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Slicing-And-Dicing On Steriods?
Written by IndexUniverse Staff  -  June 26, 2009 00:00 AM
Related ETFs: DJP / IPF

 

Bob Holderith is chief executive of Emerging Global Advisors. Richard Kang is chief investment officer for the New York-based company, which recently launched the first exchange-traded funds focused on specific sectors in emerging markets. (See related story here.)

EGA is expected to launch soon a third ETF that will act as a composite of the 10 underlying sectors in the Dow Jones emerging markets indexing series it’s using for current and upcoming funds.

The company says that nine more are in the works focusing on emerging markets sectors. Those will join the May launches of the EGS Emerging Markets Energy Fund (NYSE Arca: EEO) and the EGS Emerging Markets Metals & Mining Fund (NYSE Arca: EMT).

IndexUniverse.com’s Murray Coleman caught up with Holderith and Kang late Thursday to discuss the future of sector investing in developing markets.

IU: What is available for U.S.-based investors in terms of foreign sector ETFs now?

Holderith: The family of Select Sector SPDRs is the dominant ETF line providing sector-based exposures. They’ve got a long history. But those ETFs only focus on U.S. companies. For pure international exposure to foreign sectors, we’ve only seen two- to three- years worth of actual performance history. And that’s through the iShares’ global sector family of funds as well as those of State Street Global Advisors. The SSgA family is purely international sector ETFs.

IU: Then your firm’s line-up of international sector ETFs will compete most directly against those of SSgA?

Kang: No, since the SSgA ETFs are focused predominately on developed markets. For example, take the SPDR S&P International Financial Sector (NYSE: IPF). The top weighted countries are (in order): Japan, Canada, Australia, the U.K., Spain and Switzerland. The SSgA international sector ETFs do allow for some emerging markets exposure. But as cap-weighted indexes, they’re heavily skewed to developed countries.

IU: Why is your company going with pure emerging markets exposure rather than a mix of developed and emerging markets?

Holderith: There’s more than enough coverage of developed international markets now in the ETF marketplace. In terms of emerging markets, we’ve seen broad, regional and country specific funds. But we’re first to market with sector-specific ETFs for developing countries. The EMT and EEO ETFs are the first of a series we’re preparing to launch.

IU: What others are planned?

Holderith: We’ve got in the pipeline 10 ETFs still left to bring-to-market. Those will all use Dow Jones indexes, similar to those used by EMT and EEO. Dow Jones uses a classification system for sectors called the ICB (or industry classification benchmark) system. The other sector-specific ETFs in various stages of planning we’re working on launching cover: basic materials; consumer goods; consumer services; financials; health care; industrials; technology; telecom and utilities.

IU: You’ve also got a broader ETF that has received regulatory approval, don’t you?

Holderith: Yes, we’ve got a composite ETF that’s due to launch within the next few weeks. That’s an ETF tracking a Dow Jones index that takes the top 10 names from each of the 10 major emerging markets sectors. (It won’t include metals and mining, which is a subsector of basic materials.) So that will leave 100 names in the underlying composite index. And as in all of our ETFs, we have a rule that caps individual weightings at no more than 10%.

IU: In the composite index for such an emerging markets fund, what would the sector weightings look like then?

Holderith: Oil and gas along with financials are the dominant sectors in the composite index.

IU: What type of performance have you seen through back-tested data for emerging markets sector indexes compared to developed markets sector indexes?

Kang: We have data going back many years for the underlying benchmarks. The data for emerging markets, however, isn’t as robust as that for developed markets. So we really focus on data going back to December 2005 when comparing the Dow Jones composite benchmark we’re using for our emerging markets sector funds.

 

 



More on this topic (What's this?)
Emerging Markets… A Contrarian Take
Profit From the “New Decoupling”
The Next Five Years In ETFs
Read more on Emerging Markets, Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) at Wikinvest
 
The views expressed by those blogging are for informational purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation for any security.

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