The European economy is gradually witnessing broad-based growth.
Thanks to reduced debt worries, strong growth in some of the key
member nations and solid data, the European economy nicely
rebounded from the final quarter of last year.
Euro zone business activity during the second quarter has seen a
solid start – the fastest in almost three years (read: Hot Euro
Zone ETFs for Summer).
This is especially true as the Markit’s Composite Purchasing
Managers Index for the Euro zone rose to 54.0 in April from 53.1 in
March. Business activity is picking up even in the weaker Euro zone
nations such as Spain and Ireland. Growth in these two nations is
the fastest in at least the last six years.
Moreover, thanks to a boost in new orders, the index for the Euro
zone service industry rose to a 34-month high of 53.1 in April from
52.2 in March. The most important thing to be noted is that the
services business activity is showing growth across the board –
France, Germany, Italy, Ireland and Spain all grew for the first
time since May 2011 (also see Direxion Debuts Leveraged Europe
ETFs).
Adding to the joy, the 28-nation European Union (EU) is expected to
expand by 1.6%, as per European officials. If so, this would mark a
sharp uptick after just 0.1% growth in 2013.
For 2015, the economy is expected to expand at an even higher rate
of 2%. However, investors should also note that rising
geo-political tensions with Russia, a sustained period of low
inflation and lack of structural reform could still impact the
economy.
Though at a near record high, unemployment across the 28-nation EU
fell to 10.5% in March from 10.9% in the year-ago month.
Unemployment, however, remained stubbornly stable with February
levels. However, unemployment is expected to drop to 10.1% in 2015,
according to EU officials.
Solid business, rising exports, stronger currency and falling
unemployment make for a rewarding combination. A look now at
European Equity ETFs could be a good idea to capture this surge,
especially so if it is backed by a solid Zacks ETF Rank.
About the Zacks ETF Rank
The Zacks ETF Rank provides a recommendation for the ETF in the
context of our outlook for the underlying industry, sector, style
box or asset class (Read: Zacks ETF Rank Guide).
The aim of our models is to select the best ETFs within each risk
category. We assign each ETF one of the five ranks within each risk
bucket. Thus, the Zacks ETF Rank reflects the expected return of an
ETF relative to other products with a similar level of risk.
For investors seeking to apply this methodology to their portfolio
in the European Equity ETF space, we have taken a closer look at
the buy ranked
iShares Europe ETF
(IEV
). This ETF has a Zacks ETF
Rank of 2 or ‘Buy’ and is detailed below (see all European
Equity ETF here
)
.
IEV in Focus
Launched in July 2000, IEV is a passively managed fund designed to
deliver the return of the European equity asset class. The fund
tracks the S&P Europe 350 Index and has amassed $3.4 billion
since its inception.
IEV adds a well-diversified flavor to a portfolio and is exposed to
companies from the entire spectrum of market capitalization levels,
but with a heavy bias to large cap stocks.
From an individual holdings point of view, the assets of the fund
are very well spread out. It does a great job in holding just a
mere 19.4% in its top 10 holdings considering the fact that it
holds 356 securities in total. Nestle, Novartis and Roche Holdings
are the top three holdings of the fund, each having an allocation
between 2.2% and 2.8%.
As far as sector holdings are concerned, it relies heavily on
Financials, followed by Consumer Staples, Healthcare, Industrials
and Energy, each with double-digit exposure. All these sectors
combined account for more than half of the fund assets.
As far as geographic reach goes, the fund allocates more towards
stronger economies like the U.K. (26.93%), France (15.31%),
Switzerland (14.26%) and Germany (13.13%) (read: Time to Bet
on the British ETF?).
Bottom Line
The fund has returned 21.3% in the past one year and has gained
4.1% in the year-to-date time frame. The fund has a decent dividend
yield of 2.23% though it charges a slightly higher fee of 60 basis
points. Still, thanks to its top rank and the promising trends in
Europe, IEV could definitely be a European fund to keep an eye on
for the future.
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ISHARS-EURO (IEV): ETF Research Reports
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