WisdomTree recently introduced a new family of dividend growth Indexes, with the latest addition being an Index dedicated to the emerging markets. This new
Emerging Markets Dividend Growth Index (WTEMDG) provides a complementary strategy to our first Index—the
WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income Index (WTEMHY), which now has a six-year history of live performance and focuses on stocks with the highest
dividend yields1. The last six years involved two particularly tough markets, occurring during 2008 and 2011, that in essence stress-tested this high-yield selection and
Dividend Stream® weighting of WTEMHY.
High-dividend-yield stocks often have lower
volatility and lower
beta , and this Index’s live track record has borne that out, as WTEMHY’s beta has been 0.81 since its inception
2. But in the last few years, WTEMHY’s exposure to more cyclical sectors has increased. Notably, energy and materials stocks
3 , which have the two highest betas of the 10 sectors
4, constitute 19.7% and 17.3%, respectively, of WTEMHY as of June 30, 2013. WTEMHY has a process that searches for value with the dividend yield selection methodology and then emphasizes it further with its
Dividend Stream weighting. Some of these more cyclical sectors are where that value is being represented today.
Positioning of Dividend Growth versus Value
The new WTEMDG has a very different stock, sector and country composition than WTEMHY.
For starters, there is not much overlap between WTEMHY and WTEMDG. As of June 30, 2013, the two Indexes shared only 41 constituents out of a total of 382 for WTEMHY and 253 for WTEMDG.
• The common constituents represent only 17% of the weight of WTEMHY, which means that most of WTEMDG’s stocks are additive and new compared to 83% of WTEMHY.
• The common holdings represent 33% of WTEMDG, meaning two-thirds of its weight is not in WTEMHY and would be completely additive exposure.
While WTEMDG does not have a history of past performance to examine, we can calculate a combined beta of the Index based on the historical volatility of its underlying components. We view this as a way to gauge the collective volatility of the stocks being selected.
The estimated beta for WTEMDG is 0.92 versus 1.03 for WTEMHY as of June 30, 2013
5 . Of course the future is uncertain, but the Index methodologies are picking very different mixes of underlying stocks that are contributing to these estimated betas.
Relative Sector Weights and Underlying Betas for WTEMHY and WTEMDG (as of 6/30/2013)
Sector Exposures (as of 6/30/2013)
Sectors leading the beta reduction in WTEMDG vs. WTEMHY:
• Lower allocation to higher-beta Energy, Materials and Financial stocks
• Biggest is the 20% position in Consumer Staples stocks, which have a .75 beta vs. the
MSCI Emerging Markets Index; this sector receives a marginal weight in WTEMHY, at only 2%, as its dividend yields are low compared to those in other emerging market equity sectors.
The sector exposures are intertwined with the country exposures. As of June 30, 2013:
• WTEMDG gives much less weight to Russia, one of the higher-beta countries, than does WTEMHY.
• WTEMDG gives more weight to Mexico, Indonesia and Thailand (“MIT”) than it does to Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC). By contrast, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index gives almost four times more weight to BRIC countries than to MIT.
• South Korea and Taiwan: Combined, they represent just over one-quarter of the weight of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index but less than 10% of WTEMDG.
For a more thorough analysis of the country and sector exposures, please read our market insight here.
Conclusion: A Differentiated Exposure for Emerging Market Equities
WisdomTree has been a pioneer in creating Indexes of dividend payers for the emerging markets. We started with an Index that focuses on the highest-dividend-yielding part of the dividend-paying market—a strict valuation-based selection requirement. The introduction of this new growth-oriented Index provides a natural complement—these stocks have lower current dividend yields but are expected to grow those dividends faster over time. We believe the contrasting sector and country exposures allow investors to tailor exposure to the emerging markets in a more precise and balanced way.
Unless otherwise stated, data source is WisdomTree.
1Refers to initial constituent eligibility for inclusion in WTEMHY contingent upon being in the top 30% of stocks by trailing 12-month dividend yield from within the broader WisdomTree Emerging Markets Dividend Index.
2Sources: Bloomberg, Zephyr StyleADVISOR. Measured against the MSCI Emerging Markets Index for the period from 6/1/2007 to 6/30/2013.
3Refers to those stocks in the MSCI Emerging Markets Energy and Materials indexes.
4Sources: Bloomberg, Zephyr StyleADVISOR. Betas are calculated for the MSCI Emerging Markets Energy and Materials indexes against the MSCI Emerging Markets Index and then ranked against the 10 MSCI Emerging Markets sector indexes.
5Source: Bloomberg.
Important Risks Related to this Article
Dividends are not guaranteed, and a company’s future ability to pay dividends may be limited. A company currently paying dividends may cease paying dividends at any time. You cannot invest directly in an index.