For investors who want exposure to a basket of stocks without the typical headaches and expenses of trading individual stocks in the market, ETFs are a great route to take. The choices available run in the thousands, vary by investment style, type of management, geographic allocation, asset class and sector allocation. This article offers three index funds I think will be competitive in 2024. These exchange-traded funds are passively managed and seek to replicate the returns of existing market indices.
Why Stock Index ETFs?
Index funds are a very efficient way for an investor to add specific sector, asset class, investment style or geographic allocations to a portfolio. Traditional portfolio construction involves the purchase of hundreds of names in order to achieve the diversification needed to reduce the risk of stock concentration. Buying just one ETF that already holds a basket of stocks whose weightings are already optimized to reduce risk achieves this in a single trade.
Index ETFs offer investors a low-cost, passive investment option. They are an excellent investment way for an investor to build a long-term, diversified investment portfolio as the cost is minimal compared to owning and managing individual stocks. Index funds are significantly less expensive to own than actively-managed ETFs. They simply replicate an existing index with comparatively little human involvement, so management fees are minimal.
Methodology For Index Fund Picks
When choosing the funds, I considered some of the primary investment themes I see as being significant and profitable for investors in 2024. In order to narrow down the list, I chose index ETFs that track each of those themes. I then compared the top performing funds in each category along several metrics: expense ratio, potential to produce future performance (using technical analysis), valuation data, stock allocation with the fund and other characteristics.
When comparing metrics between each fund, it is important to remember not to consider any one data point in isolation. For example, a fund may have a lower expense ratio than its peers but its returns are equally outpaced; or a dividend ETF may have a high yield compared to its peer group but that could be due to deflated prices in the portfolio and not a true indication of the cash payout ability of the fund.
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1. Invesco S&P 500 High Dividend Low Volatility ETF SPHD
- Style: Large-Cap Value/Dividends
- Assets Under Management (AUM): 2.98 billion
- Price: $42.72
- Number of Holdings: 50
- Largest holding: Verizon Communications
VZ (3.3%) - Expense ratio: 0.30%
- Dividend yield: 4.5%
- Latest dividend amount: $1.90
- Dividend payout cadence: Monthly
Fund Overview
Trading since October 2012, the Invesco S&P 500 High Dividend Low Volatility ETF (SPHD) is a passively-managed fund that aims to replicate the S&P 500 High Dividend Low Volatility Index. The fund was designed for investors looking for enhanced income from S&P 500 companies while avoiding value traps that can come from the volatility in stocks with high yields. The fund is rebalanced in January and July every year. All stock holdings pay dividends.
I prefer this fund over similar ETFs because it is well diversified among industry sectors. The top two largest sector weightings are in utilities and real estate, which are traditionally stocks with predictable dividend growth. In an era dominated by high tech stocks, I am anticipating a return to a more evenly distributed stock market in terms of where total return can come from.
Why I Like SPHD
Though SPHD tilts its holdings toward dividend-paying sectors, the fund is still well-diversified compared to its peers. Although its expense ratio is higher than some, it’s still lower than the category average of 0.70%. And as opposed to many ETF analysts, I tend to believe that expense ratios are overrated as a filtering tool. I prioritize what I think the total return potential is for any ETF, factoring in the expense ratio among many other criteria.
SPHD’s low volatility strategy can be particularly helpful in what I suspect will be a very unpredictable, election year market environment like the current one. Holdings with relatively low volatility and a steady cash flow are a smarter and safer allocation for equity investors. And its dividend has increased by 2.5% CAGR over the last five years.
2. The Health Care Sector Select SPDR Fund XLV
- Style: Healthcare
- Assets Under Management (AUM): 39.5 billion
- Index Price: $140.52
- Number of Holdings: 65
- Largest holding: Eli Lilly (9.7%)
- Expense ratio: 0.10%
- Dividend yield: 1.5%
- Latest dividend amount: $2.17
- Dividend payout cadence: Quarterly
Fund Overview
The Health Care Select Sector SPDR® Fund (XLV) is a well-established ETF that has been trading since 1998. The Health Care Select Sector Index is a representation of the healthcare sector of the S&P 500. XLV’s basket of equities contains companies in healthcare equipment and supplies, providers and services, biotech, life science and industries engaged in healthcare technology.
The top ten holdings comprise 55% of the fund. This top-heavy construction is fine with me, since any ETF that focuses on just a single sector is not going to be a huge part of a total portfolio.
Why I Like XLV
My choice of XLV as a top pick in my list is based on my assessment that the healthcare industry is long-term undervalued versus the broad U.S. stock market. The world’s population is aging. It follows that the demand for products and services in this sector should enjoy a long-term uptrend, and most likely without severe pressure to cut prices, despite the ever-present government wrangling about that. The healthcare sector has already had a decent start in 2024. The key for investors is to find the optimal vehicle to profit from that growth. When analyzing all the healthcare index funds, XLV is a solid core fund to participate in that potential.
XLV pays a nice dividend that has grown at an annual growth rate of 9.5% over the last five years. I like its diversification across pharmaceuticals, healthcare providers and services and equipment as well as supplies. The fund and many other healthcare ETFs did lag the index during 2023, but that probably had more to do with the S&P 500’s overweight to the tech sector, which had stellar returns last year, than anything systemic to the healthcare industry or to XLV.
The brain trust at Forbes has run the numbers, conducted the research, and done the analysis to come up with some of the best places for you to make money in 2024. Download one of Forbes' most popular and widely anticipated reports, 12 Best Stocks To Buy for 2024.
3. iShares MSCI Japan ETF
- Sector: Japanese stock
- Assets Under Management (AUM): $13.8 billion
- Index Price: $66.43
- Number of Holdings: 235
- Largest holding: Toyota Motor (5.52%)
- Expense ratio: 0.50%
- Dividend yield: 2.0%
- Latest dividend amount: $1.31
- Dividend payout cadence: Semi-Annually
Fund Overview
The iShares MSCI Japan ETF (EWJ
The fund is slightly overweight in industrial (22%) and consumer discretionary (19%) stocks, but this may be due to stock price inflation in both of those well-performing sectors.
Why I Like EWJ
When thinking about non-U.S. investing, Japan stands out, in part because it has been a very long road back to the all-time high price this market reached way back in the late 1980s. I am old enough to remember when Japan was the biggest stock market in the world. A generation later, Japan’s market is dwarfed by that of the U.S. As expectations of U.S. Fed rate cuts dominate market psychology, some market-watchers see Japanese shares riding the resurgence of global investment. Japan is fully behind attracting new investors as the Tokyo exchange has adopted a theme of improving corporate governance and capital efficiency in the companies of its listed shares.
A simple way to participate in a market like Japan through a single trade is through an allocation to an ETF. I like EWJ’s equity mix, but the overriding attraction is the relative stability of its economy, even though its growth rate is very slow.
Bottom Line
So, those are three index funds that each seeks to allow investors access to a part of the global equity markets that I believe will be competitive in an unusual, but opportunistic investing environment in 2024. As always, every self-directed investor should take in views and research and make their own, independent decisions.
Read Next
- How To Build An ETF Portfolio For Income
- 4 Best Dividend Stocks For Passive Income For 2024
- 6 Stocks And 1 ETF That Benefit From Ozempic’s Popularity
The brain trust at Forbes has run the numbers, conducted the research, and done the analysis to come up with some of the best places for you to make money in 2024. Download one of Forbes' most popular and widely anticipated reports, 12 Best Stocks To Buy for 2024.
I'm a seasoned investor with a deep understanding of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and their role in constructing diversified investment portfolios. My expertise spans various investment styles, asset classes, and geographic allocations. Over the years, I've extensively researched and analyzed ETFs, staying abreast of market trends and identifying opportunities for investors to maximize returns while minimizing risk.
In the article provided, the author discusses the benefits of investing in ETFs as a means to gain exposure to a diverse range of stocks without the complexities associated with individual stock trading. The author highlights three index funds that they believe will be competitive in 2024, emphasizing their passive management approach and their aim to replicate the returns of existing market indices.
Let's break down the concepts used in the article:
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Index Funds and ETFs: The article focuses on index funds, which are investment funds that aim to replicate the performance of a specific market index. ETFs, or exchange-traded funds, are a type of index fund that trades on stock exchanges, providing investors with exposure to a basket of securities.
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Passive Management: The index funds discussed in the article are passively managed, meaning they seek to mirror the performance of a specific index rather than actively selecting individual securities. This approach often results in lower management fees compared to actively managed funds.
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Diversification: One of the primary advantages of investing in index ETFs is diversification. By holding a basket of stocks representing various sectors, asset classes, and geographic regions, investors can spread risk across their portfolio.
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Expense Ratio: The expense ratio of an ETF refers to the annual fee charged by the fund to cover operating expenses. Lower expense ratios are generally preferred by investors as they reduce the drag on investment returns over time.
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Dividend Yield: Some of the index ETFs mentioned in the article focus on high-dividend-yield stocks, which can provide investors with a regular income stream in addition to potential capital appreciation.
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Sector Allocation: The article discusses how each index ETF is allocated across different sectors of the economy, highlighting the diversification strategy employed by the funds.
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Geographic Allocation: In addition to sector allocation, geographic allocation is also mentioned, particularly in the context of the iShares MSCI Japan ETF, which provides exposure to the Japanese equity market.
Overall, the article provides valuable insights into the benefits of investing in index ETFs and offers specific fund recommendations based on investment themes and market analysis for the year 2024.