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iShares Launches EM Infrastructure ETF
June 19, 2009 11:42 am
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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
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Round Two: Pimco Vs. BlackRock
It looks like Pimco and BlackRock are at odds again—this time it’s over QE3.Is The Cheapest ETF The Best?
State Street recently lowered the expense ratios on its sector SPDRs to 0.18 percent, making them once again the cheapest U.S. sector ETFs around.
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Socializing About The Social Media ETF
Paul Baiocchi joins Dave Nadig to talk about where theme funds go astray, and why SOCL might just be the exception.
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