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What is an ETF? A 2-minute beginner’s explainer

An ETF is basically a ready-made basket of investments you can buy in one click — instead of picking shares one by one.

🔎 Anatomy of an ETF

This is a real fund card, exactly as it appears when you browse. Each label explains a part of it.

The fund’s name

Usually tells you the provider and the index it follows. One ETF like this can hold hundreds or thousands of companies at once.

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Dividends

Het fonds herinvesteert dividend automatisch in zichzelf, zodat uw positie groeit zonder uitbetalingen in contanten.

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Yearly fee (TER)

De jaarlijkse lopende kosten van het fonds, weergegeven als een % van uw geld. €0,20 per €100 per jaar bij 0,20%. Lager is goedkoper.

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Fondsomvang

Hoeveel geld in het fonds is belegd. Grotere fondsen zijn meestal goedkoper om uit te voeren en gemakkelijk te verhandelen. Its ticker (SWDA) is its short code on the exchange.

iShares Core MSCI World UCITS ETF

iShares
StocksReinvestsIE
Yearly fee 0.20%per jaar
1-jaar+24.8%Total Return
Fondsomvang $126BSWDA
IE00B4L5Y983

What’s inside

Aandelen in bedrijven (aandelen).

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Where it’s based

The fund’s home country (IE) sets its tax rules and regulations. Ireland (IE) and Luxembourg (LU) are the most common for European investors.

Last year’s return

Prestatie die herinvesteerde dividenden omvat — het volledige beeld van wat je werkelijk hebt verdiend. Past returns don’t predict the future.

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Its ID code (ISIN)

Een 12-karakters internationale code die deze aandeelklasse van het fonds op unieke wijze identificeert.

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Live data for a real fund — an example to learn from, not a recommendation.

👉 Change the numbers above — it’s your money, your assumptions.

One basket, many companies at once

Instead of buying Apple, then Microsoft, then hundreds more one company at a time, an ETF buys the whole list for you and bundles it into a single thing you can own. One purchase of a broad world ETF can give you a slice of 1,500+ companies at once. Each fund carries a unique Een 12-karakters internationale code die deze aandeelklasse van het fonds op unieke wijze identificeert. More → code, so you always know exactly which one you are looking at. The annotated card above breaks down what every part of a real ETF actually means.

It trades like a single share

The ‘exchange-traded’ half of the name is the clever bit. A traditional fund is priced just once a day; an ETF sits on a stock exchange and trades like a single share, all day long. So buying broad exposure is as quick as buying one stock — one order, one price you can see, and you can sell the same way whenever the market is open. How closely the fund mirrors its target list is called its Hoe het fonds zijn index kopieert: door de aandelen rechtstreeks te kopen (fysieke replicatie) of met behulp van een swapcontract (synthetische replicatie). More → .

Why beginners like them

Three reasons beginners reach for them. Spread: your money is split across many holdings, so one company stumbling matters far less. Low cost: a plain index ETF charges a small yearly fee, the De jaarlijkse lopende kosten van het fonds, weergegeven als een % van uw geld. €0,20 per €100 per jaar bij 0,20%. Lager is goedkoper. More → , often a fraction of a percent. Simplicity: one purchase gives you broad exposure with no need to pick individual winners — and an Het fonds herinvesteert dividend automatisch in zichzelf, zodat uw positie groeit zonder uitbetalingen in contanten. More → version even reinvests dividends for you automatically.

What an ETF is not

It helps to be clear on what an ETF is not. It is not a single hot stock — that is the whole point, it is a basket. It is not a savings account: there is no fixed interest and no guarantee, and the value rises and falls with the market, so you can get back less than you put in. And it is not a recommendation — we explain how ETFs work so you can judge them for yourself, never which one to buy.

🤔 An ETF mainly lets you…

Common questions

Is an ETF the same as a stock?
You trade it like a stock, but underneath it holds many investments, not one company. So a single ETF is far more spread out than a single share.
Can an ETF lose money?
Yes. ETFs follow markets, and markets fall as well as rise. Spreading across many holdings reduces single-company risk but not the ups and downs of the whole market. This is education, not advice.