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The iShares MSCI USA Equal Weighted ETF aims to track the performance of an equal weighted index of U.S. stocks. The fund offers more exposure to mid-cap stocks and reduces the bias toward the ...
The list below includes the top seven Fidelity ETFs by performance over the last five years. If a Fidelity fund has not existed for at least that long, it’s excluded from consideration ...
The S&P 500 is a stock market index maintained by S&P Dow Jones Indices. It comprises 503 common stocks which are issued by 500 large-cap companies traded on the American stock exchanges (including the 30 companies that compose the Dow Jones Industrial Average). The index includes about 80 percent of the American market by capitalization.
An index fund (also index tracker) is a mutual fund or exchange-traded fund (ETF) designed to follow certain preset rules so that it can replicate the performance ("track") of a specified basket of underlying investments. [1]
The time-weighted return (TWR) [1] [2] is a method of calculating investment return, where returns over sub-periods are compounded together, with each sub-period weighted according to its duration. The time-weighted method differs from other methods of calculating investment return, in the particular way it compensates for external flows.
The daily price change of the Value Line Geometric Composite Index is found by multiplying the ratio of each stock's closing price to its previous closing price, and raising that result to the reciprocal of the total number of stocks. The daily price change of the Value Line Arithmetic Composite Index is calculated by adding the daily percent ...
Some benefits of equal-weight ETFs. Equal-weighted exchange-traded funds can often perform better than its market-weighted counterparts because there is less of a concentration of a sector of ...
By providing over short investing horizons and excluding the impact of fees and other costs, performance opposite to their benchmark, inverse ETFs give a result similar to short selling the stocks in the index. An inverse S&P 500 ETF, for example, seeks a daily percentage movement opposite that of the S&P. If the S&P 500 rises by 1%, the ...