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Comments on: John Bogle Op-Ed in Wall Street Journal http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/2007/02/09/john-bogle-op-ed-in-wall-street-journal/ Thoughts from the Founder of the Vanguard Group of Investment Companies Thu, 10 Jun 2010 12:19:24 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.9.2 hourly 1 By: Bogle on ETFs | Interactive Investor Blog http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/2007/02/09/john-bogle-op-ed-in-wall-street-journal/comment-page-1/#comment-54 Bogle on ETFs | Interactive Investor Blog Tue, 13 Feb 2007 12:33:31 +0000 http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/2007/02/09/john-bogle-op-ed-in-wall-street-journal/#comment-54 [...] The father of the index fund, John Bogle, struck another blow in the war of the trackers in the Wall Street Journal last Friday. He says Exchange traded funds (ETFs) that track increasingly specialised markets serve none of the original aims of index tracking. Far from being diversified, he says:  Can you believe that we now have a “HealthShares Emerging Cancer” ETF? [...] [...] The father of the index fund, John Bogle, struck another blow in the war of the trackers in the Wall Street Journal last Friday. He says Exchange traded funds (ETFs) that track increasingly specialised markets serve none of the original aims of index tracking. Far from being diversified, he says:  Can you believe that we now have a “HealthShares Emerging Cancer” ETF? [...]

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By: THE SKILLED INVESTOR Blog http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/2007/02/09/john-bogle-op-ed-in-wall-street-journal/comment-page-1/#comment-53 THE SKILLED INVESTOR Blog Sat, 10 Feb 2007 04:41:55 +0000 http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/2007/02/09/john-bogle-op-ed-in-wall-street-journal/#comment-53 [...] This article is a heads-up to people interested in investment blogs and personal finance blogs. John C. Bogle, the founder of The Vanguard Group, Inc., has a blog called The Bogle eBlog. (If you are wondering about “eBlog,” it is an anagram of Bogle.) Mr. Bogle just posted an excellent article about the proliferation of exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which is a reprint of his Op-Ed article in today’s Wall Street Journal. If you are not a WSJ subscriber, you can find a link on his blog to a .pdf file of the full article. [...] [...] This article is a heads-up to people interested in investment blogs and personal finance blogs. John C. Bogle, the founder of The Vanguard Group, Inc., has a blog called The Bogle eBlog. (If you are wondering about “eBlog,” it is an anagram of Bogle.) Mr. Bogle just posted an excellent article about the proliferation of exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which is a reprint of his Op-Ed article in today’s Wall Street Journal. If you are not a WSJ subscriber, you can find a link on his blog to a .pdf file of the full article. [...]

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By: bylo http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/2007/02/09/john-bogle-op-ed-in-wall-street-journal/comment-page-1/#comment-52 bylo Fri, 09 Feb 2007 19:49:42 +0000 http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/2007/02/09/john-bogle-op-ed-in-wall-street-journal/#comment-52 An important warning about the darker sides of ETFs. For those of us located outside the US, however, the only way to benefit from Vanguard's low fees and shareholder-first philosophy is to buy those funds as ETFs. The open-end share classes are simply unavailable due to regulatory barriers. A historical note re "Ironically, that first ETF, created in 1992, was modeled on the classic index fund I designed three decades ago (now known as Vanguard 500 Index Fund), tracking the returns of the Standard & Poor's 500 Index." The first ETF (then called an Index Participation Unit or IPU) actually began trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange in March 1990. It tracked the largest 35 stocks listed there and was known as TIPS35. It's since been merged into what is today the largest Canadian ETF, BGI's XIU [ http://www.tsx.com/HttpController?GetPage=QuotesLookupPage&DetailedView=DetailedPrices&Market=T&Language=en&QuoteSymbol_1=xiu&x=0&y=0 ] which now tracks the largest 60 Canadian stocks. Here's a copy of the Prospectus from 1997 [ http://www.bylo.org/temp/TIPS%20Prospectus.doc - Word format]. Note the discussion of how ETF shares are created and can be redeemed for the underlying stock. Note also that since these securities were sponsored directly by the Toronto Stock Exchange, once the startup costs had been repaid, there were no management fees or other costs charged so TIPS35 also holds the record for the lowest-cost ETF. (BGI now charges an ER of 0.17%.) Note also that the trustee and custodian of TIPS35 was State Street Trust Company Canada (until the merger into BGI's XIU.) It's therefore not surprising that SSgA, the sponsor of SPY, patterned the structure of their new ETF after the IPU. An important warning about the darker sides of ETFs. For those of us located outside the US, however, the only way to benefit from Vanguard’s low fees and shareholder-first philosophy is to buy those funds as ETFs. The open-end share classes are simply unavailable due to regulatory barriers.

A historical note re “Ironically, that first ETF, created in 1992, was modeled on the classic index fund I designed three decades ago (now known as Vanguard 500 Index Fund), tracking the returns of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.”

The first ETF (then called an Index Participation Unit or IPU) actually began trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange in March 1990. It tracked the largest 35 stocks listed there and was known as TIPS35. It’s since been merged into what is today the largest Canadian ETF, BGI’s XIU [ http://www.tsx.com/HttpController?GetPage=QuotesLookupPage&DetailedView=DetailedPrices&Market=T&Language=en&QuoteSymbol_1=xiu&x=0&y=0 ] which now tracks the largest 60 Canadian stocks. Here’s a copy of the Prospectus from 1997 [ http://www.bylo.org/temp/TIPS%20Prospectus.doc - Word format]. Note the discussion of how ETF shares are created and can be redeemed for the underlying stock. Note also that since these securities were sponsored directly by the Toronto Stock Exchange, once the startup costs had been repaid, there were no management fees or other costs charged so TIPS35 also holds the record for the lowest-cost ETF. (BGI now charges an ER of 0.17%.)

Note also that the trustee and custodian of TIPS35 was State Street Trust Company Canada (until the merger into BGI’s XIU.) It’s therefore not surprising that SSgA, the sponsor of SPY, patterned the structure of their new ETF after the IPU.

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