An analytical performance comparison of exchanged traded funds with index funds: 2002-2010
Mohammad Sharifzadeh, Simin Hojat

TL;DR
This study compares the performance of ETFs and index mutual funds from 2002 to 2010, finding no statistically significant difference in their risk-adjusted returns, suggesting investor choice depends on product features and tax benefits.
Contribution
It provides an empirical performance comparison of ETFs and index funds over a nine-year period, highlighting the lack of significant performance differences.
Findings
No significant performance difference in Sharpe Ratio
No significant difference in risk-adjusted buy and hold returns
Investor choice influenced by product features and tax advantages
Abstract
Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) have been gaining increasing popularity in the investment community as is evidenced by the high growth both in the number of ETFs and their net assets since 2000. As ETFs are in nature similar to index mutual funds, in this paper we examined if this growing demand for ETFs can be explained through their outperformance as compared to index mutual funds. We considered the population of all ETFs with inception dates prior to 2002 and then for each ETF found all the passive index mutual funds that had the same investment style as the selected ETF and had inception date prior to 2002. Within each investment style we matched every ETF with all the passive index funds in that investment style and compared the performances of the matched pairs in terms of Sharp Ratios and risk adjusted buy and hold total returns for the period 2002-2010. We then applied the Wilcoxon…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinancial Reporting and Valuation Research · Financial Markets and Investment Strategies · Economic and Fiscal Studies
