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@ChrisBizz @randomdude Then you can just buy a high volume ETF from the beginning and not have to buy an ETF and wait until the reinvestment grows the individual positions of the companies in the ETF. Or am I missing something?
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@Gottegris The starting price of an ETF is set arbitrarily when it comes onto the market. Something easily tradable, e.g. 5 or 10 euros. The value or price development is then determined by the NAV and, to a certain extent, also on the stock exchange.
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@randomdude Whether you have 100 shares in an MSCI World ETF that cost 10 euros or 10 that cost 100 euros, it doesn't matter. Both will rise or fall in value in the same way.
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@Gottegris I don't quite understand your question. The volume of the ETF means the amount of money under management. In general, this should not be too low because otherwise there might be a higher risk that the ETF will be closed, but this has nothing to do with the increase in value of an ETF share due to the accumulation.
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@Gottegris At the end of the day, you want YOUR assets invested in the fund to increase. A long-dated ETF with high fund assets is a good indicator that the fund is running. I don't agree with the idea that a high fund volume has an impact on the return. As I said at the beginning, it depends on the return of your invested capital. If you would enter now at 80€ per share instead of 70€, because you want to wait until the fund has a large volume, you would have missed 10€ return per share. You also have to look at the total number of shares. Just because one fund is larger than the other does not mean that the share price is automatically higher. Maybe issuer 2 has issued twice as many shares and the price per share is even lower than issuer 1. Also, like normal securities, the price of an ETF is determined by demand and not just by the value of the securities it contains. In summary, you need to know how much money you can/want to put into an ETF. Depending on which ETF you put it into, you buy shares of a fund with it. What percentage they represent of the total fund depends on the fund's assets. How much percentage you make with your shares depends on how well the ETF performs.
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@TimLie thanks I had nen thinking error all the time :D
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