Implications for effective market hypothesis (EMH)23
Lower penetration of ETF in India24
Implications for investors25
Investor dilema26
Theoritical Advances in ETF27
Criticism on evaluation models27
References29
Chapter1: Introduction
One of the foremost trends actually in asset management industry is the relentless rise of exchange traded fund (ETF). Globally, ETFs have gained gigantic attractiveness over the last ten years as they can be utilised to gain exposure to several asset categories encompassing equity, repaired earnings, products and currencies. According to nationwide supply exchange (NSE, 2010) of India, ETFs now account for over a trillion dollars in assets, up from only about USD 75 billion in the year 2000. NSE, cited about sixty per hundred of dealing volumes on the American Stock Exchange are from ETFs. The most well liked ETFs are, QQQs (Cubes) is founded on the Nasdaq-100 Index and SPDRs (Spiders) is founded on the S&P 500 Index.
The inexorable rise of ETF in India
Times of India (August, 2010), a bulletin cited, with a GDP of USD 3,526 billion in buying power parity and averaging development about 8.5 per hundred for the last five years, India is the world's fourth biggest finances and the second-fastest increasing amidst foremost economies. Dion (2010) opines exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in India have the promise to travel high on a powerful economy. Figure-1 depicts development of ETFs in India, as on May 2007, the worth of assets was Rupees 6000 crores with just eight ETFs. ETFs are undoubtedly appearing as a well liked buying into vehicle in India.
Figure-1: Growth of ETFs in India
Source: Benchmark AMC, 2009
Over the past 12 months, round 20 per hundred of all lesser market, foreign institutional investors (FII) equity flows into the Indian market have arrive from ETFs. Despite this accelerated flow, ETFs in India is still exceedingly little in evaluation to China or Brazil, due to delayed launch of ETFs in India, from historic regulatory issues. In detail, the first ETF, Standard and Poor Depositary Receipts (SPDR) comprising a fund that followed supplies creating S&P 500 supply index, was sold in January 1993. Half a ten years after ETFs became a storm in worldwide markets, India commenced the first ETF in 2001. Though it took some years for ETF to appeal public concern in India, but one time they did, the volumes took off with a vengeance. It is only over past couple of years that ETFs have arrived to the fore in India (Akash Prakash, 2010).
Indian benchmark
Sharpe (2000) cited, “One set about is to contrast a portfolio with a market index that is assembled ...