast, the Russell 2000 index is a popular measure of small-capitalization stocks.

“A good way to think about it is like a funnel,” Jim Rowley, senior investment analyst at Vanguard, said in the article. “You could think about it in terms of the broadest of the broad markets and then imagine it narrowing to focus on specific types of companies.”

For example, among the broadest of the broad markets, the Vanguard Total World Stock ETF (NYSEArca: VT) follows the FTSE Global All Cap Index, which is a weighted index of large-, mid-, and small-cap companies across industries in almost all equity markets around the world, including both developed and emerging markets. Through this one ETF, investors can track a group of 7,104 international stocks.