Middle East Exposure in Focus on MSCI Upgrade

The decision by the MSCI index family to upgrade Qatar and United Arab Emirates from “frontier markets” to “emerging markets” is causing ripple effects throughout the investment world—in both the performance of the underlying markets and shifting allocations with strategies dedicated to frontier markets.

Qatar and UAE have recently been nearly 40% of the MSCI Frontier Markets 100 Index, and their upgrade will result in a shift in higher allocations to Kuwait, another Middle Eastern country, and Nigeria.1

MSCI released the names of the individual securities being included in the MSCI Emerging Markets Indexs from both Qatar and UAE. Of the 19 stocks MSCI is adding to the MSCI Emerging Markets, 16 are in the WisdomTree Middle East Dividend Index (WT Middle East); as of May 31, these 16 stocks comprised almost half the exposure of this Index. The WT Middle East thus has half its weight in stocks that will be purchased by broad-based strategies tracking the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.

But there is another Middle Eastern country in focus as a result of this transition of Qatar and UAE: Kuwait is the largest exposure in the MSCI Frontier Markets 100 Index outside of Qatar and UAE and will see an increase in weight within frontier indexes once Qatar and UAE are removed and the Index and portfolios get rebalanced. Kuwait represents approximately 15% of the exposure in the WT Middle East and together with Qatar (32%) and UAE (29%), they make up more than 75% of the WT Middle East.2 In other words, approximately 75% of the weight of the WT Middle East is being impacted by this transitional upgrade.

The composition of the frontier market indexes is certainly going to undertake a dramatic shift once this upgrade is completed; it is occurring in stages on a monthly basis from the end of May through November.3 The exposures embedded in the WT Middle East offer a way to reflect what is happening in the transitional phase. For a look at the performance of the stocks being upgraded and how they compare versus the broader Middle East, we have provided the below analytics. Highlights:

• Both UAE and Qatar have outperformed the broader Middle East over the last one, three and five years.4

• UAE stocks on average have performed better across all periods displayed below compared to Qatar, but they have underperformed if you look back to pre-financial crisis levels.5 The financial sector makes up a large part of both markets, but it was a more significant drag on the UAE market. The financial sector has rebounded well and benefited both markets since the crisis lows.