Tabula US Enhanced Inflation UCITS ETF (USD) Acc.

AuM:
$17'283'109
Ongoing charges:
0.29%
NAV:
114.566
Ticker:
TINF
Benchmark ticker:
H35616US Index

Data: Net Asset Value (NAV) and Assets under Management (AuM) as of 2024-10-31

Past performance does not predict future returns. The value of an investment may go down as well as up and you may lose the amount originally invested. Investors should read the Key Risks section of this page, Key Investor Information Document and Prospectus prior to investing.

How we can assist

Our team maintains relations with APs, market makers and banks/brokers and will help you find the most efficient way to execute.

Contact us for further information about Tabula ETFs trading and liquidity.

When it comes to trading, Tabula ETFs combine the best of listed securities and mutual funds – the flexibility to trade throughout the day, plus the ability to trade at NAV for large orders. Trading in our ETFs is supported by both Authorised Participants and Market Makers.

Ways to trade

– On exchange – Pay bid/offer spread plus broker commission
– Over-The-Counter at risk – Bank/broker provides price
– Over-The-Counter at NAV – Pay NAV plus/minus a spread agreed with AP

What to consider

– Size of trade
– Timing / urgency
– Market environment
– Specific underlying
and many other factors…

Understanding ETF trading

Like a mutual fund, the liquidity of an ETF is driven primarily by the liquidity of the underlying index. ETFs shares can be created and redeemed at NAV by Authorised Participants (the “primary market”).

What makes ETFs so liquid?

However, unlike mutual funds, ETFs also trade on the secondary market, via an Exchange or Over-The-Counter. ETF shares can be exchanged between investors or via a Market Maker, thus Authorised Participants don’t necessarily need to create/redeem shares on the primary market.

ETF secondary market can provide an additional layer of liquidity for investors seeking exposure to the underlying market.

Unlike for shares, exchange volume is not the only measure of liquidity

Unlike for shares, exchange volume is not the only measure of liquidity

Key risks

No capital protection: The value of your investment may go down as well as up and you may not get back the amount you invested.

Leverage : The Sub-Fund may use leverage, so losses may be magnified.

Liquidity risk: Lower liquidity means there are insufficient buyers or sellers to allow the Sub-Fund to sell or buy investments readily. Neither the Index provider nor the issuer make any representation or forecast on the liquidity of fund constituents.

Counterparty risk: The Sub-Fund may incur losses if any institution providing services such as safekeeping of assets or acting as a derivatives counterparty becomes insolvent.

Credit risk: The issuer of a financial asset held within the Fund may not pay income or repay capital to the Sub-Fund when due.

OTC Total Return Swap risk: Swap returns are subject to the returns of the Index or reference assets. Valuations of a Sub-Fund’s Investments, the Index tracked or replicated by the Sub-Fund or the FDI used by a Sub-Fund to achieve tracking or replication of an Index may in certain circumstances, only be available from a limited number of market participants who may also act as counterparties to these transactions. Valuations received from such market participants may therefore be subjective and there may be substantial differences between any available valuations.

Contact us for further information about Tabula ETFs.