Sections
iShares Launches EM Infrastructure ETF
June 19, 2009 8:42 am
|
iShares launched a new emerging markets infrastructure exchange-traded fund on Friday, June 19, with the debut of the iShares S&P Emerging Markets Infrastructure Index Fund (NASDAQ: EMIF). EMIF holds a portfolio of 30 large-cap emerging market infrastructure companies focused in markets like EMIF will go head-to-head with the PowerShares Emerging Markets Infrastructure Portfolio (NYSE Arca: PXR), which launched in October of this year and currently has $45.5 million in assets under management. Both funds charge management fees of 0.75%. The two funds differ markedly in how they approach the market. EMIF breaks the emerging markets infrastructure field down into three subsectors: transportation, energy and utilities. At each semiannual rebalancing, it aims for a 20%, 40% and 40% weight in the three markets. It limits itself to the 30 most liquid, large-cap holdings in the field. PXR holds a broader portfolio of 60 names and defines its market differently, looking for companies that fit one of seven categories: 1) construction and engineering; 2) construction machinery; 3) construction materials; 4) diversified metals and mining; 5) heavy electrical equipment; 6) industrial machinery; and 7) steel. It aims to diversify across the market capitalization spectrum, and indeed, has a large weight (49%) in mid-cap companies. On a top-line basis, EMIF seems more focused on transportation and electrical utilities, while PXR has more exposure to mining and basic materials. On a country basis, the two funds are very different. EMIF has more than twice the exposure to
|
Short-Seller’s Guide To GLD
Gold, despite its recent rebound, has gotten clobbered over the past three months.Looking Beyond VWO And EEM
Broad-based, cap-weighted ETFs were the way to play emerging markets over the past decade. But it’s time for investors to become more strategic and look beyond VWO and EEM.
|
|
|
|
JP Morgan & ETN Credit Risk
Paul & Ugo discuss the implications of J.P. Morgan's $2 billion loss, the European debt crisis and what it means for ETN investors.
See All

