| Emerging Markets iShares Begin Trading
By IndexFunds.com Staff
April 10, 2003 |
|
The iShares MSCI Emerging Markets began trading today on the
American Stock Exchange under the ticker EEM. The new exchange-traded
fund, managed by Barclays Global Investors, is benchmarked to
the MSCI Emerging Markets Free (EMF) index.
The fund will use a representative sampling strategy to approximate
index performance, and plans to hold approximately 200 local securities,
American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), and Global Depositary Receipts
(GDRs) to provide exposure to 20 equity markets.
We spoke with Feng Ding, senior portfolio manager in the international
equity portfolio management group at BGI, prior to the launch.
She is currently in charge of the international iShares team,
which manages 33 single-country, regional, global, and sector
iShares across the MSCI international and S&P global indices.
Q: How do the emerging markets iShares stack
up to comparable funds in terms of expenses?
A: The average expense ratio of the funds in Morningstar's
emerging markets category is 2.12%, while the iShares are set
at 0.75%. But there are other cost advantages as well, especially
in terms of turnover. Turnover is an important point in emerging
markets because this asset class has higher transaction costs.
Higher turnover translates into higher implicit costs that negatively
impact performance. According to Mornigstar, the average emerging
market fund turnover [as of December 2002] was 104%, which is
very high in our opinion. To give you a sense of the index turnover,
the MSCI Emerging Market Free index turnover is 16%.
Q: What's the case for holding emerging markets in
a portfolio, and how do emerging markets correlate with domestic
stocks?
A: In terms of strategic asset allocation, people look
at emerging markets as a way to gain exposure to economic growth
and opportunities outside the U.S. and other developed markets.
The second reason is to either provide enhanced returns or risk
diversification in the portfolio.
Emerging markets make up about 20% of the world's Gross Domestic
Product (GDP), a rather significant portion. Also, based on the
GDP growth figures for 2001, 14 of the 16 fastest-growing economies
were in emerging markets.
The risk diversification benefits of emerging markets really
come from reasonably low correlation with both the U.S. and developed
markets. The correlation vs. the U.S. using the Russell 3000 is
about 0.60; the correlation of the MSCI EMF index vs. the MSCI
EAFE is about 0.54. On average, we see our institutional clients
allocate roughly 5% to 10% of assets to emerging markets.
Q: How are emerging markets currently valued relative
to historical levels?
A: Emerging markets are currently at a pretty decent discount
relative to the U.S. and developed markets. They have the highest
yield of these three asset classes, and the lowest price-to-earnings
(p/e) ratio.
Looking at historical valuations of emerging markets, the p/e
is probably at its lowest point in five years. Generally speaking,
emerging markets are viewed as a good asset class to gain exposure
to any upswings in the global economy.
Q: How have active managers of emerging markets funds
fared against the MSCI EMF index?
A: We looked at the relative performance of funds in Morningstar's
emerging markets category vs. the index. For the period ending
December 2002, the median emerging markets fund has underperformed
the MSCI EMF index when you look at 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year returns.
I think that speaks to the fact that the underlying country volatility
is very high for emerging markets. Market timing and asset allocation
between countries are difficult to capture, and higher turnover
translates directly into higher transaction costs.