ETF

English

Noun

ETF (plural ETFs)

  1. (finance) Initialism of exchange-traded fund.
    • 2020, Nellie S. Huang, "Find the Best ETFs For Your Goals" in Kiplinger's Personal Finance, 74(9), p. 18:
      Against this backdrop, we reviewed the Kiplinger ETF 20, the list of our favorite exchange-traded funds.
    • 2021 October 19, Paul R. La Monica, “The first bitcoin ETF finally begins trading”, in CNN Business[1]:
      The ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF began trading at $40 a share under the ticker symbol “BITO” and finished the day up 5%. The ProShares fund is the first of what is expected to be several ETFs that track bitcoin futures to debut on Wall Street.
    • 2023 November 11, Steve Johnson, “Corporate bond ETFs hit by record withdrawals as US lending rates soar”, in FT Weekend, page 13:
      In contrast, government bond ETFs sucked in $30.4bn, nearly double the level in September, with almost all this money heading into US Treasury funds.
    • 2025 July 25, Rakesh Upadhyay, “Price predictions 7/25: BTC, ETH, XRP, BNB, SOL, DOGE, ADA, HYPE, XLM, SUI”, in Cointelegraph[2]:
      According to Farside Investors’ data, spot ETH exchange-traded funds (ETFs) recorded net inflows of roughly $2.4 billion in the past six trading days, well above the $827 million in net inflows into spot BTC ETFs during the same period.

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