Bespoke Investment Group:
Summary ° Most country ETFs are sitting on solid year-to-date returns.
° Here we take a look at a snapshot of more than forty country ETFs traded on US exchanges.
° The average year-to-date change of all these country ETFs is already above 7%, while eleven are already up 10%+ and three are up 20%+.
ReadAs domestic equities have struggled to hang onto gains so far this year, most country ETFs are already sitting on solid year-to-date returns.
Below is a snapshot of more than forty country ETFs traded on US exchanges. The average year-to-date change of all these country ETFs is already above 7%, while eleven are already up 10%+ and three are up 20%+. Peru (EPU) is up the most at +25%, followed by Colombia (COLO) and South Korea (EWY) at just over 20%.
Note that all seven G7 country ETFs (highlighted in light blue) are up less than the overall YTD average, with Japan (EWJ) up the most of this small group at +4.8%. The US (SPY) ranks 2nd to last of the G7 with its 1.6% YTD gain in front of only France (EWQ) at 1.5%.
Three country ETFs are in the red so far this year: Vietnam (VNAM), Kuwait (KWT), and India (INDA).
Comments
Latin America, Emerging Europe and a few others seem to be on fire.
@Crash,
I was able to access this article via Mark's link.
Institutional funds are moving elsewhere since 2025 and one can verify that on MFO Premium’s money flow.
U.S. stocks will outperform foreign stocks for a number of years.
A transition occurs and then foreign stocks often take the lead for years.
The duration and timing of this cycle are, of course, unpredictable.
US Equity vs. International Equity 5-Year Monthly Rolling Returns
https://www.hartfordfunds.com/practice-management/client-conversations/investing-for-growth/us-and-international-markets-have-moved-in-cycles.html
Good link on the international cycles. If you only look at 5,10,15 year returns, then you would invest 0% in international markets. Same for precious metals.