Claymore/Robeco Developed World Equity ETF (EEW)

All Comments on EEW

  • commenter
    SeekingAlpha
    Editors
    Apr 06 05:21 AM
    My Website
    General Discussion on EEW
    Is this a buy or a sell? Reply
  • commenter
    Apr 06 03:05 AM
    My Website
    Broad International ETFs [view article]
    Update: We've added Roger Nusbaum's short article "Explore More Core" ( seekingalpha.com/artic... ) to the Further Reading section.

    It's short, and asks more questions than it answers, but it touches on a crucial issue: Should you build a portfolio with an All World ETF as the core, supplemented by perhaps one other instrument?
    Reply
  • commenter
    Apr 06 02:56 AM
    My Website
    Broad International ETFs [view article]
    Update: In the Further Reading section, we've added two articles about building a portfolio from an All World ETF:

    BGI's All World ETF Could Fundamentally Change the Way People Invest (Matt Hougan)
    seekingalpha.com/artic...

    Total Stock Market ETFs vs. Slice 'n Dice (Murray Coleman)
    seekingalpha.com/artic...
    Reply
  • commenter
    Apr 06 02:56 AM
    My Website
    Broad International ETFs [view article]
    Update: we just added Barclays' iShares MSCI ACWI (All Country World Index) Index Fund ETF (ACWI) to the list. Reply
  • commenter
    Mar 05 12:02 AM
    Broad Developed Market ETFs [view article]
    ishares EFA and Vanguard Europe Pacific ETF (VEA) are safer bets considering the trading volumes .
    Reply
  • commenter
    Mar 04 08:17 AM
    Broad Developed Market ETFs [view article]
    Any opinions on which of the Europe ETFs have most liquidity if you want to short them? Reply
  • commenter
    Feb 03 08:33 PM
    Claymore Fund Closings Not Good for ETF Industry [view article]
    Your last paragraph is kind of confused. You seem to recognize the ill, that vendors are cluttering the space without much thinking and then pulling away what doesn't work, but at the same time, you seem to wish that they keep pretending that everything is all right, by no pulling the plug on what is not right. Strange! At least, the Canadians have enough sense to accept the mistake, rectify it, and move on. Reply
  • commenter
    Feb 03 05:07 PM
    Claymore to Liquidate 11 of Its Least Popular ETFs [view article]
    Yeah.. glad to see the death of some of the wanna-be-SPY products. How about more commodity or international ETFs, instead of yet more overpriced US equity ETFs that correlate highly w/ existing products?
    Reply
  • commenter
    Feb 02 08:58 PM
    Claymore Fund Closings Not Good for ETF Industry [view article]
    You may "believe you're write," but your being right is not at all convincing. You are defending the indefensible. The "industry" has slung hundreds of funds out there, and only a few of them are "great products". Many are just niche garbage. Die, ETFs, die! Reply
  • commenter
    Feb 02 06:58 PM
    Claymore to Liquidate 11 of Its Least Popular ETFs [view article]
    Ah, good riddance, the ETF space is much too cluttered! Reply
  • commenter
    Jan 07 10:25 AM
    ETFs with the Highest Yields/Lowest P/E Ratios [view article]
    BBH had total distributions of around 11 dollars in 07, that's why it's showing such a high yield. Little if any of that was probably from the underlying yields but most databases won't distinguish. Reply
  • commenter
    Jan 05 11:52 PM
    ETFs with the Highest Yields/Lowest P/E Ratios [view article]
    There is something wrong with your data. BBH does not have a yield of 6.25%. Think about it, there is not a single biotech company that has a yield that high, how could the ETF that tracks biotechs have a yield that is higher than any of the underlying companies? Reply
  • commenter
    Jan 05 08:32 PM
    ETFs with the Highest Yields/Lowest P/E Ratios [view article]
    UTF has a 12 month yield of 8.+ % ... isn't this an ETF? Reply
  • commenter
    Jan 05 02:04 PM
    ETFs with the Highest Yields/Lowest P/E Ratios [view article]
    Datalink - I am not trying to argue with you, but that isn't always entirely true. For example:

    REIT's are legally required to distribute 90% of profits to shareholders.
    Some individual companies have shareholder agreements to distribute most of the profits to shareholders (oil transportation sector is a good example of this)

    Of course, these aren't ETF's, but I just wanted to pass that on.
    Reply
  • commenter
    Jan 05 10:33 AM
    My Website
    ETFs with the Highest Yields/Lowest P/E Ratios [view article]
    The reason these yields are going up is because the market prices are going down. Does catch a falling knife have any meaning? Reply