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Can You Lose Money in an ETF? An Honest Answer

Yes — you can lose money in an ETF. Let's be honest about how, and also clear up the one scary thing that almost never happens.

Yes — the price can fall

Let's be honest right away. Yes, you can lose money in an ETF.

An ETF is one basket that holds many companies' shares (its The individual investments the fund owns. The largest few are shown; full lists update less often. More → ). When the stock market rises, the basket is usually worth more. When the market falls, the basket is usually worth less.

Here's a simple picture. Say you put in €1,000. A rough year arrives and the market drops 20%. Now your basket is worth about €800. You haven't actually lost that €200 yet — it only becomes a real loss if you sell at €800. But the lower number is real, and it can feel awful.

This isn't a fault or a trick. It's simply how owning a slice of real companies works. Prices go up and down. That's the bumpy part nobody can switch off.

The scary thing that almost never happens

Now the part that quietly worries a lot of beginners. "What if the company running the fund goes bust — do I lose everything?"

Short answer. No. The fund company going bust does not take your money.

Here's why. The actual shares the fund owns are kept separate from the company that runs it, looked after by a different guardian (called a custodian). By law they are not the fund company's property to spend or to lose. If the company that runs the fund failed, those holdings would be handed over or wound down in an orderly way, and the value belongs to investors like you.

So there are really two very different worries. One is market falls — real and normal. The other is the firm collapsing — and your money is held apart from that. Don't let the rare one scare you off understanding the common one.

What spreading out & time actually do

So if the price can fall, what helps?

Two calm, boring things. Spreading out and time.

Spreading out means the basket holds many companies instead of one. If a single company has a terrible year, it's one small slice, not the whole thing. A broad Shares in companies (stocks). More → ETF often spreads its The individual investments the fund owns. The largest few are shown; full lists update less often. More → across hundreds of firms. That softens the blow — it does not delete it. If the whole market falls, a spread-out basket still falls.

Time helps too. Over many years, markets have had rough patches and recoveries. A longer time horizon means a bad year is less likely to be the year you're forced to sell. Still — no promises. The past is not a forecast, and there are no The individual investments the fund owns. The largest few are shown; full lists update less often. More → that remove risk entirely. Anyone who says otherwise isn't being honest with you.

🤔 The company that runs your ETF goes out of business. What happens to your money?

Common questions

If I see my ETF drop, have I already lost money?
Not yet, in a real sense. A lower price on screen is a "paper" loss — it only becomes a real, locked-in loss if you sell at the lower price. Whether holding or selling is right depends on your own situation, and that's a personal call, not something a guide can decide for you.
Can an ETF ever go all the way to zero?
For a broad ETF holding hundreds of companies, going to exactly zero would mean every single one of those companies became worthless at once — extraordinarily unlikely. A narrow fund holding very few The individual investments the fund owns. The largest few are shown; full lists update less often. More → , or a single risky theme, can fall much harder. Broad and boring tends to be less fragile than narrow and exciting.
Is there any ETF with no risk at all?
No — and be careful with anyone who claims there is. Every investment that can grow can also fall. Spreading out and giving it time can reduce the bumps, but they never remove risk completely. Honest is better than comforting here.