And thus the expected performance should be the same, minus expenses. There may be differences based on index construction, but they should be random. (For example, the Russell 2000 and S&P 600 hold stocks in the same cap range, but it is common for the Russell to either outperform or underperform the S&P because of the different construction rules.)They both track very similar indexes (not exact though)What makes you think that the "competitive ETF" (whatever that means) will perform at the same level as the ETF that you originally bought?
Statistics: Posted by grabiner — Sun Sep 15, 2024 11:11 pm — Replies 13 — Views 608