Not exact matches
Do you mean risk in the sense that
when you buy and sell mutual
funds, you get the exact NAV price calculated at the end of the day;
when you buy and sell ETFs you have a free market price that while it's unlikely to diverge much from the underlying NAV because arbitrageurs gonna
arbitrage, it theoretically could?
1) Waiting for an article from you about
arbitrage funds,
when to invest in this and how it works etc,... 2) people are suggesting for long terms investing in equities (stock market), how would it work, like SIP in mutual
funds or??
Arbitrage Funds can be a better choice if you are in the tax slabs of 20 to 30 %,
when markets are very volatile and
when the interest rates are stable or increasing.
Arbitrage Funds can generate more and better returns
when markets are volatile.
In effect, you're
arbitraging tax rates to your benefit, paying the tax for the conversion (or Roth contribution)
when your rate is lower and avoiding what would be a tax hit at a higher rate
when you withdraw the
funds later on.
When he left in 1988 to start the hedge
fund Perry Capital he was working in equity
arbitrage, while lecturing on finance at the Stern School of Business at New York University.
Although the Journal did not describe the
arbitrage mechanism, its story claimed that narrowing spreads between the bitcoin price and the GBTC price allowed traders to profit as they would
when arbitraging an exchange - traded
fund (ETF) and its underlying assets.