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Walmart’s rustic 3-piece quilt set with a charming log cabin vibe is on sale for only $28
TheStreet aims to feature only the best products and services. If you buy something via one of our links, we may earn a commission.Why we love this dealTotal relaxation is not one-size-fits-all. A tropical getaway with the soothing sounds of crashing waves may help some unwind, while others prefer the refreshing scent of pine at a mountainside cabin retreat. For those who decompress best with the serene vibes of a rustic log cabin, consider bringing those same aesthetics to your bedroom decor to create a peaceful sleeping oasis. An easy way to start on your bedroom’s cabincore makeover is with a rustic, vintage-inspired comforter set.One of Walmart’s bestselling bedding options, the Jessy Home Rustic 3-Piece Quilt Set is 15% off with a limited-time Flash deal, making it a great time to transform your bedroom. Already affordable at its original price of $33, the queen-sized comforter and two matching pillow shams are now even more budget-friendly at just $28. The bedding also comes in twin and king sizes, which are discounted to $26 and $30, respectively. Jessy Home Rustic 3-Piece Quilt Set, $28 (was $33) at Walmart
Courtesy of Walmart
Why do shoppers love it?With over 550 perfect five-star ratings, this bestselling quilt set with exquisite stitching is shopper-approved. It has a forest-inspired pattern with pops of green plaid, bear silhouettes, and green trees on the coverlet and two matching pillow shams. “The colors are beautiful and vibrant, and the design is super cute and rustic,” one buyer raved. The traditional mountain lodge pattern is a classic style and reminiscent of a handmade quilt, so it will continue to look good in your bedroom for years to come. Crafted from microfiber and filled with needle-punched cotton, the comforter is lightweight, soft, and the perfect weight for all seasons. The fluffy bedspread will keep you warm on chilly nights, but the fabric is breathable, so you won’t overheat or feel stuffy in the warmer seasons. Pleasant to the touch, the material is “very soft and comfortable,” one shopper said. They also wrote, “My wife and I were stunned by the quality of the material and the workmanship of the comforter and pillow covers.”Related: Walmart’s bestselling $160 farmhouse console table is on sale for only $89Another benefit of this microfiber material is that the bedding is easy to maintain. The wrinkle and fade-resistant fabric is durable and retains its quality wash after wash. To fluff up the bedding, it’s suggested you wash the quilt and pillow shams before making your bed with this set for the first time.Details to know Sizes available: The twin, queen, and king-size quilt sets are all on sale at various price points.Pieces in set: One coverlet and two matching pillow shams.Material: 100% polyester with a needle-punched cotton filling.Is it machine-washable?: Yes.This rustic bedding is also a popular choice for RVs and campers. There are actually 11 different quilt patterns to choose from, all of which have a rustic forest pattern, but not all are on sale right now. If this isn’t your preferred color combination, we’ve listed additional bedding deals under $30 at Walmart that may be a better fit.Shop more dealsBeartech Lightweight Reversible Quilt Set, $29 (was $33) at WalmartAmeha 3-Piece Chevron Embossed Quilt Set, $20 (was $34) at WalmartSmuge 3-Piece Plaid Patchwork Quilt Set, $27 (was $43) at WalmartBring the coziness of a cabin to your bedroom with the Jessy Home Rustic 3-Piece Quilt Set for just $28 at Walmart. Walmart’s limited-time Flash deals don’t last long, so add the bedding bundle to your cart now.
Fidelity says your portfolio may be ‘too American’
If your entire portfolio lives in the S&P 500, Fidelity has a message for you: The rest of the world is pulling ahead, and you’re sitting on the sidelines.Fidelity’s latest ETF screen shows the MSCI World (ex U.S.) up about 8% year to date in 2026. The S&P 500 has lagged that pace overall, even after a recent bump tied to the market’s reaction to the Block layoffs. That performance gap follows international stocks topping U.S. stocks in 2025 for the first meaningful stretch in nearly two decades.The MSCI World (ex U.S.) Index delivered a 32.7% total return last year, compared with 17.9% for the S&P 500, according to FactSet data cited by First Trust.International equities posted their best calendar-year performance since 2009, driven by attractive valuations, a weakening U.S. dollar, and expansionary fiscal policies across Europe and Asia. And the tailwinds are far from spent.Here’s what’s fueling the global rally, which international ETFs Fidelity is flagging. And most importantly, here’s what it means for your money.Why Fidelity is waving a red flag at U.S.-only portfoliosAmerican investors have become dangerously lopsided. After more than a decade of U.S. outperformance, U.S. stocks have grown from about 30% of the MSCI World Index in the 1990s to roughly 75% today, leaving many portfolios heavily exposed to a single country’s market.Fidelity’s Capital Markets Strategy Group recently pointed out that earnings growth has strengthened across all major global regions. Historically, that pattern has favored non-U.S. stocks, especially when paired with a softer dollar and easing financial conditions abroad, which is exactly the setup investors are seeing in early 2026.The valuation gap amplifies the argument: The S&P 500 trades at a trailing price-to-earnings ratio near 30x, more than double its long-term average, while the MSCI ACWI ex-USA sits around 20.6x, according to InvestmentMarkets. The S&P 500’s dividend yield of 1.17% also trails the 1.6% offered by ex-U.S. markets. When U.S. stocks command nearly double the earnings multiple of international peers but no longer enjoy materially faster earnings growth, that premium becomes harder to justify.The IMF’s January 2026 World Economic Outlook projects global GDP growth of 3.3% this year, outpacing the U.S. at 2.4%, according to First Trust Portfolios. When the world’s economy is growing faster than America’s, the earnings potential for companies based outside the U.S. tends to expand.
Japanese corporations have been overhauling governance standards, returning more capital to shareholders.Photo by George Pachantouris on Getty Images
Three international ETF themes Fidelity is watching right nowFidelity’s latest ETF screener research highlights three distinct regional themes: Europe, Japan, and Latin America. Each has its own catalyst and its own risk profile. When I dug into the three screens, what stood out was not just the fund names, but also the differences in exposure levels between ETFs that look similar on the surface.Europe: Defense spending is rewriting the playbookEurope isn’t just tagging along in the global rally. Several European countries, including Greece, Poland, and Spain, ranked among the world’s best-performing stock markets in 2025, according to FactSet. The biggest catalyst: NATO allies have committed to raising defense expenditures to 3.5% of GDP by 2035, according to Janus Henderson. Germany earmarked roughly €108 billion for defense in its 2026 budget, a 25% year-over-year increase, and the STOXX Europe Aerospace & Defense Index surged more than 65% in 2025, per Datasite.Fidelity’s Europe-focused ETF screen surfaces five funds to research further: iShares Core FTSE 100 UCITS ETF, Franklin FTSE United Kingdom ETF, Global X DAX Germany ETF, Franklin FTSE Switzerland ETF, and Franklin FTSE Germany ETF. Most are single-country bets, so if you’re not comfortable picking one economy, a broad developed-market international ETF captures the European rally without the concentration risk.Japan: Corporate governance reforms keep deliveringJapanese corporations have been overhauling governance standards, returning more capital to shareholders, and improving returns on equity, according to Fidelity.Fidelity’s Japan screen (at least 30% Japanese stock exposure, expense ratios of 0.38% or below) highlights the following.Avantis International Small Cap Value ETF (AVDV)JPMorgan Betabuilders Japan ETF (BBJP)Vanguard FTSE Pacific Index Fund ETF SharesiShares Edge MSCI International Value Factor ETFFranklin FTSE Japan ETFThe exposure range matters enormously here, and this is where I think many investors get tripped up.AVDV offers just 32% Japanese exposure alongside holdings from other international markets, while BBJP is a pure-play 100% Japan bet. Two ETFs that appear in the same screener result can give you radically different portfolios. Before buying, check the fund’s country breakdown, not just its name.Latin America: a commodity boom with staying powerThe commodity supercycle is one of the most powerful structural trends supporting Latin American equities. Several of the world’s largest miners operate from South America, sitting on vast reserves of gold, silver, copper, lithium, and other critical minerals. Fidelity noted that this commodity leverage, combined with central bank easing and improving macro stability, has supported earnings growth and attracted global capital.More Personal Finance:Why selling a home to your child for a dollar can backfireElon Musk says ‘universal high income’ is comingFTC, 21 states sue Uber over ‘shady’ subscription billingFidelity’s LatAm screen (at least 50% exposure, expense ratios of 0.81% or below) flags iShares MSCI Brazil ETF (EWZ), iShares Latin America 40 ETF (ILF), iShares MSCI Mexico ETF (EWW), iShares MSCI Chile ETF (ECH), and Franklin FTSE Brazil ETF (FLBR).That list is heavily tilted toward Brazil, with Mexico and Chile as the other main country exposures. Latin American markets carry significantly more political and currency risk than developed-market peers. Brazil’s fiscal policy trajectory and Mexico’s trade relationship with the U.S. are both live variables that can whipsaw returns. For most investors, I would suggest treating LatAm as a smaller satellite allocation rather than a core international holding.What this means for your wallet, and what to do nowThe S&P 500 remains home to some of the world’s most profitable companies, and 2026 earnings growth expectations are still around 13%. The point is that an all-U.S. portfolio leaves money on the table and concentrates risk in ways most investors don’t fully appreciate.Here’s the wallet math: If the S&P 500 remains flat while international stocks gain 8% to 10%, an investor with $100,000 fully in U.S. equities earns nothing.Someone with a 20% international allocation could see $1,600 to $2,000 in additional gains on that portion alone. Compounded over multiple years of international outperformance, the difference becomes substantial.Apart from the raw returns, diversification also helps prevent currency exposure. When the dollar weakens, owning foreign-currency assets provides a natural tailwind. And international stocks, which are less tied to the AI/tech concentration that defines the S&P 500, can cushion your portfolio during a sector-specific drawdown. As Maria Rahni of New York Life Investment Management told TheStreet, the goal isn’t to replace U.S. exposure but to complement it in a way that reduces reliance on one economic outcome or policy path.How to add international ETFs to your portfolio without overcomplicating itWhen I step back from Fidelity’s three screens and think about how I would translate their framework into concrete steps, I discovered the goal isn’t to overhaul your portfolio overnight. All you need to do is make simple, smart checks without being overly reliant on any one market. Here’s a practical way of adding international ETFs to your portfolio.Audit your current allocation. Check what percentage of your portfolio is already international. Many target-date and balanced funds include some foreign exposure, so you may already have more (or less) than you think. If international stocks represent less than 15% to 20% of your equity allocation, there’s likely room to add.Decide between broad and targeted. A broad international ETF such as Vanguard Total International Stock ETF (VXUS) or iShares Core MSCI EAFE ETF (IEFA) gives you diversified exposure to developed and emerging markets in a single trade. That’s simpler and less volatile than single-country bets.Watch expense ratios, bid-ask spreads, and tracking error. Fidelity calls out these three cost layers, and all three matter. A low expense ratio doesn’t help if the bid-ask spread is wide (meaning you pay more to get in and out) or if the fund consistently misses its benchmark. Before buying, pull up two or three similar ETFs and compare all three metrics side by side.Don’t chase last year’s winner. European defense stocks surged by 65% or more in 2025. That doesn’t mean they’ll repeat in 2026; some are already trading above fair value. The strongest case for international investing is structural (valuation gaps, earnings convergence, dollar softening), not a short-term momentum trade. Buying into a region because it was hot last year is one of the most common and costly mistakes in ETF investing.Understand currency risk. International ETFs expose you to swings in foreign currencies. A weakening dollar boosts your returns; a strengthening dollar erodes them. Currency-hedged ETF options exist, but they add cost and eliminate one of the diversification benefits. For long-term investors with a 10-plus-year horizon, currency fluctuations tend to wash out over time, so hedging may not be necessary.When going international backfires: common investing mistakes to avoidInternational diversification is not a guaranteed win. There are real scenarios where this strategy underperforms or causes pain, and knowing them in advance can help you set realistic expectations.Dollar strength kills returns: If the Federal Reserve pauses rate cuts or the dollar surges on safe-haven demand, international stock returns get crushed on a currency-adjusted basis, even if local-market performance is strong. This happened consistently from 2011 to 2020, a period when U.S. stocks trounced international peers. The current dollar-weakening trend could reverse if geopolitical risk drives safe-haven flows back into the greenback.Political risk is real: Single-country ETFs carry outsized exposure to government policy shifts, capital controls, and geopolitical shocks. Brazil’s market, for example, can swing violently on fiscal headlines. Mexico’s equities face ongoing tariff uncertainty. If you hold country-specific funds, keep position sizes small enough that a 20% to 30% drawdown in one country won’t wreck your broader plan.Home-country bias: U.S. companies generate roughly 40% of their revenue internationally, per FactSet. Owning the S&P 500 already gives you meaningful global revenue exposure. International ETFs add geographic diversification of the companies themselves, which reduces concentration risk, but you’re not missing all global growth by staying domestic. The case for international isn’t that the U.S. is broken. It’s that paying 30x earnings for exposure you could get at 20x elsewhere doesn’t make portfolio sense.Overcomplicating with niche ETFs: Buying separate Germany, Japan, Brazil, and Chile funds creates a portfolio that’s hard to manage, expensive to rebalance, and difficult to keep in line with your target allocation. One or two broad international funds accomplish the diversification goal without the complexity. This is the same principle behind keeping your portfolio simple. The fewer moving parts, the less likely you are to make a costly behavioral mistake.The bottom line on international stocks in 2026Fidelity’s data show international stocks have momentum, a valuation advantage, and structural tailwinds from defense spending, corporate reforms, and commodity demand.Fidelity is one of several major firms, alongside Vanguard, J.P. Morgan, BlackRock, and Morningstar, pointing investors toward non-U.S. equities.That doesn’t mean you should sell your S&P 500 index fund tomorrow. But if 100% of your stock allocation sits in U.S. equities, you’re making a concentrated bet on one country at historically expensive valuations, while the rest of the world offers comparable earnings growth at significantly lower prices.When I look at Fidelity’s framework and the broader Wall Street consensus, the practical takeaway is this: A 15% to 25% allocation to international equities is a reasonable starting point for most long-term investors.The right number depends on your risk tolerance, time horizon, and existing holdings. Start by checking your current allocation, pick one or two low-cost, broad international ETFs, and rebalance gradually rather than making one large move.Related: ETF flows reveal what smart investors are buying now
Two major airlines now ban common tech item most pack
Over the last year, the issue around transporting lithium batteries and the power banks that commonly contain them has once again begun coming up after multiple airlines, the TSA and the entire country of Japan all expanded on existing bans around packing them in their luggage.The lithium-ion battery that allows for portable charging also contains volatile electrolytes that pose a particular risk of catching fire; the additional restrictions come after a string of in-cabin fires on different airlines.While the wireless headphones that have largely replaced cable versions over the last decade also contain lithium-ion batteries in the charging case, their significantly smaller size has largely kept them under the radar from sweeping bans. But amid a bigger spotlight on airborne fire safety, at least two national airlines have introduced new restrictions on transporting portable headphones including the popular Apple AirPods in checked luggage.”Should only be packed in carry-on baggage”: Airlines increasingly crack down on portable headphonesAir New Zealand became the latest major airline tweak its policy to state that not just batteries and power banks but also wireless headphones should not be packed in checked luggage “under any circumstances.” Taiwanese airline Eva Air made similar changes to its policy that it now displays on its website in November 2025.”Batteries, portable chargers or power banks that are not installed in a device must be packed safely in carry-on,” Air New Zealand writes on its website. “[…] The charges cases for air pods, earbuds and in-ear devices should only be packed in carry-on baggage.”Related: Lufthansa is latest to ban use of item many other airlines allowIncidents involving in-cabin fires from a portable charging case have been significantly rarer than those arising from power banks but their potential has pushed some airlines to issue proactive bans.”Bluetooth earphones and their charging case must be carried in your carry-on baggage, as the charging case contains a lithium battery and functions as a power bank,” Eva Air explains to anyone who may be confused as to why their headphones are treated the same as a power bank.
Air New Zealand is among the major airlines that do not allow wireless headphones to be packed in checked baggage.Air New Zealand
Which other airlines restrict wireless headphones in checked luggageSmaller airlines to introduce similar restrictions include Taiwanese regional carriers UNI Air and Tigerair. Neither airline’s restriction on checked baggage transportation affects travelers’ ability to use wireless headphones to listen to music or watch videos in-flight; they were put in place primarily so that any fires that do break out can be spotted and put out quickly rather than spread in the cargo section of the airplane.More Travel News:Airline to launch unusual new flight to Cayman Islands from the U.S.Iranian strike hits major airport, injuries reportedUnexpected country is most luxurious travel destination for 2026US government issues sudden warning on Switzerland travelNo U.S.-based airline currently has wording that specifically singles out portable headphones although Southwest Airlines became the first to change its policy to explicitly state that any power banks brought inside the cabin need to be clearly visible and kept near the traveler at all times rather than be placed within a bag in the overhead compartment.”Do not pack recalled, damaged, or defective batteries, as they can pose a fire hazard,” the Southwest now also has in its policy on which items can be brought aboard.Related: Airline loses license over false pilot records, all flights off
Top-Performing Stock ETFs
Stock exchange-traded funds, or equity ETFs, are often low-cost, tax-efficient instruments for investors to track popular indexes or leverage experienced manager choices to beat the market. The best ones serve as low-cost building blocks in a portfolio, and unlike open-end mutual funds, all ETFs are traded throughout the day on an exchange.In February 2026, the top-performing stock ETFs included mid-cap blend funds Tema American Reshoring ETF RSHO and Invesco S&P Spin-Off ETF CSD. Data in this article is sourced from Morningstar Direct.Screening for the Best-Performing ETFsWhen evaluating ETFs, investors should focus on long-term returns across multiple years and market cycles. However, short-term returns can provide valuable information about biases within strategies.To find the month’s best-performing stock ETFs, we screened the Morningstar US equity category for those that trade within the United States. We excluded exchange-traded notes and ETFs with less than $100 million in total assets. Within our list, three funds fell into the mid-cap blend category, where the average name rose 3.31% in February.The 10 Best-Performing ETFs for February 2026Tema American Reshoring ETF RSHOInvesco S&P Spin-Off ETF CSDTCW Transform Systems ETF PWRDGQG US Equity ETF GQGUAlpha Architect US Quantitative Momentum ETF QMOMAbsolute Select Value ETF ABEQSimplify US Equity PLUS Managed Futures Strategy ETF CTAPPacer Lunt Large Cap Alternator ETF ALTLCastellan Targeted Equity ETF CTEFInvesco S&P MidCap 400 Pure Growth ETF RFGMetrics for the Best-Performing Stock ETFsTema American Reshoring ETFMorningstar Rating: N/AExpense Ratio: 0.75%Morningstar Category: Mid-Cap BlendThe best-performing ETF in February was the $265.8 million Tema American Reshoring ETF. The actively managed Tema Global ETF returned 12.43%, outperforming the average mid-cap blend fund, which gained 3.31%. Over the last year, the fund has climbed 49.78%, outperforming the 16.25% gain on funds in its category, placing it in the 1st percentile for the period.The Neutral-rated Tema American Reshoring ETF launched in May 2023.Invesco S&P Spin-Off ETFMorningstar Rating: ★★★★Expense Ratio: 0.65%Morningstar Category: Mid-Cap BlendThe $110 million Invesco S&P Spin-Off ETF ranked second for the month, returning 9.04%. The Invesco ETF, which is passively managed, beat the 3.31% gain on the average mid-cap blend fund. Over the past year, the fund has risen 48.88%, outperforming the 16.25% gain on funds in its category, placing it in the 2nd percentile for the period.The Bronze-rated Invesco S&P Spin-Off ETF was launched in December 2006.TCW Transform Systems ETFMorningstar Rating: ★★★★★Expense Ratio: 0.75%Morningstar Category: Large BlendThe third-best-performing ETF in February was the $1.2 billion TCW Transform Systems ETF. The actively managed TCW ETF returned 8.24%, outperforming the average large blend fund, which dropped 0.16%. Over the last year, the fund has climbed 45.37%, outperforming the 15.40% gain on funds in its category, placing it in the 1st percentile for the period.The Neutral-rated TCW Transform Systems ETF was launched in February 2022.GQG US Equity ETFMorningstar Rating: N/AExpense Ratio: 0.49%Morningstar Category: Large GrowthThe $465.3 million GQG US Equity ETF ranked fourth for the month, returning 7.85%. The GQG Partners ETF, which is actively managed, beat the 2.7% loss on the average large growth fund. The fund launched in July 2025 and does not have a one-year record.The GQG US Equity ETF has not yet been awarded a Morningstar Medalist Rating.Alpha Architect US Quantitative Momentum ETFMorningstar Rating: ★★★Expense Ratio: 0.28%Morningstar Category: Mid-Cap GrowthThe fifth-best-performing ETF in February was the $390.5 million Alpha Architect US Quantitative Momentum ETF. The actively managed Alpha Architect ETF returned 7.63%, outperforming the average mid-cap growth fund, which gained 1.67%. Over the last year, the fund has climbed 17.62%, outperforming the 12.38% gain on funds in its category, placing it in the 28th percentile for the period.The Neutral-rated Alpha Architect US Quantitative Momentum ETF launched in December 2015.Absolute Select Value ETFMorningstar Rating: ★★Expense Ratio: 0.85%Morningstar Category: Large ValueThe $142.7 million Absolute Select Value ETF ranked sixth for the month, returning 7.00%. The Absolute Investment Advisers ETF, which is actively managed, beat the 2.57% gain on the average large value fund. Over the past year, the fund has risen 21.46%, outperforming the 17.06% gain on funds in its category, placing it in the 14th percentile for the period.The Absolute Select Value ETF has a Negative Morningstar Medalist Rating, meaning our analysts expect it to be one of the worst performers within its category and think it is unlikely to deliver positive returns after fees.Simplify US Equity PLUS Managed Futures Strategy ETFMorningstar Rating: N/AExpense Ratio: 0.1%Morningstar Category: Large BlendThe seventh-best-performing ETF in February was the $116.2 million Simplify US Equity PLUS Managed Futures Strategy ETF. The actively managed Simplify Asset Management ETF returned 7.00%, outperforming the average large blend fund, which dropped 0.16%. The fund launched in December 2025 and does not have a one-year record.The Simplify US Equity PLUS Managed Futures Strategy ETF has not yet been awarded a Morningstar Medalist Rating.Pacer Lunt Large Cap Alternator ETFMorningstar Rating: ★Expense Ratio: 0.6%Morningstar Category: Large BlendThe $102.3 million Pacer Lunt Large Cap Alternator ETF ranked eighth for the month, returning 6.86%. The Pacer ETF, which is passively managed, beat the 0.16% loss on the average large blend fund. Over the past year, the fund has risen 29.60%, outperforming the 15.40% gain on funds in its category, placing it in the 3rd percentile for the period.The Negative-rated Pacer Lunt Large Cap Alternator ETF launched in June 2020.Castellan Targeted Equity ETFMorningstar Rating: N/AExpense Ratio: 0.45%Morningstar Category: Mid-Cap BlendThe $522.8 million Castellan Targeted Equity ETF was the ninth-best-performing ETF in February, with a 6.49% gain. The actively managed Castellan ETF beat the 3.31% gain on the average fund in Morningstar’s mid-cap blend category for the month. The fund launched in June 2025 and does not have a one-year record.The Castellan Targeted Equity ETF has not yet been awarded a Morningstar Medalist Rating.Invesco S&P MidCap 400 Pure Growth ETFMorningstar Rating: ★★★Expense Ratio: 0.35%Morningstar Category: Mid-Cap GrowthThe $323.3 million Invesco S&P MidCap 400 Pure Growth ETF ranked tenth for the month, returning 6.47%. The Invesco ETF, which is passively managed, beat the 1.67% gain on the average mid-cap growth fund. Over the past year, the fund has risen 24.76%, outperforming the 12.38% gain on funds in its category, placing it in the 12th percentile for the period.The Neutral-rated Invesco S&P MidCap 400 Pure Growth ETF launched in March 2006.What Are ETFs?Exchange-traded funds are investments that trade throughout the day on stock exchanges, much like individual stocks. They differ from traditional mutual funds—known as open-end funds—which can only be bought or sold at a single price each day. Historically, ETFs have tracked indexes, but in recent years, more ETFs have been actively managed. ETFs cover a range of asset classes, including stocks, bonds, commodities, and most recently cryptocurrency.ETFs offer investors an efficient way to gain exposure to the markets, often with low fees and an ease of buying and selling. They also generally offer higher tax efficiency than open-end funds.How to Find Top ETFs for the Long TermETFs are often equated with low-cost indexing. However, the ETF marketplace has grown increasingly complicated. Some ETFs track a very narrow part of the market or pursue specific themes. Some ETFs invest based on a particular factor or a combination of them. And now there are actively managed ETFs.Use these Morningstar resources to help find the best ETFs for the long term:Learn about the types of exchange-traded funds, their costs, and how to invest in them by reading Morningstar’s Guide to ETF Investing.Find the highest-rated ETFs across all investment categories in The Best ETFs and How They Fit in Your Portfolio.Review Morningstar director of personal finance Christine Benz’s suggested ETF portfolios for those saving for or already in retirement, including Tax-Efficient Retirement-Saver Portfolios for ETF Investors, Tax-Sheltered Retirement-Saver Portfolios for ETF Investors, ESG Tax-Sheltered Retirement-Saver Portfolios for ETF Investors, Tax-Sheltered Retirement-Bucket Portfolios for ETF Investors, and Tax-Sheltered ESG Retirement-Bucket Portfolios for ETF Investors.Research ETFs based on your personal selection criteria by using our Morningstar Investor Screener. The tool, which is available to Morningstar Investor members, allows investors to screen ETFs based on various criteria, including asset class, Morningstar Category, Medalist Rating, and fee level.Visit Morningstar’s ETF page for the latest articles and videos from our ETF specialists.