What KYP tool do you use for ETFs?

We asked three experts

Hand rolling a cube with a brownie and a happy face, customer satisfaction concept

Headshot of Jennifer Tozser

Jennifer Tozser, senior wealth advisor and portfolio manager, National Bank Financial, Calgary

My firm recognized the problem that could arise with the know-your-product (KYP) reforms, so it introduced an in-house tool for the KYP requirements. I can choose the index or ticker that I want to use, and the tool produces a list of similar securities so I can compare. Before, I was doing it manually. If I had an idea of an ETF I wanted to use, I would go to the provider I am most familiar with and look at its lineup, and then I would go to about four or five other providers, look at their offer and do a comparison.

Headshot of Brian Peters

Brian Peters, senior investment advisor, Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management, Vancouver

I have access to a KYP comparison tool under my firm’s Envestnet internal system, which is essentially an internal know-your-product compliance comparison tool. I can input a ticker or mutual fund code and it provides a comparison of about five ETFs in similar categor-ies or size, for example, and it spits out a report of costs, volatility — all the metrics we need to make these decisions. It’s a very simple tool. Additionally, if I’m looking at a particular sector of funds, I can print a 10-page report with a detailed comparative analysis and financial metrics.

Headshot of Ryan Lewenza

Ryan Lewenza, senior financial advisor and portfolio manager, Turner Investments, Toronto

I use Bloomberg. I pay for it, but it’s worth it. It saves me so much time because all the information is right there — I think it’s the greatest analytical tool out there. It helps me really get to know my products because I can get into the granular details of an ETF.

Basically, I pick the theme I want to use and look at all the ETFs available. Then I take the tickers to Bloomberg and look for three things: the bid/ask spread, the daily trading volume, and the size or assets under management of the ETF. I also use it to look at the management expense ratio and tracking error of an ETF, which analyzes how close an ETF tracks its benchmark.