Underrated Benchmark Indexes and
Barclays unveils World Real Estate ETF
August 3, 2007
SAN DIEGO (ETFguide.com) - As
domestic real estate investment trust (REIT) indexes continue their downward
slide, investors in funds tracking them are looking for cover. And international
real estate may be the ticket.
To that end, Barclays Global Investors (BGI) has
introduced the iShares S&P World ex-U.S. Property Index Fund (Ticker: WPS),
which began trading on the NYSE today.
The new fund has an annual expense ratio of 0.48
percent and will compete head-to-head with the SPDR DJ Wilshire International
Real Estate ETF (Ticker: RWX). The SPDR fund also aims to track international
real estate stocks and carries an expense ratio of 0.59 percent.
The new iShares fund is the first international REIT
ETF to complement the seven U.S. real estate funds managed by BGI.
The underlying index is composed of companies
engaged in international property development, rental, management, and
investment. The geographic mix of companies is broad and comes from Australia,
Canada, Denmark, Germany, France, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, the United
Kingdom, and others.
As of the end of May, the index had a total market
capitalization of approximately $615 billion.
“The iShares S&P World ex.-U.S. Property Index Fund meets
several important needs of investors – accessing a market with a cost effective,
tradable investment vehicle and diversification beyond what U.S. real estate can
provide,” said Noel Archard, Head of U.S. iShares Product Development. “Many
U.S. investors have trouble investing in the non-U.S. real estate market due to
high costs, lack of liquidity and ways to access it. As more REIT and REIT-like
structures are created outside of the U.S., BGI expects more individual
investors and financial advisors to consider international real estate as an
investment.”
As of June 30, 2007,
BGI has introduced 17 new iShares Funds and has captured most net flow of U.S.
listed ETFs this year, gathering $22 billion of the $32 billion in ETF net
flows.
|