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ETFM Types of ETFs Guide

CSI ETFM topic guide for types of etfs, with section lessons, ETF trading cues, disclosure checks, risk review, and portfolio-fit priorities.

Types of ETFs is an ETFM topic weighted at 16%. Use this chapter landing page to frame the ETF issue first, then move into the section lessons for the exact exposure, structure, exchange-trading, disclosure, risk, or portfolio-fit question.

What This Topic Is Testing

ETFM questions in this topic test whether a mutual fund representative can explain ETF mechanics in a client recommendation context. Focus on how the ETF gets exposure, how the units trade, what the disclosure says, what risk or cost matters, and whether the ETF actually fits the client account.

Section Lessons

LessonMain review cue
Broad-market, sector, style, and factor ETFsETF category recognition, exposure source, complexity, income profile, leverage, inverse behaviour, and suitability limits
Fixed income, cash, commodity, and currency ETFsETF category recognition, exposure source, complexity, income profile, leverage, inverse behaviour, and suitability limits
Active, leveraged, inverse, and covered-call ETFsETF category recognition, exposure source, complexity, income profile, leverage, inverse behaviour, and suitability limits
Multi-asset and solution-oriented ETFsETF category recognition, exposure source, complexity, income profile, leverage, inverse behaviour, and suitability limits

Better First Instincts

If the case feels most like…Better first move
ETF product label or themeidentify exposure, benchmark, structure, and complexity before judging fit
exchange-trading or liquidity issuecheck spreads, execution quality, premium-discount behaviour, and underlying liquidity
disclosure or client conversationexplain ETF mechanics, risks, costs, and trading differences in client language
portfolio construction or taxationtest overlap, diversification, time horizon, account type, and after-tax implementation

Common Traps

  • treating ETF names as enough information to decide suitability
  • assuming low fees solve structure, spread, liquidity, or tax problems
  • confusing mutual fund purchase logic with exchange-traded ETF execution
  • ignoring monitoring when the ETF uses leverage, inverse exposure, concentrated holdings, niche markets, or complex income strategies

In this section

Revised on Friday, May 29, 2026