As competition for the growing market of indexed products intensifies, Satrix, SA’s oldest ETF provider, is stepping up its game. After listing two new ETFs earlier this year, the fund manager is planning to add three global ETFs to its product suite. These provide local investors with low-cost access to the world’s major indices via their local stockbroker, on a real-time basis, with no offshore intermediaries involved.
This note, on the Satrix MSCI Emerging Markets ETF, is the first of three looking at the three new Satrix ETFs. The Satrix Emerging Markets ETF is the first on the JSE to invest in emerging markets indices. The term “emerging markets” was coined by economists at the International Finance Corporation in 1981, when the World Bank subsidiary was promoting the first mutual fund investing in developing economies. Since then, references to emerging markets are widely used but definitions vary widely. There are several different ones on offer, as a Google search quickly shows. A definition we’re comfortable with is that an emerging market is a country with growth potential that has some characteristics of a developed market, but does not meet the size and infrastructure levels of a developed market.
The bulk of the world’s economic growth over the past few years has come from emerging markets and the IMF projects that over the next few years they will produce 70% of world growth, with China and India accounting for 40% of that. China and India will account for nearly 38% of the Satrix fund, giving South African investors good exposure to this growth. The graph below shows the growth from emerging markets versus advanced economies
This certainly widens the international exposures that are easily available to South Africans. The underlying index covers approximately 99% of the free float-adjusted market capitalisation of listed equities in 23 countries. It currently tracks 2,655 counters, which is a very large number, which we think leads to increased trading costs with little diversification benefit at the margin. That could be negative for overall performance. The ETF is also unlikely to give investors the rand hedge qualities that you are likely to find from other foreign ETFs that invest mostly in advanced economies because of the positive correlation between emerging market currencies and the rand. However, given that South Africa is in a recession and growth prospects for most emerging markets are significantly better, there may be a decoupling between South African and other emerging markets’ performance.
How to participate
The initial public offering (IPO) opened on Friday and will close on 17 July. During this period investors can buy shares directly through their broker or through Satrix ETF platforms. The ETF is expected to be listed on the JSE on 25 July.
Suitability
The ETF is ideal for someone looking for diversified exposure to emerging markets.
What it does
The Satrix MSCI Emerging Markets ETF aims to replicate the performance of the MSCI Emerging Markets Investable Markets Index, which captures companies across 23 countries. The index currently tracks 2,655 counters.
Advantages
Although invested offshore, this and other global ETFs are considered local assets, which means investing in them won’t affect your offshore asset allocation limit of R10m a year. The provide cheap, easy access to emerging market companies which provides a way to diversify exposures.
Disadvantage
Returns from underlying stocks are not encouraging. The index returned 7.9% in rand terms per year over the past five years. The high number of stocks in which it is invested may inhibit performance.
Risk: The performance of the fund may be affected by changes in economic and market conditions, political developments, changes in government policies or changes in legal, exchange control, regulatory and tax requirements.
Fees
The Satrix Emerging Markets ETF is expected to have a total expense ratio of 0.45%, which will be far cheaper than most foreign ETFs on the market.
Performance
The historical performance of the underlying index isn’t too impressive: it returned 7.86% a year over the past five years.
Alternatives:
There is no close alternative to this ETF but investors may consider AMI Big50 ex-SA ETF Atlas, which invests in both emerging and frontier markets in Africa. Frontier markets are developing countries with slower-growing economies than emerging markets.
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