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XL-entLady
03-29-2009, 03:51 PM
I see that Vanguard's VIPERS have a seriously smaller expense ratio than, for example, iShares. So that's good, but there's got to be a down side. What is it?

TIA to anyone who can give me some insight!

Lady
Okay, further research leads me to believe that Vanguard's ETFs are a shareclass of their open-end funds rather than stand-alones, and so may not be as tax efficient (according to The ETF Book, by Richard Ferri). So apparently Vanguard ETFs are a good thing in a Roth IRA but may not be a good thing in a traditional taxed account.

Maybe ..... ?:confused:

Lady

alevin
03-29-2009, 04:05 PM
tell us more about the Ferri book?

XL-entLady
03-29-2009, 10:44 PM
tell us more about the Ferri book?
I bought the book to read when I started investing in ETFs. It was published in 2008 and you can get it at Amazon for about $20. The book has some good basic information in it and helped to fill some elementary black holes in my knowledge base, so that's a good thing.

I wasn't hugely impressed with the book, however, because it spends what (to me) was an inordinate amount of time explaining how to put ETFs into the little Morningstar tic-tac-toe squares of passive vs. screened vs. I-don't-remember what else.

I'm still looking for "THE ETF Book". :rolleyes:

Lady

etftalk
03-30-2009, 05:11 AM
I'm still looking for "THE ETF Book". :rolleyes:

I bought "The ETF Book" by Ferri. Informative but quite dull actually. I never did finish it. It was very heavy into how ETFs evolved. Maybe I should give it another shot.