Emerging Markets ETFs Could Get Help From Fed | ETF Trends

Considering U.S. interest rates remain elevated and the dollar has been strong for much of this year, emerging markets equities have notched impressive performances in 2024. Though well behind the S&P 500, the widely followed MSCI Emerging Markets Index is up 8.3% year-to-date.

Some exchange traded funds are doing even better than that. Just look at WisdomTree Emerging Markets Quality Dividend Growth Fund (DGRE) which is up 11.47% year-to-date as of Aug. 28. To its credit, DEM has also been less volatile this year on an annualized basis than the MSCI gauge.

These are encouraging signs. However, DGRE has the potential to build on its 2024 gains. If the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates in September, particularly if that move leads to more downside for the greenback, DGRE may benefit. Precedent bodes well. Prior eras of dollar weakness have coincided with upside for the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.

DGRE Merits Consideration

DGRE’s quality overlay could prove particularly advantageous because the stark reality is that the emerging markets complex isn’t home to as many quality stocks as are found in the U.S. That gets into a conversation about geography. DGRE allocates more than a third of its portfolio to Indian stocks – a good thing because India has been the star among large developing economies over the past several years.

Taiwain, a tech-heavy, high-quality market in its own right, has an established track record of dividend growth. This confirms it merits its status as DGRE’s second-largest geographic exposure at almost 14% behind India. South Korea, the ETF’s third-largest country weight, has room to grow payouts, but offers other quality attributes.