Two exchange-traded funds focusing on this fast-growing nation debut this month.
February 21, 2008
By Amy Bickers
Fueling the expansion has been rapid growth in services, including call centers, software design and back-office out-sourcing. The ability of Indian companies to design and produce well-made goods at a fraction of
The booming economy, hefty corporate profits and an unprecedented flow of foreign investment have propelled a spectacular surge in Indian share prices. Over the past five years through February 20, the Bombay Stock Exchange's 30-stock Sensitive Index, or Sensex, returned an annualized 43% (in dollar terms). Real estate, banking and information-technology stocks have been at the forefront of the boom.
The outlook for the Indian economy remains bright, but the picture for Indian stocks is murkier. Volatility has increased amid concerns about the global credit crunch and the rupee's strength against the dollar, which hurts Indian exporters. Year-to-date through February 20 the Sensex has lost 13%.
Meanwhile, the fund industry is supplying
ETFs, which trade just like stocks, are funds that hold pools of securities and are designed to follow a specific index. They include mechanisms designed to keep the funds' share prices close to the value of their underlying assets.
Emerging from the gate first is WisdomTree India Earnings. Relative stock weightings in this ETF, like others from WisdomTree, will be based on a company's earnings rather than market capitalization. The ETF (symbol EPI) will draw from a universe of 150 profitable Indian companies that WisdomTree will reviewed annually.
WidsomTree's research director, Luciano Siracusano, says it's important for investors to consider the fund in the context of their overall investment plan. "People need diversity by having exposure around the world," he says. "But investing in
Also due out soon is PowerShares India Portfolio (PIN). This ETF, which is scheduled to start trading before March 1, will track an index of 50 stocks developed by Indus Advisors. The index is designed to represent the overall Indian stock market.
Exchange-traded notes are similar to ETFs. But instead of owning a basket of stocks, as ETFs do, ETNs are a type of debt instrument that's linked to the performance of an underlying index.
The iPath MSCI
The ETN had a great run in 2007, but '08 has been a stinker. The stock, which closed at $76.38 on Feburary 21, is 35% off the $118 intra-day high it hit on January 14.
For investors who want a traditional open-end fund, all but one of the five choices are unattractive because they levy sales charges. The exception is the no-load Matthews India fund (MINDX). In 2006, its first full year, the fund returned 36%, compared with a 51% gain for the SENSEX (in dollar terms). In 2007, Matthews India soared 64%, trailing the index by three percentage points.
So far, 2008 has been difficult. The fund has lost 17% year-to-date through February 21. Co-manager Sharat Shroff attributes the drop to the fund's heavy weighting in consumer stocks, which have performed poorly recently. "People in
Key holdings include Infosys Technologies (INFY), a technology outsourcing company; Dabur
The only other open-end fund with a track record of at least a year is Eaton Vance Greater India. Its class A shares (ETGIX), which levy a front-end sales charge of 5.75%, have returned an annualized 45% over the past five years through February 20. Top holdings include industrial materials giant Reliance Industries and HDFC Bank.
Investors can also buy into
Both
But the fund's NAV has dropped 16% so far this year, and its share price has fallen 20%. As of February 20, the fund, which closed that day at $43.40, sold at a 5.9% discount to NAV. The fund's annual expense ratio is 1.35%.
The performance of
The fund, which carries an expense ratio if 1.41%, recently sold for a 5% discount to NAV. The shares closed at $52.47 on February 20.
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