| Why
Invest Overseas At All?
By Sam Henry
April 25, 2001 |
|
This is the first in a two-part series on investing abroad.
We'll take a look at some index funds that are based on broad
international benchmarks, but before we do that let's look into
the debate surrounding the value, if any, of foreign diversification.
Before you buy an international index fund, you might ask whether
it makes sense to invest overseas at all. Although this is a complicated
question, it seems pretty clear that the increased diversification
and opportunity provided by overseas equities argue strongly for
their inclusion in most portfolios. The idea behind foreign diversification
is that if some of your domestic investments are declining, your
foreign investments may cushion the blow. Thus, many financial
advisors tell their clients to spread their invested wealth among
stocks and bonds, both foreign and domestic.
Lately, a number of analysts have called attention to the increased
correlation of foreign and American stocks. Conventionally, statisticians
measure correlation on a scale of -1 to 1, where 1 represents
perfect correlation, -1 represents perfect inverse correlation,
and 0 no correlation at all. Recently, Walter Updegrave of Money
magazine reported that, over the past five years, most large-cap
biased foreign funds had a correlation with the S&P
500 of 0.70 or higher. Also, Roger Ibbotson of the Yale School
of Management and Chicago-based Ibbotson Associates calculated
that the correlation between American stocks and foreign stocks,
including emerging markets, was 0.765. Moreover, these and other
studies have shown that foreign stocks have followed American
stocks especially closely during bear markets, when diversification
is so important. These statistics are often cited as evidence
that foreign equities no longer provide suitable diversification
for American investors' portfolios. It is true that many foreign
stock markets are presently following ours in tandem - but they
haven't always done so.
Merrill Lynch recently reported that in autumn 1993, the correlation
between American and foreign equities was a very low 0.145. In
1979 it was as low as 0.07.
While it may be argued that it may be some time before these correlations
return to the level of those of the 1970s, we can be sure that
they won't remain static. And even if the correlation among the
world's large cap stock remains high for a while, investors can
diversify in emerging markets or small-cap foreign funds. For
example, the Dreyfus Founders Passport foreign small-cap
fund has correlated at only 0.23 with the S&P 500 in the last
five years. In sum, it's presently not as easy to diversify adequately
overseas. But it's still quite possible, and almost certain to
get easier in the future.
Why Use Indexing Overseas?
Geri Hom, fund manager for the Schwab International Index,
answered this question most succinctly.
"While there are instances when active managers can outperform
and index fund,
picking the active manager who will consistently outperform will
be difficult for
most investors," says Hom. "Also, generally in an index
fund, the investor is appraised of the methodology used by the
fund manager. As a result, you know exactly what you are buying.
It is possible that with an active fund you don't even know what
countries you are investing in."
These are, of course, some of the same arguments we hear for
indexing at home. Since there are so many companies in the international
MSCI EAFE index, and they are so widely dispersed all over the
world, working with this index presents some of the same difficulties
we find when dealing with the Wilshire
5000 index.
On the whole, foreign index funds have pretty much matched their
actively- managed rivals, when risk is taken into consideration:
| Category |
YTD ret. |
3 yr. ann. ret. |
5 yr. ann. ret. |
Standard Deviation |
| Active Foreign Funds |
-13.73% |
12.12% |
10.67% |
21.85 |
| Foreign Index Funds |
-14.87% |
10.00% |
10.14% |
17.60 |
Source: Morningstar
It should be mentioned that indexing is generally a longer-term
strategy, and most widely-spread foreign index funds haven't been
around long enough to render an accurate assessment of their performance.
The Other Side of the Argument
Active managers, of course, have scored some impressive successes
overseas of late. Morningstar reported recently that active
fund managers have beaten the EAFE benchmark with far greater
frequency than U.S. managers have outperformed the S&P 500.
Over the last five years ended in February, the average foreign
index fund had beaten only half of its peers in the international
arena, while the average US index fund had beaten two-thirds of
its peers. Moreover, The Wall Street Journal reported in
its latest Mutual Funds Quarterly Review that "many
investors prefer to have a stock picker on the ground in countries
that are a little bit more difficult to navigate and where markets
are frequently less efficient."
By all accounts, a great many active overseas fund managers achieved
their success against the EAFE by avoiding Japanese equities,
which comprise 30% of the EAFE index, and which have been in a
protracted bear market for the last decade. One of the central
tenets of indexing is that it is more important to participate
in bull markets than to avoid bear markets, since the stock markets
in most developed countries have historically appreciated in value
over time at a pace that substantially outstrips inflation. By
avoiding Japan for all of these years, active managers have won
- at the cost of risking missing out on the next Japanese bull
market.
As is the case in most aspects of the world of index funds, Vanguard
is the leader in overseas equity index funds. Vanguard maintains
the oldest such fund, its European Stock Index Fund (VEURX),
which was launched in 1990. They boast the lowest expenses, and
they track their benchmarks better than most other such funds.
Still, at least two other high quality broad international equity
index funds are available to investors: Fidelity's Spartan
International Index (FSIIX) and Schwab's International
Index-Investor Shares (SWINX).
All of these foreign fund companies have their own way of indexing
the broad foreign equity market, for which the conventional benchmark
is the Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe, Australia,
and Far East Index (MSCI EAFE). Generally, all three have
registered results that one might expect from funds that track
their indexes closely.
| Fund |
Vanguard Tot. International |
Fidelity Spartan International |
Schwab International |
| Ticker |
VGTSX |
FSIIX |
SWINX |
| Expense ratio |
0.34% |
0.35% |
0.58% |
| Fund incept. date |
April 1996 |
November 1997 |
September 1993 |
| Min. init. purchase |
$3,000 |
$15,000 |
$2,500 |
| Total net assets
($MM) |
3,003.1 |
319.0 |
567.8 |
| 3 mo. ret. |
-13.27% |
-14.07% |
-14.00% |
| 1 yr. ret. |
-26.66% |
-26.63 |
-28.31% |
| 3 yr. ann. ret. |
-1.11% |
0.13% |
-0.85% |
| 5 yr. ann. ret. |
n/a |
n/a |
4.69% |
Source: Morningstar data as of 3/31/2001
Over the past three years ending 3/31/2001, the Vanguard International
fund had an r-squared value of 0.99; the Schwab International
was at 0.98, and Fidelity Spartan International had a value of
0.97, according to data provider Wiesenberger. R-squared
is a measure of how closely the returns of a fund parallel those
of a particular index - in this case the index is the MSCI EAFE.
The historical returns of the MSCI EAFE index are listed below:
| Index |
3 mo. ret. |
1 yr. ret. |
3 yr. ann. ret. |
5 yr. ann. ret. |
10 yr. ann. ret. |
15 yr. ann. ret. |
| MSCI EAFE |
-13.73% |
-28.55% |
-0.56% |
3.43% |
5.90% |
8.42% |
Source: Morningstar data as of 3/31/2001
Schwab's International Index-Investor Shares
Although this Schwab fund has only about one fifth the net assets
that Vanguard's Total International Stock Index has, it's well
worth at least looking into, not least of all because its expense
ratio is a low 0.58%. Interestingly, Schwab created its own index
for this fund to follow.
"Many of the international index funds out there are much
more broad in that they follow the MSCI EAFE index, which has
many more countries and many more
stocks," says Geri Hom, who manages the Schwab International.
"In seeking an international milieu for investors, Schwab
chose to create a low-cost index fund. The proprietary Schwab
International Index represents the 350 largest stocks in 14 developed
countries, so it is very much a blue chip international index."
By sticking to its proprietary index, Schwab's fund has avoided
the recent turmoil in some of the emerging markets, and the unpredictability
of foreign medium- and small-cap stocks, but it is also missing
out on some of the diversification which draws investors overseas.
This fund has a minimum purchase of $2,500 compared, for instance,
to $15,000 to get into Fidelity's international fund. In general,
this is a large-cap international fund that seems to be designed
to eliminate big unpleasant surprises in the market, while ensuring
lower trading, administrative, and capital gains tax costs.
Fidelity Spartan International Index
The Bankers Trust indexing team at Fidelity has a reputation
for indexing experience and excellence. At 0.35%, this fund's
expenses are comparable to the Vanguard International fund. This
fund closely tracks the MSCI EAFE, but it also has some leeway
in picking stocks.
Still, like the EAFE index, this fund is heavily slanted toward
Europe and away from emerging markets (except for a very few issues
from Hong Kong and Singapore, which Morgan Stanley doesn't even
consider emerging markets). Currently, one of this fund's greatest
claims to fame is that it has beaten the EAFE benchmark in each
of the last three years.