In recent years and decades, numerous emerging countries have had stronger economic growth than developed industrial countries. More favorable demographic developments with a high proportion of young people, growing middle classes and a corresponding increase in prosperity as well as often a focus on technological progress can speak in favor of including emerging markets in one’s own portfolio.
With the Amundi Core MSCI Emerging Markets Swap UCITS ETF Dist you can use this potential broadly and cost-effectively as an addition to your portfolio.
The “emerging markets” include China, Taiwan, India, South Korea, Brazil and South Africa – countries with young populations, growing middle classes and a lot of catching up to do in terms of consumption, infrastructure and Digitalization. This is exactly where many of the companies that could capture global market share in the future are created.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Indexwhich the Amundi Core MSCI Emerging Markets Swap UCITS ETF Dist tracks, brings together large and medium-sized companies, i.e. large and mid-caps, from 24 emerging markets and covers around 85% of the freely tradable market capitalization. This means you are not investing in individual stocks, but rather in the broad growth trend of entire economies.
Now check the Amundi Core MSCI Emerging Markets Swap UCITS ETF Dist as an emerging market component in your portfolio.
Our investment idea:
The Amundi Core MSCI Emerging Markets Swap UCITS ETF Dist
Broad diversification across countries and industries
The index includes around 1,200 companies from a wide range of sectors – from IT and financial stocks to consumer goods, industry and raw materials. The country heavyweights are currently China, Taiwan, India and South Korea, supplemented by other countries such as Brazil, South Africa and Mexico. At the same time, you can take advantage of the opportunities offered by technology champions, financial institutions and consumer stocks, which in turn benefit from growing local wealth.
The broad diversification allows country-specific risks such as political uncertainties or stronger economic fluctuations, which are typical for emerging countries, to be cushioned. The return potential of high-growth, developing countries remains intact. Emerging markets can therefore be ideal as a long-term addition and supplement to existing industrialized country or world ETFs.
How to take advantage of emerging markets with the Amundi ETF
- Core building block for investing in emerging markets: Representation of the MSCI Emerging Markets Net Total Return USD Index with large and mid-caps from 24 developing countries.
- High diversification: Around 1,200 stocks from a wide range of industries.
- Cost-effective: running costs of 0.14% p. a. (Administration and operating costs).
- Easy to trade: Like a share via the securities portfolio on leading stock exchanges.
Conclusion: emerging countries as a growth engine in the portfolio
Investing in emerging markets is not a short-term investment, but a strategic decision: you focus on countries with higher growth potential, better demographics and increasing importance in the global economy – while at the same time broadly diversifying your portfolio.
If you want to use this potential without having to worry about individual stocks or country quotas, you can check whether the Amundi Core MSCI Emerging Markets Swap UCITS ETF Dist (ISIN LU2573966905) fits into your own portfolio as a long-term addition.
Amundi Core MSCI Emerging Markets Swap UCITS ETF Dist at finanzen.net
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