The Difference Between Mutual Funds and ETFs

If you are new to the investing world, you may be wondering what the difference between mutual funds and exchange-traded funds are. While there are similarities between the two, the differences could determine whether one or the other, or a mix of both, makes the most sense for you. It’s quite important to understand the differences between them because how you use them depends on your investing time frame, your goals, and your financial plan.

Here’s a look at the key differences between ETFs and traditional mutual funds to help you decide how either or both might fit into your investment strategy.

The Basics

Both are essentially pools of money in which investors buy shares. The funds invest their assets in stocks or bonds, or both, or other types of investments (i.e., commodities such as gold or silver), depending on the fund’s objective.

Many traditional mutual funds are actively managed, meaning investment experts are at the helm choosing where to invest a fund’s assets.

Other mutual funds are passively managed funds. That is, their holdings mirror those of an index, such as the S&P 500, instead of having someone handpicking the investments.

On the ETF side, most are passively managed and follow an index, although a small share do employ active management.

Cost

For the most part, actively managed funds cost more than those that are passively managed because you’re paying for investment-picking expertise.

In investment funds, the cost is called the expense ratio and is expressed as a percentage. It’s the share of your assets that the fund takes each year from your account as compensation for managing your money.

The average expense ratio for actively managed mutual funds is 1.1 percent, according to Morningstar, an investment research and management firm in Chicago. For ETFs, meanwhile, the passive bulk of them come with an average expense ratio that’s half that: 0.51 percent.

Differences in cost

Fund typeAverage expense ratio
Actively managed ETFs0.66 percent
Actively managed mutual funds1.11 percent
Passively managed ETFs0.51 percent
Passively managed mutual funds0.82 percent

Source: Morningstar

Your investment fees matter because they take a bite out of money that otherwise would be in your account to continue growing. The bigger the yearly expense, the bigger the hit to your earnings over time.

Say you invested $100,000 for 20 years and your annual return was 4 percent. If you paid 0.25 percent yearly, you’d have close to $210,000 at the end of those two decades, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Office of Investor Education and Advocacy.

In contrast, if you paid 1 percent a year, the return on that $100,000 after 20 years would be way less: $180,000.

Investments

As mentioned, actively managed funds have an expert, or team of experts choosing exactly how to invest your money. The fund’s prospectus outlines parameters that the fund managers must follow when choosing investments, and performance is based on whether the fund’s management team gets their picks right.

Most ETFs have no flexibility in the investments, so if the index they track does well, so does your holding. And if the index tanks? Guess what.

In theory, in actively managed mutual funds, the mix of holdings can be altered by the fund manager to avoid huge losses. While that doesn’t always turn out as planned, it’s an advantage that could bode well in a bad market environment.

Of course, if you’re invested for the long haul, short-term shifts in the market, or even lengthy down markets, shouldn’t make you panic.

Trading

Another big difference between traditional mutual funds and ETFs is how they are traded.

Traditional mutual funds, whether actively managed or index funds, can only be bought and sold once daily, after the market’s 4 p.m. ET close.

In contrast, ETFs trade throughout the day like stocks. This means investors can react to market news quickly to buy or sell when it suits them.

However, long-term investors, such as those saving for a retirement that’s decades away, should generally be sticking to an investment strategy that is not based on trying to time the market, whether they are in ETFs or mutual funds.

Tax treatment

When mutual funds sell investments throughout the year, any profits from those transactions get passed on to the fund’s shareholders via capital gains distributions.

If your mutual funds are in a taxable account, i.e. a brokerage account, you’ll owe taxes on the gains for the year they were distributed.

However, if you hold mutual funds in a tax-advantaged account, i.e., 401(k) plan or an individual retirement account, you don’t need to worry about it because gains are deferred until you withdraw money in retirement.

Generally speaking, capital gains are less likely with ETFs, due to how they are constructed and how they are traded. This makes them generally more tax-efficient.

Transparency

Most mutual funds disclose their holdings quarterly. In contrast, investors can view a typical ETF’s holdings online any time they want.

If you want to learn more about mutual funds, ETF’s, or other investment strategies, we encourage you to reach out to us at Kendall Capital.