Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs): A Simple Guide to Global Capital Markets
An exchange traded fund (ETF) is an investment vehicle that combines key features of traditional mutual funds and individual stocks. ETFs trade on public exchanges throughout the day, making them easy to buy and sell while providing diversified exposure to global capital asset markets.
Exchange traded funds play a central role in modern market analysis because they allow investors and analysts to observe stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, and international markets using a consistent, transparent structure.
This guide explains what ETFs are, how they are used to represent global capital asset markets, and why they are ideal tools for intermarket analysis and market monitoring.
What Are Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs)?
Exchange traded funds are pooled investment vehicles that hold baskets of securities, commodities, or other assets. Unlike mutual funds, ETFs trade intraday on stock exchanges at market prices.
Key characteristics of ETFs include:
- Intraday liquidity
- Broad diversification
- Transparent holdings
- Lower structural complexity compared to futures or derivatives
Because of these features, ETFs have become the preferred vehicle for tracking capital asset markets.
Why ETFs Matter in Intermarket Analysis
Intermarket analysis examines relationships between multiple asset classes, including equities, fixed income, commodities, currencies, and foreign markets.
Historically, many of these markets were difficult for individual investors to access directly. Commodities and currencies were primarily traded through futures markets, while sector- and industry-level exposure was limited.
Exchange traded funds changed this landscape by making it possible to observe and analyze nearly every major asset class through a standardized ETF framework.
Today, ETFs exist to represent:
- Broad equity indices
- Economic sectors and industries
- Hard and soft commodities
- Major global currencies
- Developed and emerging countries
This standardized approach allows consistent market comparison across cycles.
Major ETF Providers
A small group of issuers dominates the global ETF market:
- iShares (BlackRock)
- State Street Global Advisors (SPDR)
- Vanguard
Additional providers include Invesco, ProShares, VanEck, WisdomTree, Direxion, iPath, and Guggenheim.
ETF Categories Used in the Monthly Market Pulse
The following exchange traded funds are used in both the free and premium Monthly Market Pulse and Weekly Watch reports. These ETFs are selected to provide consistent coverage across global capital asset markets.
Broad Market Index ETFs
Broad market index ETFs provide a high-level view of equity market performance.
- SPY – S&P 500 Index
- QQQ – NASDAQ 100 Index
- DIA – Dow Jones Industrial Average
- IWM – Russell 2000 Small-Cap Index
Sector ETFs
Sector ETFs divide the equity market into major economic segments, helping identify leadership and rotation.
- XLK – Technology
- XLI – Industrials
- XLE – Energy
- XLF – Financials
- XLB – Materials
- XLC – Communication Services
- XLY – Consumer Cyclical
- XLP – Consumer Defensive
- XLV – Healthcare
- XLRE – Real Estate
- XLU – Utilities
Industry ETFs
Industry ETFs provide more granular exposure within sectors and often highlight trend changes earlier than broad indices.
- ITA – Aerospace & Defense
- DBA – Agriculture
- JETS – Airlines
- KBE – Banks
- XBI – Biotechnology
- DBC – Broad Commodities
- ENTR – Entertainment
- PBJ – Food & Beverage
- XME – Metals & Mining
- XOP – Oil & Gas Exploration & Production
- IHE – Pharmaceuticals
- XRT – Retail
- SOXQ – Semiconductors
- IYT – Transportation
Commodity ETFs
Commodity ETFs allow exposure to both hard and soft commodities without direct futures trading.
Metals ETFs
- GLD – Gold
- SLV – Silver
- PPLT – Platinum
- PALL – Palladium
- CPER – Copper
- SLX – Steel
Energy ETFs
- USO – Crude Oil
- UNG – Natural Gas
- URA – Uranium
- COAL – Coal
- TAN – Solar Energy
Agriculture ETFs
- WEAT – Wheat
- CANE – Sugar
- SOYB – Soybeans
- CORN – Corn
- COCO – Cocoa
Fixed Income ETFs
Fixed income ETFs track different maturities along the yield curve and help monitor interest rate expectations.
- TBIL – 3-Month Treasury Bills
- XBIL – 6-Month Treasury Bills
- OBIL – 12-Month Treasury Bills
- SHY – 1–3 Year Treasuries
- IEI – 3–7 Year Treasuries
- IEF – 7–10 Year Treasuries
- TLH – 10–20 Year Treasuries
- TLT – 20+ Year Treasuries
Currency ETFs
Currency ETFs track the relative performance of major global currencies.
- UUP – U.S. Dollar
- FXB – British Pound
- FXE – Euro
- FXY – Japanese Yen
- FXC – Canadian Dollar
- FXA – Australian Dollar
- FXF – Swiss Franc
Country ETFs
Country ETFs provide insight into regional market performance and capital flows.
- EWA – Australia
- EWO – Austria
- EWK – Belgium
- EWZ – Brazil
- EWC – Canada
- FXI – China
- EWQ – France
- EWG – Germany
- EWH – Hong Kong
- INDA – India
- EWI – Italy
- EWJ – Japan
- EWM – Malaysia
- EWW – Mexico
- EWN – Netherlands
- EWS – Singapore
- EWY – South Korea
- EWP – Spain
- EWD – Sweden
- EWL – Switzerland
- EWT – Taiwan
- EWU – United Kingdom
How These ETFs Are Used
These exchange traded funds form the foundation of the Weekly Watch and Monthly Market Pulse reports. The focus is on observing price behavior, identifying leadership, and understanding intermarket relationships rather than making investment recommendations.
By monitoring the same ETFs consistently, market context becomes clearer over time.
Next Steps
For readers new to exchange traded funds and capital markets, the best starting point is observation. Track how different asset classes move relative to one another and how leadership changes across cycles.
To build a deeper understanding, explore intermarket analysis, which examines how stocks, bonds, commodities, and currencies interact as part of a unified system.
This content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

