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Apeh Salifu Jibrin
Apeh Salifu Jibrin
Asked: April 26, 20262026-04-26T21:03:12+00:00 2026-04-26T21:03:12+00:00In: INVESTING & WEALTH BUILDING

Why do exchange traded funds (ETFs) show high volatility even when underlying stocks are performing well in the Nigeria stock market?

why do exchange traded funds experience frequent volatility even when the underlying stocks are posting strong performances.

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  1. Ochoyoda
    Ochoyoda Educator
    2026-04-27T06:54:38+00:00Added an answer on April 27, 2026 at 6:54 am

    Your expectation sounds logical: if the underlying stocks are doing well, the ETF should be stable or rising smoothly. But in practice, Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) often show short-term volatility even when fundamentals are strong. That’s not a flaw—it’s how the structure works. Let’s break it downRead more

    Your expectation sounds logical: if the underlying stocks are doing well, the ETF should be stable or rising smoothly. But in practice, Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) often show short-term volatility even when fundamentals are strong. That’s not a flaw—it’s how the structure works.
    Let’s break it down properly.
    1. ETFs trade like stocks (intraday pricing effect)
    Unlike mutual funds, ETFs are priced every second during market hours.
    That means:
    Price reacts instantly to buy/sell pressure
    Not just the value of underlying stocks (NAV)
    So even if the underlying portfolio is strong: ➡️ Heavy selling in the ETF itself can push price down temporarily.
    2. Supply vs Demand mismatch (market microstructure)
    ETF prices are influenced by:
    Traders
    Institutions
    Arbitrageurs
    If more people are:
    Selling the ETF → price drops
    Buying the ETF → price rises
    Even when underlying stocks are stable.
    This creates short-term dislocations between:
    ETF price (market price)
    NAV (true value of holdings)
    3. Arbitrage mechanism (creation/redemption process)
    ETFs rely on Authorized Participants (APs) to keep prices aligned.
    When mispricing happens:
    APs buy/sell underlying stocks
    Create or redeem ETF units
    But: ➡️ This correction is not always instant, especially in volatile markets
    Result:
    Temporary volatility even when fundamentals are fine
    4. Sector concentration & weighting effects
    Many ETFs are not equally weighted.
    Example:
    A tech ETF may be dominated by a few large stocks
    If:
    2–3 heavyweights dip slightly
    ➡️ ETF drops, even if 20 smaller stocks are performing well
    5. External macro factors (big driver)
    ETF prices react to:
    Interest rates
    Inflation data
    Currency movements
    Global sentiment
    So even if companies are reporting:
    Strong earnings
    ➡️ The ETF can fall because:
    Market sentiment turned risk-off
    6. Liquidity differences (hidden risk)
    Some ETFs (especially in emerging markets like Nigeria or niche sectors):
    Have low trading volume
    This leads to:
    Wider bid-ask spreads
    Sharp price swings
    Even small trades can move the price significantly.
    7. Passive rebalancing and index tracking
    ETFs must follow their index strictly.
    When:
    Index rebalancing happens
    Stocks are added/removed
    ➡️ ETF is forced to buy/sell, which can:
    Create temporary volatility
    Ignore short-term “good performance”
    8. Investor behavior (psychology)
    Retail and institutional investors:
    React to news, fear, rumors
    Even if fundamentals are strong: ➡️ Panic selling can drive ETF volatility
    The key insight (this is what many miss)
    ETF price ≠ immediate reflection of company performance
    It is a combination of:
    Underlying asset value (NAV)
    Market demand/supply
    Liquidity
    Sentiment
    Practical takeaway for you as an investor
    Since you’re actively learning investing:
    Don’t judge ETFs by short-term price movement
    Focus on:
    Tracking error
    Expense ratio
    Long-term index performance
    If you’re investing monthly (like your ₦50k plan): ➡️ Volatility actually helps via dollar-cost averaging
    Simple analogy
    Think of ETF like a basket of goods in a busy market:
    The goods inside are valuable (strong stocks)
    But the price of the basket depends on:
    Who is buying or selling at that moment

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