Capabilities

ETF & Index Fund Investing

Explore how our ETFs and index funds can be cost-effective tools that help you invest in new possibilities for your clients.

Forefront of ETFs

Explore our ETF & Index Fund capabilities

Our range includes some of the lowest-cost products on the market tracking major equity, fixed income and commodity benchmarks, including those providing access to innovative strategies and more specialist market segments, some not available from any other ETF issuer.

Equity ETFs

Equity ETFs & Index Funds

Enhance your portfolio with cost-effective and diversified equity ETFs, covering various regions, sectors, and investment themes.

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Fixed Income ETFs

ETFs can offer convenient access to broad and diversified baskets of bonds at a low cost. Discover our range of fixed income ETFs.

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Digital asset exposures

Digital asset exposures

Explore the future of finance. Invest in Bitcoin and blockchain technologies with Invesco’s specialised digital asset funds and ETFs.

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Commodity ETFs

Commodities can play several roles in a portfolio with the potential for diversification, inflation hedging and growth opportunities.

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Spotlight ETFs

ETF
Invesco FTSE All-World UCITS ETF

The Invesco FTSE All-World UCITS ETF is a cost-effective way to participate in the performance of over 4,000 companies around the world.

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ETC
Invesco Physical Gold ETC

Discover insights into how this precious metal relates to key macro events, and what we think is worth keeping an eye on in the near term.

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How to invest in Invesco ETFs

Buying and selling Invesco products is as straightforward as buying and selling ordinary stocks and shares.

Learn more

Frequently asked questions

An Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) is a pooled investment vehicle with shares that can be bought and sold throughout the day on the stock exchange, in the same way that ordinary stocks and shares are traded.

Exchange Traded Commodities (ETCs) are listed debt instruments traded on a stock exchange and backed by a commodity. They are not funds or ETFs.

An index fund is a type of passive investment that aims to match the performance of a market index, such as the S&P 500 or the MSCI USA. These funds typically offer low fees and may require a minimum or regular investment amount. Unlike ETFs, index funds are not traded on exchange. They are priced once a day after the market closes, and most investment platforms don’t charge dealing fees when investors buy or sell them.

ETFs and mutual funds both offer diversified exposure to main asset classes and are typically UCITS funds. However, ETFs can be bought through a stockbroker or trading platform at any time during the trading day, while mutual funds are purchased via a fund management company and only once per day. ETFs are priced continuously throughout the day, providing high transparency, whereas mutual funds are priced once daily and their transparency can vary.

Benefits:

Low cost of ownership: Both vehicles are typically lower cost than many active funds.

Index tracking: Both vehicles can use physical or swap-based (synthetic) replication, which may offer economic and tracking advantages depending on the index.

Transparency: ETFs are very transparent and usually disclose their full list of holdings daily on the ETF provider’s website. Index funds disclose holdings once a day after the market closes but still provide clear reporting.

Ease of trading: ETFs can be traded on a stock exchange at any time, when open. May be an attractive feature for investors who are looking for more flexibility around when to buy and sell an investment. Index funds are priced once per day, often with no dealing fees on many platforms and suitable for regular contributions.

Liquidity: ETFs are supported by the creation/redemption mechanism and market makers to help provide secondary-market liquidity. Index funds offer daily dealing at NAV via the fund platform (no intra-day trading).

Risks:

Tracking differences: ETFs and index funds may not track an index perfectly. The difference between the fund return and index return is called ‘tracking difference’.

Capital risk: Like any investment product, the value of an ETF or index fund may go down as well as up, and you may not get back the amount invested.

ETFs: Buy and sell through a stockbroker or online trading platform, just like ordinary stocks and shares.

Index funds: Invest via your investment platform or directly with the fund provider. Orders are placed at the next available NAV (priced once per day).

Large or complex ETF trades? Our Capital Markets team serves as the central point of contact for both primary and secondary market activity for our European-domiciled ETFs and ETCs. They can help guide you to find the most suitable and cost-effective way to buy or switch into one of our ETFs or ETCs, based on your individual preferences. They can also provide you with a pre-trade cost analysis, free and without obligation

While buying and selling our ETFs is usually quite straightforward, you may wish to speak to us first especially if you have a particularly large or complex trade.

There are many ways for fund managers to track the performance of an index. These ‘replication methods’ fall into two broad categories, physical and  swap-based (synthetic).

Physical replication: The fund owns the underlying stocks or bonds that comprise the benchmark index.

Swap-based  replication: The fund aims to deliver the index performance through a swap provided by an investment bank. A swap is a type of derivative contract where two parties agree to exchange (“swap”) one stream of flows for another.  

At Invesco, we pioneered a swap-based method called “physical with swap overlay” whereby the fund holds a basket of quality securities, which are not the same as those in the index but are expected to produce most of the returns. To reduce tracking error, the fund has swaps often with multiple counterparties (investment banks) that pay the difference between the index return and the return of the basket of securities.

Learn more about physical and swap-based funds

Latest insights

  • ETF
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    ETF

    March European ETF Flows

    By Benjamin Jones, Chris Mellor, Paul Syms

    Middle East tensions unsettled markets in March, yet European ETFs attracted US$12bn, driven by diversification away from the US and cautious demand for cash and short-duration fixed income.

    21 April 2026
  • Equities
    Equities

    MSCI World exposure at the lowest cost on the market

    By Chris Mellor

    Access MSCI World Index exposure at the lowest cost on the market and benefit from our swap-based replication approach.

    9 April 2026
  • ETF
    Side%20view%20of%20successful%20trader%20or%20businessman%20in%20formal%20wear%20and%20eyeglasses%20working%20with%20charts%20and%20market%20reports%20on%20computer%20screens%20in%20his%20modern%20office.
    ETF

    An intelligent approach aiming to boost total returns in IG credit

    By Paul Syms

    Demand for non-core exposure to investment grade credit is gaining traction as investors look for higher returns.

    11 March 2026
  • ETC
    A%20person%20holding%20a%20gold%20bar%20among%20rows%20of%20gold%20bars,%20each%20marked%20with%20%271000g%27%20and%20%27999.9%27.
    ETC

    What’s driving the gold price? … and other important questions

    By Invesco

    Gold and silver prices set new record highs earlier this year. Find out what’s been driving precious metal prices as well as what investors should know when considering these assets for their portfolios.

    16 February 2026
  • ETF
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    ETF

    How to enhance your portfolio with options-based income strategies

    By Invesco

    Options-based income strategies can be used in a portfolio to seek consistent income, diversify income sources, and reduce equity exposure while still participating in the equity market.

    6 February 2026
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  • Investment risks

    For complete information on risks, refer to the legal documents.

    The value of investments and any income will fluctuate (this may partly be the result of exchange rate fluctuations) and investors may not get back the full amount invested.

     

    Important informaton

    Views and opinions are based on current market conditions and are subject to change. Data as at 28 February 2026, unless otherwise stated.

    This is marketing material and not financial advice. It is not intended as a recommendation to buy or sell any particular asset class, security or strategy. Regulatory requirements that require impartiality of investment/investment strategy recommendations are therefore not applicable nor are any prohibitions to trade before publication.

    For information on our funds and the relevant risks, refer to the Key Information Documents/Key Investor Information Documents (local languages) and Prospectus (English, French, German), and the financial reports, available from www.invesco.eu. A summary of investor rights is available in English from www.invescomanagementcompany.ie. The management company may terminate marketing arrangements.

    UCITS ETF’s units / shares purchased on the secondary market cannot usually be sold directly back to UCITS ETF. Investors must buy and sell units / shares on a secondary market with the assistance of an intermediary (e.g. a stockbroker) and may incur fees for doing so. In addition, investors may pay more than the current net asset value when buying units / shares and may receive less than the current net asset value when selling them.

    All investment decisions must be based only on the most up to date legal offering documents. The legal offering documents (Key Information Document (KID), Base Prospectus and financial statements) are available free of charge at our website www.invesco.eu and from the issuers.

  • EMEA5306501/2026