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Friday, May 3, 2013

Three Global Dividend ETFs with 7% Yields

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, 409 W. ...
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, 409 W. Olympic Blvd., Los Angeles, California (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
By ETF Trends

Los Angeles, May.3, online stock trading .- Risk and returns often go hand-in-hand, and income hunters who are willing to stomach a little more risk can look overseas for attractive dividends in globally focused exchange traded funds.
With the Federal Reserve depressing yields on U.S. government bonds, investors have branched out to riskier investments for yields. [Surveying the Dividend ETF Landscape]
“What we have is money that had typically gone to fixed income now coming into equities,” Chris Wallis, chief investment officer of Vaughan Nelson Investment Management, said in a Wall Street Journal article. “They’re looking for bond substitutes and it doesn’t mean that the money is going to exit and go either to cyclical stocks or go to cash. I think it’s going to stay where it is.” [Dividend ETFs: Yields Falling as Market Rallies]
For starters, the Global X SuperDividend ETF (SDIV) , which tracks the performance of 100 equally weighted companies with some of the highest dividend yields in the world, comes with a 7.67% 12-month dividend yield and a 0.58% expense ratio. The fund is up 11.3% year-to-date.
Regional breakdowns include North America 33.6%, Latin America 3.4%, U.K. 12.3%, Developed Europe 13.2%, Emerging Europe 3.8%, Australasia 23.7% and developed Asia 10.0%. The fund is primarily composed of developed market stocks at 92.8% of the portfolio, with a 7.2% allocation toward emerging markets.
Sector allocations include basic materials 2.3%, consumer cyclical 8.4%, financials 17.5%, real estate 20.5%, telecom 11.8%, energy 4.7%, industrials 9.5%, technology 4.0%, consumer defensive 3.0%, healthcare 5.9% and utilities 12.7%.
The SPDR S&P International Dividend ETF (DWX) also offers an attractive 7.35% dividend yield. The fund tracks mostly non-U.S. mid-cap companies as it weights holdings by dividend yield, but the highest component weighting is 3.8% of the fund. DWX has a 0.45% expense ratio. The ETF is up 5.1% year-to-date.
However, the high yields do not come without risks.
“It gives the most portfolio weight to the companies with the highest yield, which boosts income but can be risky during times of market distress,” according to Morningstar analyst Abby Woodham. “During such periods, high-yielding companies are the unloved bunch, and can trade at a significant discount to their fundamental fair value.”
DWX has a significant tilt toward Australia at 28.3% of the overall portfolio, followed by Spain 6.9%, Finland 5.7%, U.K. 5.4%, Sweden 4.8%, Canada 4.8%, Turkey 3.9%, France 3.9%, Thailand 3.6%, Israel 3.5%, Italy 3.4%, Norway 3.0%, Switzerland 3.0%, South Africa 2.6%, Netherlands 2.5%., Belgium 2.4%, Czech Republic 2.0%, Germany 1.8%, Brazil 1.5%, Portugal 1.5%, Denmark 1.5%, and China 1.4%. The ETF has a 15.3% exposure to emerging markets and 84.7% to developed markets.
Sector allocations include financials 21.6%, telecom services 18.3%, utilities 15.3%, energy 11.5%, materials 9.4%, industrials 7.7%, information technology 4.9%, consumer discretionary 4.3%, health care 3.2% and consumer staples 3.0%.
The Guggenheim S&P Global Dividend Opportunities Index ETF (LVL) offers a 7.12% 12-month yield. The ETF is comprised of American depositary receipts, or “ADRs,” that offer high dividend yields. LVL has a 0.60% expense ratio. The ETF is up 5.3% year-to-date.
Country allocations include U.S. 19.6%, Australia 16.0%, Sweden 7.1%, Israel 6.5%, Belgium 5.6%, Canada 5.1%, France 4.4%, South Africa 3.9%, Thailand 3.7% and Turkey 3.3%. About 85.1% of the portfolio is allocated toward developed economies and 14.9% in emerging markets.
Sector allocations include telecom services 20.7%, financials 19.3%, energy 11.0%, utilities 11.0%, industrials 9.6%, consumer staples 9.1%, materials 9.0%, consumer discretionary 8.4% and information technology 1.7%. ...
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