What Is ETF Liquidity?

David Wysocki: Hi, my name is Dave Wysocki, Vice President of Sales at Harvest ETFs. I’m going to show you why ETF liquidity is different from stock liquidity. Because ETFs trade on an exchange just like individual securities do, many investors believe that trading volume on a security and trading volume on an ETF is one and the same. That is simply not the case. An ETF has two components to its liquidity, primary and secondary liquidity. The primary liquidity involves the underlying securities, which make up the ETF. While secondary is simply the trading volume on the exchange. An ETF might have low trading volume but yet be highly liquid due to the nature of the securities it owns. An ETF insurer, for example, Harvest will work with market makers to purchase and redeem liquid securities. This creates or redeems units of an ETF.