2. 159902 Small and Medium-sized Board (China SME Board Trading Open Index Fund)
3. 159903 Shenzhen Stock Exchange ETF (southern fund Company Shenzhen Stock Exchange Open Index Securities Investment Fund)
4.5 100 10 Governance ETF (BOCOM Schroeder SSE 180 Corporate Governance Trading Open Index Securities Investment Fund)
5.5 10020 Very Large ETF (Bosera SSE Super Large Market Trading Open Index Securities Investment Fund)
6. 10050 50ETF (China SSE 50 Trading Open Index Securities Investment Fund)
7.5 10060 Central Enterprise ETF (ICBC, Credit Suisse, SSE Central Enterprise 50 Trading Open Index Fund)
8.510 180180etf (Huaan SSE180 Trading Open Index Securities Investment Fund)
9.5 10880 Dividend ETF (AIA Huatai Shanghai Stock Exchange Dividend Trading Open Index Securities Investment Fund)
:
1, ETF fund
Transactional open-end index fund, commonly known as exchange-traded fund (ETF), is an open-end fund with variable fund share, which is listed and traded on the exchange.
Transactional open-end index fund is a special type of open-end fund, which combines the operating characteristics of closed-end fund and open-end fund. Investors can buy or redeem fund shares from fund management companies, and at the same time, they can buy and sell ETF shares at the market price in the secondary market like closed-end funds.
2. It has the characteristics of both stock and index fund.
(1) For ordinary investors, ETFs can also be split into smaller marketing unit and traded in the secondary market of the exchange like ordinary stocks.
(2) If you earn the index, you will make money, and investors will no longer have to study stocks and worry about stepping on stocks; Before 20 10, there was no short-selling mechanism in China's securities market, so there was a situation of "losing money when the index fell". On April 20 10, stock index futures were opened. Since February 5, 20 1 165438, seven ETF funds have been included in the margin financing and securities lending scope. )
3. Combining the advantages of closed-end funds and open-end funds.
ETF, like the familiar closed-end fund, can be bought and sold on the exchange in the form of small "fund units". Similar to open-end funds, ETF allows investors to purchase and redeem continuously, but when ETF redeems, investors get a basket of stocks instead of cash, and they are allowed to purchase and redeem after reaching a certain scale.