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A Juicy 5% Yield From Emerging Markets But Be Aware Of The Risks

Summary The SPDR S&P Emerging Markets Dividend ETF has a yield of over 5% but dividend inconsistency and region exposure make it a risky proposition. The fund has sizeable positions in China and Brazil – two areas that have been hotbeds of political turmoil. The fund has underperformed the broad MSCI Emerging Markets index since its inception and an above average beta suggests a fund that comes with risks. Income-seeking investors often look to familiar sectors like financials and utilities to generate a higher yield from their equities. A place that investors may not consider for dividend income is emerging markets but, believe it or not, there are some significant yields in this space. The SPDR S&P Emerging Markets Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: EDIV ) has been around for over four years and boasts a little over $300M in assets. Since its inception, the fund has trailed the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (NYSEARCA: EEM ) and one of its larger competitors, the WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income ETF (NYSEARCA: DEM ) on a total return basis. EDIV Total Return Price data by YCharts The 5% yield is no doubt tantalizing but it’s important to recognize how that dividend is achieved and how much risk is involved in obtaining it. Not surprisingly, the fund has performed poorly as emerging markets have been hammered over the last year or more. The fund is down a total of 24% over the past one-year period and 35% since inception. The fund is fairly well diversified across the broad economy. The fund has 5% or higher allocations to eight different sectors with communications and technology stocks accounting for roughly 40% of total fund assets. More conservative areas like financials, industrials and basic materials count 30% of the portfolio bringing overall portfolio risk down although a 3 year beta of 1.16 suggests a more aggressive portfolio when compared to emerging markets overall. While ETF Database indicates this portfolio has one-third of its assets in “developed” markets, a look at the fund’s country and region allocation shows its exposure to primarily less developed and risky markets. China (10% of fund assets) for all of the volatility it has experienced over the past year is actually one of the fund’s better performing regions. Brazil (8%) has been the worst performer among the fund’s larger allocations due to the political unrest resulting from the Dilma Rousseff regime. Other regions like Taiwan (27%), South Africa (14%) and Turkey (9%) are all down double digits in the one-year period. Another risk comes from the quarterly dividend volatility. Income seekers looking for a predictable quarterly dividend should probably look elsewhere. Historically, most of the fund’s annual dividends come in the 2nd and 3rd quarter and trail off to minimal levels in the 1st and 4th quarters. Trailing 12-month dividend yields were down below 4% during the summer of 2014 and have risen to their current level of 5.16% thanks in part to the fund’s share price drop. The fund has paid $1.342 per share in dividends over the past four quarters compared to $1.645 per share in the four quarters prior to that. Conclusion This ETF has been able to consistently deliver annualized yields of over 4% but there’s a great deal of volatility involved to get there. Global economic weakness has hit emerging markets hard over the past year and the dividend is just one piece to consider here. The quarterly dividend payments are very inconsistent and the fund has larger exposures to areas with significant political and economic risks. This ETF has a place in a broader portfolio as a smaller high risk high return position but those looking for a predictable income producing investment should probably look elsewhere.

Emerging Market And Oil: 2 ETFs To Watch On Outsized Volume

In the last trading session, the U.S. stocks were badly hit by China’s 2% devaluation of the yuan, as it raised fears about the health of the world’s second-largest economy and could spur new round of currency wars. Among the top ETFs, investors saw the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) lose 0.9%, the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (NYSEARCA: DIA ) shed 1.2% and the PowerShares QQQ Trust ETF (NASDAQ: QQQ ) move lower by 1.3% on the day. Two more specialized ETFs are worth noting, as both saw trading volume that was far outside of normal. In fact, both these funds experienced volume levels that were more than double their average for the most recent trading session. This could make these ETFs ones to watch out for in the days ahead to see if this trend of extra interest continues: SPDR S&P Emerging Markets Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: EDIV ): Volume 3.79 times average This emerging market ETF was in focus yesterday, as around 279,000 shares moved hands, compared to an average of roughly 77,000. We also saw some share price movement, as EDIV lost 1.4% in the last session. The movement can largely be blamed on China’s surprise move that triggered the sell-off in emerging market currencies and can have a huge impact on the stocks like what we find in this ETF’s portfolio. EDIV was down nearly 9.5% in the month, and currently has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold). The United States Brent Oil ETF (NYSEARCA: BNO ): Volume 2.47 times average This oil ETF was under the microscope yesterday, as more than 323,000 shares moved hands. This compares to an average trading day of 134,000 shares, and came as BNO lost nearly 1.7% on the session. The big move was largely the result of declining oil prices following OPEC’s latest monthly oil report, which showed that it pumped the maximum oil in three years in July. BNO was down nearly 16.4% in the past one-month period. Original Post Share this article with a colleague