A flurry of new ETFs hit the market last week, with a variety of
issuers launching fresh funds. The biggest single push, however,
came from Van Eck’s Market Vectors brand, as they put out four new
funds into the market.
These four products all look to focus on international markets,
giving investors new ways to target both developed and emerging
market stocks. Additionally, it should be noted that two of the
four will have a dividend focus, giving new options for income
investors.
The real focus of this group though, is on ‘quality’ stocks. Each
of the four funds will invest in a broad benchmark of securities,
but will apply a rigorous screen in order to only get the best
companies in each fund (see Invest in Quality Stocks with These
ETFs).
For the dividend products, this means that the fund will look for
securities that have demonstrated dividend yields that are higher
than average, and have payouts that are both sustainable and
persistent. This approach should find the safer high yield stocks,
potentially creating a lower risk dividend portfolio.
Meanwhile, for the ‘regular’ quality ETFs, a focus will be on the
stocks that score the highest on three key factors; ROE, stable
year-over-year earnings growth, and low financial leverage. This
technique should also narrow the list down to safer stocks, and it
could reduce volatility as well.
For investors interested by this approach, we have highlighted some
of the key details regarding these new funds below:
MSCI Emerging Markets Quality ETF: QEM
This product tracks the MSCI Emerging Markets Quality Index,
charging investors 50 basis points a year in fees. The fund holds
about 200 stocks in its basket, and no single stock makes up more
than 7% of assets.
Tencent Holdings, Taiwan Semiconductor, and China Mobile take the
top spots, and are reflective of the Asian focus of the fund, as
China, South Africa (the one outlier), Taiwan, India, and South
Korea take the top five country spots. In terms of sectors, tech
dominates at nearly 28% of assets, though it is followed by double
digit weights to staples, telecoms, and energy.
MSCI Emerging Markets Quality ETF: QDEM
This dividend-focused fund follows the MSCI Emerging Markets High
Dividend Yield Index, holding about 175 stocks in its basket. The
fund charges investors 50 basis points a year in fees for this
exposure, while the underlying index has a dividend yield of over
4.2% (read 3 Best Dividend ETFs of 2013).
Assets are pretty well spread out in this fund, as the top three
companies all take up roughly 5% of the total, though China
dominates from a nation perspective, accounting for 31% of the
total. For sectors, financials (30%) take the top spot, followed by
energy (26%), and telecom (15.8%) to round out the top three.
MSCI International Quality Dividend ETF: QDXU
Another dividend focused product, QDXU follows the MSCI ACWI ex USA
High Dividend Yield Index and it holds just over 300 stocks in its
portfolio. The product charges investors 45 basis points a year in
fees, and its index has a dividend yield of 4.4%.
Top holdings include HSBC, Vodafone and Novartis, while the UK,
Canada and Germany take the top three spots from a national look.
Financials (28%), dominate the sector profile, while energy and
telecoms both make up more than 12% as well.
MSCI International Quality ETF: QXUS
This ETF tracks the MSCI ACWI ex USA Quality Index and charges
investors 45 basis points a year in fees for the exposure. The
product holds over 375 securities, so this looks to have the most
securities out of any of these new products from Van Eck (also see
The Key to International ETF Investing).
No single company makes up more than 5% of assets, while Nestle,
Roche, and Samsung currently take the top three spots. Three
European nations—the UK, Switzerland, and the Netherlands—take the
top three spots in this product, though they are followed by China
and South Korea in the top five. For sectors, consumer staples,
consumer discretionary, and health care take the top three, and
each account for at least 13% of assets.
ETF Competition
There are a variety of other emerging market and developed market
funds out there, so competition could be stiff for this Van Eck
group. Furthermore, there is already a small group of ‘quality’
focused funds on the market, and while many are tilted towards the
U.S., there are some international funds in the group.
In particular, the
FlexShares International Quality
Dividend Index Fund (IQDF), the
FlexShares International Quality Dividend
Defensive Index Fund (IQDE), and the
PowerShares
S&P International Developed High Quality Portfolio
(IDHQ), and the
FlexShares International Quality
Dividend Dynamic Index Fund (IQDY) look to be direct
competitors, just to name a few (see FlexShares Debuts 3 Dividend
ETFs).
The group hasn’t attracted a whole lot of interest from investors
yet though, so a dominant market leader hasn’t really been
established in this space. Still, it will be tough to compete and
Van Eck will have to show some degree of outperformance in order to
establish itself in what is becoming a very tough, but increasingly
in-focus, way to invest in emerging and developed market
securities.
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PWRSH-SP INTL (IDHQ): ETF Research Reports
FLEXS-IQD IF (IQDF): ETF Research Reports
FLEXS-IQD DY IF (IQDY): ETF Research Reports
MKT VEC-MS EMQD (QDEM): ETF Research Reports
MKT VEC-MS IQD (QDXU): ETF Research Reports
MKT VEC-MS EMQ (QEM): ETF Research Reports
MKT VEC-MS IQ (QXUS): ETF Research Reports
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