Investors are well aware that 2015 has been a brutal year for emerging markets equities and currencies. With the dollar strengthening and the Federal Reserve poised to raise interest rates later this year, exchange-traded funds holding developing world debt denominated in local currencies have also been punished in 2015.
What Are Some Options?
So, give the WisdomTree Emerging Markets Corporate Bond Fund (WisdomTree Trust (NASDAQ: EMCB)) some credit for being down just 6.5 percent year-to-date. Obviously, that performance is nothing to crow about, but the largest U.S.-focused investment-grade corporate bond ETF has also traded lower this year.
Looking At EMCB
Credit risk is not substantial with EMCB, as bonds rated AA, A or BBB combine for nearly 52 percent of the ETF's weight. And the good news is the nearly 80 bonds held by EMCB are dollar-denominated, meaning the ETF is less vulnerable to changes in Federal Reserve policy.
“While neutralizing the currency headwind to returns did improve the picture, it was still not quite enough for a positive return. However, this shows just how important it is to think carefully about different emerging market options. We think that pairing an investment vehicle like EMCB with other emerging market investments that may have currency exposure could offer an interesting strategy,” adds WisdomTree.
EMCB, which allocates nearly 27 percent of its combined weight to Chinese and Hong Kong corporates, has a 30-day SEC yield of 5.16 percent and an effective duration of 5.19 years.
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