Bigger Isn't Always Better With ETFs: Part III

IJR
) is one of the largest ETFs tracking U.S. small-caps with almost $6.5 billion in assets under management. The SPDR S&P 600 Small Cap ETF (NYSE:
SLY
) does basically the same thing as IJR with 1% of IJR's AUM total. Both have expense ratios of 0.2%. Or you can opt for the Schwab U.S. Small-Cap ETF (NYSE:
SCHA
), which is far smaller than IJR. SCHA has an expense ratio of just 0.13% and Schwab clients can trade it commission-free. An Oil Services Battle The iShares Dow Jones US Oil Equipment Index Fund (NYSE:
IEZ
) is a fine option for making a bullish bet on the oil services stocks. Most investors know that, but a compelling alternative is the SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Equipment & Services ETF (NYSE:
XES
), which holds more stocks than IEZ. XES has $110 million in AUM less than IEZ, but the SPDR offering has slightly outperformed IEZ this year, plus its fees of 0.35% are cheaper than the 0.47% expense ratio IEZ sports. Real Estate Rumble The iShares Dow Jones US Real Estate ETF (NYSE:
IYR
) is a well-known REIT ETF. A nice yield of 4.1% helps and $2.9 billion in AUM shows this ETF is popular among REIT investors. The Schwab U.S. REIT ETF (NYSE:
SCHH
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