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WisdomTree Files For Two Hedged Foreign Funds

Source: http://www.indexuniverse.com/sections/newsinfocus/5567-wisdomtree-files-for-two-hedged-foreign-funds.html?Itemid=3&utm_source=straightstocks.com&utm_medium=sidebar&utm_campaign=rss
Posted on Wednesday, March 18th, 2009 | In Exchange Traded Funds
Contributed by: IndexUniverse Staff (http://indexuniverse.com) -

The new ETFs plan to hedge against the U.S. dollar’s swings by investing in futures contracts of foreign currencies. 

 

WisdomTree Investments has filed requests to open two new international exchange-traded funds, both of which would use currency hedging strategies.

The WisdomTree DEFA Hedged Fund and the WisdomTree Emerging Markets Hedged Fund would invest in similar fashionw as current index-based ETFs offered by the company.

But each adds a different twist. The proposed ETFs plan to hedge each portfolio’s long-only exposure to equities by using different currencies. According to the filings, the process in each fund will be rules-based and tied to specially created benchmarks from WisdomTree.

Company officials declined on Wednesday to comment other than to verify the filing, which is dated March 16. According to the prospectuses of both, they’ll each come with an expense ratio of 0.63%. 

Here’s how it would work.

Much like the current WisdomTree DEFA (NYSE: DWM), the new WisdomTree DEFA Hedged version would invest in developed markets outside the U.S. and Canada. It would include companies that have paid at least $5 million in cash dividends on common stock shares annually. The underlying index, much like DWM’s, would weight individual names by regular cash dividend rates. 

The WisdomTree Emerging Markets Hedged Fund would resemble the WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income Fund (NYSE: DEM). But the current ETF only includes the top 30% in terms of dividend generating stocks. It would seem to include more of a high-yielding component in its screening processes than the proposed hedged version. 

Here’s the extra wrinkle of the new ETFs. Included in their indexes are the published one-month currency forward rates to the total equity exposure of each country. The rates will be taken from data compiled by WM/Reuters and applied as a means to adjust the value of each currency against the U.S. dollar. 

The aim is to produce higher returns than non-currency hedged funds when the greenback is on the rise. On the flip side, when the dollar is dropping relative to other currencies represented in each portfolio’s mix of countries represented by different stocks, the fund probably won’t do as well. 

You can read the prospectus for both funds here.

 

 

 

 

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About IndexUniverse Staff (http://indexuniverse.com)
IndexUniverse encompasses the world of indexing and beyond. Our website and related subsites cover product and market developments related to index funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), index derivatives (futures / options / swaps), and the sophisticated investment strategies which use these financial tools. Our goal is to provide the industry's best news, columns, research, and features about the dynamic field of index-based investing and trading. Industry professionals, individual investors, business/finance students and academic researchers will find various features targeting their interests and needs. We also provide valuable tools and data to assess markets and investment products, and specialized discussion boards for our registered members to exchange cutting-edge ideas and market views. We aim to be educational, thought-provoking, and most importantly, rigorously independent in our perspective.

The development of IndexUniverse was a global effort, originally led by Steven Schoenfeld and Jim Wiandt, supported by John Spence and a diverse team in the U.S., Europe and Latin America, and enhanced by editorial contributors from around the world. The site is now managed solely by Jim Wiandt and the global Index Publications LLC team. The site was originally started by Steven as a data and information complement to his book, Active Index Investing, published by Wiley Finance in July 2004. As he recognized the need and potential for such a resource, in August 2003, Steven partnered with Jim, who as editor of The Journal of Indexes similarly recognized the industry's need for timely, useful and independent information on products and markets.

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