2 Key Risks of Investing in Australian ETFs

Investing in ETFs has risks. Visit issuer's site and ETF's PDS for details. Key risks are market fluctuations and portfolio duplication. Market risk stems from market and sector changes affecting ETFs. Sector ETFs may duplicate existing sector exposure, needing consideration in diversified portfolios.

Investing in ETFs involves risk. Two key risks particularly relevant to domestic ETFs are:

Market risk

The portfolio underlying an ETF is diversified across many securities, protecting you against the 'specific risk' of an individual security performing poorly.

However, you are still exposed to market risk.

For example, if the broad Australian sharemarket falls, an ETF that tracks the S&P/ASX 200 index will fall in value.

Similarly, an ETF that tracks a sector index such as the S&P/ASX 200 Resources Index will fall in value if the resources sector performs poorly. This is called 'sector risk'.

Portfolio duplication

This is a risk associated with sector ETFs.

If you hold a diversified portfolio of shares, or an ETF that tracks the broad sharemarket, adding a sector ETF may duplicate an existing exposure to that market sector.

You should consider your total exposure to a market sector, not just the exposure the sector ETF gives you.

For example, a diversified share portfolio is likely to include stocks in the financial sector. It is wise to take this existing exposure into account if you are considering buying an ETF that tracks the Financials index.

‌For more detailed coverage of the risks, please refer to the issuer's website and the ETF's PDS.

0
0
0
Disclaimer: The Australian Securities Exchange ('ASX') and Webull Securities (Australia) Pty Ltd ('Webull') are separate and unaffiliated companies. This content is provided by ASX and does not reflect the official policy or position of Webull. This content is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice or a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell securities.