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3 Choices for Those Expecting an Emerging-Markets Rebound

Innovative emerging-markets funds may catch the eye, but the traditional type has the edge for most investors.

Investors who believe that the sell-off in the developing world is a buying opportunity will find that they have an abundance of options. Indeed, as we wrote in our recent research paper, "The Growing Complexity of the Emerging-Markets Fund," there now are more than 300 funds in the diversified emerging-markets Morningstar Category (open-end and exchange-traded funds combined). A daunting task faces investors looking over this group. The emerging-markets equity-fund landscape now includes four separate varieties besides the traditional type of portfolio: geographically flexible offerings, small-/mid-cap funds, multiasset offerings, and frontier-markets funds.

  • Traditional funds focus on large-cap stocks and favor the bigger emerging markets. These funds used to be the only choice for investors, and they still compose approximately three fourths of the category.
  • Geographically flexible funds invest not only in typical emerging-markets firms, but also invest significant chunks of their assets in companies that have extensive business in the developing world, but are headquartered in the United States or other developed markets. The first of these funds was launched in 1999, and there now are more than 20 such offerings.
  • Small-/mid-cap funds focus on companies beyond the big, widely owned names. There are approximately two dozen of these funds at present, and all but one of them has opened in the past decade. Multiasset funds divide their assets between emerging-markets stocks and emerging-markets bonds (and in some cases currencies and more). There now are nine such funds, and all of them are less than four years old.
  • Frontier-markets funds target stocks in countries that rank below emerging markets in terms of stock-market access and other factors, such as Colombia, Kenya, Kuwait, Nigeria, and Pakistan. The first of these funds opened in 2008, and there are 15 such funds currently.

Some of the newer funds deserve attention from investors, and we will cover those in a column later this month. For the most part, though, the traditional variety makes the most sense for the majority of investors, so we highlight three of the best ones below. All are Morningstar Medalists.

Invesco Developing Markets

GTDDX has an exceptionally seasoned and stable management team. Steve Cao and Borge Endresen have served as managers since 2003; Mark Jason worked on the fund for six years before becoming a comanager in 2009; and Brent Bates became a comanager in 2014 after working on the fund for nine years. The managers employ an attractive growth discipline that is fairly conservative as well as rather distinctive. For example, they tend to invest more than most rivals in the smaller emerging markets. Although the fund posted weak results in 2015, it has held up better than most peers in early 2016’s sharp sell-off, as it did in 2011's troubled climate. Thus it still has a sound long-term record. It's also less costly than most other emerging-markets funds.

Vanguard Emerging Markets Stock Index

VEMAX (VWO for the ETF share class) has an ultra-low cost, which gives it a sizable and enduring edge over the competition, but that’s not the only factor in its favor. Vanguard is a first-rate parent with a long history of treating fundholders well and delivering the goods with index offerings. The team that is in charge here is exceptionally well suited for the task at hand. The fund has done an excellent job of tracking its benchmark over time, and its long-term record is solid. Investors should be aware, however, that its already-large China weighting is getting even bigger as it adds China A-shares to its portfolio. At the end of 2015, the fund had nearly 30% of assets in China, compared with a diversified emerging-markets Morningstar Category average of about 20%.

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About the Authors

William Samuel Rocco

Senior Analyst, Equity Strategies, Manager Research
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Bill Rocco is a senior manager research analyst, equity strategies, for Morningstar Research Services LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc. He specializes in international-stock and emerging-markets funds and is the lead analyst covering asset managers Harding Loevner, Matthews and Seafarer. Rocco is a member of the Morningstar Analyst Ratings Committee for international-equity funds. He joined Morningstar in 1994 as a mutual fund analyst.

Rocco holds a bachelor's degree in political science from Duke University and a master's degree in comparative politics from Georgetown University.

Gregg Wolper

Senior Analyst, Equity Strategies, Manager Research
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Gregg Wolper, Ph.D., is a senior manager research analyst, equity strategies, for Morningstar Research Services LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc. He covers equity strategies and sits on the Morningstar Analyst Ratings Committee for international-equity funds. Wolper covers a variety of international- and domestic-equity strategies from asset managers including Invesco, GQG, and Sound Shore. Wolper joined Morningstar as a closed-end fund analyst in 1992 and has held several positions within the company, including associate director of fund analysis. In addition to researching individual funds, he also writes articles for Morningstar.com, Morningstar FundInvestor, and Morningstar Magazine.

Wolper holds a bachelor’s degree in history, with high honors, from the University of Michigan. He also holds a master’s degree and a doctorate in history from the University of Chicago, with a specialization in U.S. foreign relations.

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