Emerging Market Dividend ETFs for Income, Growth & Diversification - ETF News And Commentary
05 Março 2012 - 4:00AM
Zacks
With the safer fixed income instruments such as Treasury bonds
and high-grade corporate bonds yielding meager returns, many income
oriented investors now look for companies with solid balance sheets
that pay stable dividends. But most domestic dividend paying
companies are mature, larger companies that do not offer the growth
potential that some newer, smaller companies offer. An attractive
option for such investors is to invest in the Emerging Market
Dividend ETFs that combine the opportunity to benefit from the
higher growth potential in the emerging markets with the steady
flow of dividend income. (Read Three Overlooked Emerging Market
ETFs)
Emerging markets investments should be a part of any diversified
portfolio due to their low correlation with the developed markets
assets as also their higher growth potential. The IMF projects that
the emerging economies will grow 5.4% in 2012, versus 1.2% growth
for the developed economies. Further the emerging markets companies
often offer a higher rate of dividend yield compared with the
domestic companies.
Investors should however remember that the higher returns from
emerging markets are also accompanied with higher volatility. In
times of heightened global uncertainty, emerging markets exhibit
greater correlation with the developed markets and underperform
them as the investors seek safer assets. During the second half of
last year, the emerging markets fell sharply but as the fears of a
global recession ebbed, the investors flocked to chase higher
returns offered by these post sell-off attractively priced assets.
(Read-India ETFs on The Rise)
MSCI Emerging Market Index has returned 17.61% year-to-date
compared with 8.91% for S&P 500. Further the emerging market
ETFs that do not hedge their currency exposures also benefit from
the rising currencies of those countries.
The investors could consider the following ETFs that invest in
high dividend paying stable companies in emerging markets.
WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income Fund
(DEM)
DEM tracks the WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income Index,
which is a fundamentally weighted index that measures the
performance of the high dividend yielding stocks in emerging
markets.
The funds assigns heaviest weight to Financials (26.5%),
followed by Telecom (19.6%) and Information Technology (13.8%). In
terms of country allocations, Brazil is at the top (22.2%),
followed by Taiwan (21.1%), South Africa (9.8%) and Malaysia
(9.0%). The fund charges 63 basis points annually. It had total
return of 30.98% and average annual return of 6.11% since
inception. Year-to-date, the fund has returned 15%. Its dividend
yield is 3.89% versus average US dividend yield of less than
2%.
Emerging Markets Dividend Index Fund (DVYE)
This ETF introduced very recently (February 24, 2012), is
designed to compete with the popular WisdomTree ETF mentioned above
by providing a lower cost alternative to the investors, while
fulfilling similar investment objective.
The fund seeks to replicate the Dow Jones Emerging Markets
Select Dividend Index. This fund is less exposed to the
Financials (13.7%) compared to DEM, with top weighting assigned to
Industrials (17.5%) and Telecom (16.2%). Taiwan leads the country
allocation with 23.6% weight, followed by Brazil (13.5%) and South
Africa (11.6%). The fund holds 99 stocks and thus focuses on a
smaller group of companies compared with DEM (293 holdings). The
underlying stocks are selected on the basis of dividend yield. The
ETF currently charges 0.49% to the investors. The adviser to the
fund has agreed to waive a part of its management fee to limit the
expense ratio at this level through the end of December 2014.
SPDR S&P Emerging Markets Dividend ETF
(EDIV)
EDIV tracks S&P Emerging Markets Dividend Opportunities
Index, consisting of dividend paying securities of 100
publicly-traded companies in emerging markets. The ETF was launched
in February last year. Currently, it is heaviest weighted in
financials (25.4%), followed by Information Technology (21.6%) and
Materials (15.4%). Country weights for the top three are Taiwan
(25.5%), Brazil (14.4%) and China (11.8%).
The expense ratio for this fund is 0.59% and its dividend yield
is 4.22%. It has returned a solid 14.8% year-to-date.
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