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Exchange-Traded Fund

In the wide and varied family of the thousands and thousands of funds out there, the exchange-traded fund is one of the more consumer-friendly ones.

Unlike mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, behave more like stocks. You can buy into an ETF at any time, and sell it whenever you feel like it. And like a stock, an ETF's value can rise and fall--depending on what the ETF is invested in.What do ETFs invest in? Well, they're typically linked to an index like the Dow Jones Industrial Average or the S&P 500. So, if you had an ETF that trades the same companies that make up the Dow or the S&P, it will rise and fall in value pretty much the same amount as the Dow or S&P.

You can also buy ETFs that invest in other types of products, like bonds, currencies, gold or other commodities. The ETF market has grown considerably in the past few years, so there is no shortage of ETFs to invest in.

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Moody's May Downgrade Tyson On Volatile Grain Costs

 
Sue Chang
MarketWatch Pulse
 

SAN FRANCISCO -- Moody's Investors Service on Friday placed Tyson Foods Inc.'s long-term ratings under review for possible downgrade, including its Ba1 corporate family rating and probability of default rating. The move is prompted by concerns that volatile and high grain costs could prevent a near term improvement in Tyson's chicken segment, which accounts for nearly one-third of the company's consolidated revenues, said Moody's in a statement.

Copyright © 2008 MarketWatch, Inc.

 
 

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