Tracker Fund

Tracker Fund

A tracker fund is an index fund that tracks a broad market index or a segment thereof. Tracker funds are pooled investments used to track a broad market index or a segment of one; they are also known as index funds. A tracker fund is an index fund that tracks a broad market index or a segment thereof. Index fund management is driven by tracking functions, and tracker funds seek to replicate the performance of the market index. Tracker funds are also known as index funds, designed to offer investors exposure to an entire index at a low cost.

Tracker funds are pooled investments used to track a broad market index or a segment of one; they are also known as index funds.

What Is a Tracker Fund?

A tracker fund is an index fund that tracks a broad market index or a segment thereof. Tracker funds are also known as index funds, designed to offer investors exposure to an entire index at a low cost. These funds seek to replicate the holdings and performance of a designated index, constructed as ETFs or alternative investments to meet the fund’s tracking objective.

Tracker funds are pooled investments used to track a broad market index or a segment of one; they are also known as index funds.
Index fund management is driven by tracking functions, and tracker funds seek to replicate the performance of the market index.
Passively managed tracker funds can include customized indexes for market sectors, segments, and themes.
Today, market innovation has resulted in the potential for customized tracker funds which provide for more targeted investments.
Customized tracking funds are relatively low cost for investors and keep overall expenses lower using an index replication strategy.

How a Tracker Fund Works

The term "tracker fund" has evolved from the tracking function that drives index fund management. Tracker funds seek to replicate the performance of a market index. Market innovation has significantly broadened the number of tracker funds available in the investable market.

Investing in an index fund is a form of passive investing. Initially, index funds were introduced to provide investors a low-cost investment vehicle that allows for exposure to the many securities included in a market index. The primary advantage of such a strategy is the lower expense ratio on an index fund. 

Popular indexes for U.S. market exposure include the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, and the Nasdaq Composite. Investors often choose traditional tracker funds because a majority of investment fund managers fail to beat broad market indexes on a consistent basis.

The majority of tracker funds are either income or accumulation units. Income is paid out to fund holders as cash, in the former, and in the latter, the income is retained within the fund for reinvestment. 

Special Considerations

As markets have evolved over time, investment companies have sought to meet comprehensive demands by developing new and innovative funds and indexes to satisfy investors. As a result many investment companies now work with specialized index providers or create their own customized indexes to use in passively managed funds. With this market evolution, tracker funds now encompass a much broader definition.

Customized tracker funds still seek to track a predefined market index but they provide for much more targeted investment. Offering relatively low costs for investors they are able to keep overall fund expenses lower by continuing to use an index replication strategy while getting many of the benefits of active fund management through screened indexes. 

These funds only need to make significant fund transactions when a customized index reconstitutes which is typically once a year. Customized tracker funds offer investors a broader range of options while also alleviating many of the significant challenges for fund managers in beating the market.

Examples of Tracker Funds

Investors will find tracker funds available for nearly every market index in the world. One of the most popular tracker funds is the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY). The fund has $364 billion in assets under management as of June 15, 2021. It has an expense ratio of 0.0945%. The year-to-date return for the SPY through May 31, 2021, was 12.55%, closely matching the S&P 500's total returns. 

Alternatively, many companies develop their own indexes with specified criteria for tracker funds. The Fidelity Quality Factor ETF (FQAL) is an example. The fund tracks a customized index created by Fidelity called the Fidelity U.S. Quality Factor Index.

The Fidelity Quality Factor ETF seeks to replicate the holdings and performance of the Fidelity U.S. Quality Factor Index. The Index utilizes a screening methodology to identify high-quality large-cap and mid-cap stocks. 

Investors get exposure to high-quality U.S. large-cap and mid-cap stocks while the fund requires lower costs due to its index replication construction. As of May 31, 2021, the Fidelity Quality Factor ETF, returned 34.2% over the last twelve months. Meanwhile, the fund underperformed the broad U.S. large and mid-cap universe represented by the Russell 1000, which has a one-year return of 42.52% (as of May 31, 2021).

Related terms:

Diversified Fund

A diversified fund is a fund that is broadly diversified across multiple market sectors or geographic regions.  read more

The of Expense Ratio

The expense ratio (ER), also sometimes known as the management expense ratio (MER), measures how much of a fund's assets are used for administrative and other operating expenses. read more

Index

An index measures the performance of a basket of securities intended to replicate a certain area of the market, such as the Standard & Poor's 500. read more

Index Fund

An index fund is a pooled investment vehicle that passively seeks to replicate the returns of some market indexes. read more

Indexing

Indexing may be a statistical measure for tracking economic data, a methodology for grouping a specific market segment, or an investment management strategy for passive investments. read more

Large Cap (Big Cap)

Large cap (big cap) refers to a company with a market capitalization value of more than $10 billion. read more

Market Index

A market index is a hypothetical portfolio representing a segment of the financial market. Popular indexes include the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq. read more

Mid-Cap Fund

A mid-cap fund is a type of investment fund that focuses its investments on companies with a capitalization in the middle range of listed stocks in the market. read more

What Is Passive Investing?

Passive investing is an investment strategy to maximize returns by minimizing buying and selling. Discover more about it here. read more

S&P 500 Index – Standard & Poor's 500 Index

The S&P 500 Index (the Standard & Poor's 500 Index) is a market-capitalization-weighted index of the 500 largest publicly traded companies in the U.S. read more