World’s Cheapest ETF Portfolio Gets Cheaper

Matt Hougan is CEO of Inside ETFs, a division of Informa PLC. He spearheads the world's largest ETF conferences and webinars.

Well, that didn’t take long.

Less than two months after ETF Securities shocked the commodity ETF world with the launch of a broad-based commodity ETF charging just 0.29% in annual fees, far below the standard 0.75% fee, newcomer GraniteShares has done one better, launching its new GraniteShares Bloomberg Commodity Broad Strategy No K-1 ETF (COMB), with a management fee of just 0.25% per year.

With its launch, COMB instantly earns a place in my World’s Cheapest ETF Portfolio, a diversified portfolio holding the lowest-cost ETF in each of six major asset classes. The portfolio provides exposure to more than 4,600 stocks in 47 different countries, over 3,100 bonds, dozens of currencies and 22 different commodities.

When I started tracking the portfolio in 2008, the blended fee was 0.16%; today, the fee is less than 0.06% a year (0.0585% a year, to be precise).

The World’s Cheapest ETF Portfolio

Asset Class

Weight

Fund

Ticker

Expense Ratio

U.S. Equity

40%

iShares Core S&P Total U.S. Market ETF

ITOT

0.03%

Developed Markets Equity

30%

Schwab International Equity ETF

SCHF

0.06%

Emerging Markets Equity

5%

Schwab Emerging Markets Equity

SCHE

0.13%

Fixed Income

15%

Schwab U.S. Aggregate Bond

SCHZ

0.04%

REITs

5%

Schwab U.S. REIT ETF

SCHH

0.07%

Commodities

5%

GraniteShares Bloomberg Commodity Broad Strategy No K-1 ETF

COMB

0.25%

No End In Sight To Fee War

The incredible decline in the cost of this portfolio is emblematic of the incredible decline in the cost for ETFs in general over the past 20 years.

While ETFs have always been low cost, one of the most powerful pieces of the ETF story is that they keep getting better over time. That’s because, all else being equal, a larger ETF will be more liquid, track its index better, have better tax efficiency and be lower cost than a smaller ETF. By comparison, the exact opposite is true of actively managed mutual funds, which suffer under the weight of their own success.

As the table below shows, the cost for accessing broad-based asset classes has declined by 67-88% since the first ETF covering that asset class launched. That’s an incredible statistic, and speaks to the often-overlooked scale benefits ETFs offer.

The Ever-Declining Cost of ETFs

Asset Class

First ETF

Earliest Found Fee

Current Fee

Current Asset Class Leader

Fee

Price Decline from Original

U.S. Equity

SPY

0.16%

0.09%

ITOT

0.03%

81%

Developed Markets

EFA

0.35%

0.33%

SCHF

0.06%

83%

Emerging Markets

EEM

0.75%

0.68%

SCHE

0.13%

83%

Fixed Income

AGG

0.20%

0.05%

SCHZ

0.04%

80%

Real Estate

IYR

0.60%

0.45%

SCHH

0.07%

88%

Commodities

DBC

0.75%

0.75%

COMB

0.25%

67%

Note: The original fees for ETFs are not easy to find. There is a chance that the “Earliest Fee Found” is not the actual original fee for these ETFs; in each case, I went back as far as I could in the records, but I’m not 100% convinced I got back to the original in each case. If you have documentation of the original fee that differs from any of these products, please let me know at mhougan@insideetfs.com.

A lot of people ask me if we’ve reached the end of the ETF fee war. My answer is always no. As assets continue to flow into the space, fees will continue to come down, and that will ultimately be good for all investors.

At the time of writing, the author held none of the securities mentioned. You can reach Matt at mhougan@InsideETFs.com.

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