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Trading Costs And ETFs
Written by Matt Hougan   
June 05, 2009 8:56 PM (CET)

Another issue with the FAZ, Paul, is that its vanishing share price ($4.40 per share) means that trading FAZ now has a significant cost.

Many professional investors in the United States pay a per-share fee to buy and sell securities. Sometimes it’s a penny a share, but more often it’s 2, 3 or even 4 cents a share.

Let’s take one of the lower numbers—two cents a share. Using that, a round-trip trade in the fund costs four cents per share.

But don’t forget spreads. FAZ and FAS are both extraordinarily liquid, often trading at the minimum possible spread of a penny a share. But if you add a penny spread onto both sides of a round-trip trade, you’re talking about 6 cents per share to buy and sell FAZ.

On a $25 or $50 ETF, 6 cents would be miniscule. But for an ETF trading at $4.40/share, 6 cents is 1.36%. To put it another way, trading $10,000 worth of FAZ now costs you about $136 round-trip!

Time for a reverse split?

 

More on this topic (What's this?)
Top 10 Hottest ETFs For February 2010
Best ETF’s for 2010…how to choose? (Part 2)
Top 20 ETFs to Buy and To Sell Out of 776 ETFs
Top 10 Hottest ETFs For January 2010
Read more on Exchange Traded Fund (ETF), Direxion Financial Bear 3X Shares at Wikinvest
 

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