This screened ETF list is based on a combination of features that are often requested by conservative equity investors:

  • funds with history and reasonable liquidity
  • acceptable expense ratios for the type of portfolio
  • not too much volatility for the return
  • some current yield
  • better total returns than bonds

The funds in the list are not recommendations. They are simply idea possibilities for do-it-yourself investors who may find the particular screening criteria useful.

The funds do not represent a full spread of the asset classes which we believe should be in a well designed portfolio.

The universe from which they were filtered is the entire database of hundreds of ETFs at www.IndexUniverse.com.

Richard Shaw

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This article has 4 comments:

  • May 16 09:12 AM
    “Seasoning”:

    A much longer list of funds would be generated if the three-year data requirement were modified to include index funds tracking indices that themselves have three-years of data.

    We believe that three years of “seasoning” is an important selection factor in a world with so many choices, but a new index fund following an established index with its own published history of three years or more can reasonably be seen as “seasoned” for three years.
  • May 16 11:07 AM
    What figure is "reasonable" liquidity in your opinion?
  • May 16 11:46 AM
    Personally, I like to see a rapidly moving tape for investments I make or make for others.

    For this screen I was more forgiving. I used the 1-minute charts and wanted to see all or most minutes with trading activity. I did it visually without a bright line test.

    There are many newer ETFs with interesting objectives, but with so little trading that you may wait too long for a limit buy to execute and maybe longer for your limit sell to execute. Market orders on thinly traded ETFs are not a good idea.

    It becomes a personal matter, but the best situations would allow you to exit whenever you please. You might also find unattractive Bid-Ask spreads in cases where trading is sporadic or limited.
  • May 16 11:51 AM
    Bill (BILLB),

    I should have added that reasonable size is also determined by the investor's bit size. Someone who wants to put $10,000 into a position has different criteria than someone who wants to put $100,000 or $500,000 into a position.

    I certainly would not be willing to be more than 10% of a single day's trading, and would prefer to be closer to unobservable in the volumes.
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