Benchmark Mutual Fund, Indias exchange-traded fund (ETF)-specialist fund company launched an ETF that is linked to the Hang Seng index of the Hong Kong stock exchange. ETFs are exchange-traded funds, that is, mutual funds that are traded on stock exchanges such as stocks. ETFs are always linked to some underlying index or other price they are not actively managed by an investment manager. There are a number of ETFs in India that are either linked to one of the indices or to Gold prices.
The Hang Seng ETF, which is called Hang Seng BeES, will be available for trading on the National Stock Exchange (NSE). The interesting thing about this ETF is that it offers the Indian investor a way to diversify geographically in an easy and convenient manner. On the face of it, such diversification should be a good idea because it would offer an investor an asset that may counteract a weakness in one area withbetter returns in another.
However, thats the theory. We need to see whether such diversity is actually offered by the Hang Seng. The connection between two investments can be of many different types. The ideal would be if the two assets have a negative or inverse correlation. This means that when one asset does badly, the other does well. Traditionally, gold and stocks and stocks and bonds were supposed to have such correlations. Certainly, the Indian stock markets and the Hong Kong market do not have this kind of correlation.
In fact the two markets actually have a direct correlation. When one does well, the other does well too. The correlation is very high. Over the past five years, the two indices had a correlation of 0.93 on a scale where perfect correlation is 1 and perfect inverse correlation is -1. The closer the correlation is to -1, the more useful two assets are as diversification for each other. In this sense, buying the Hang Seng ETF is completely useless from the diversification point of view.
However, thats a theoretical point of view. If two markets gain and lose together but one generally does better than the other, then for the practical investor seeking to maximise his gains, thats a useful kind of diversification. In this sense, the Nifty has better performance over the past five years. However, if one looks a little more closely, then this better performance is basically limited to the pre-2006 period and to the recovery from the crash last year. Past performance is just a good source of 20:20 hindsight, which is ultimately useless.
Going forward, diversifying into the Hang Seng is basically a call on whether China will do better than India and whether this difference will be large enough to be useful. My guess is that it wont be. Hang Seng being available on NSE will give the punters yet another security to play with. For fund investors who genuinely want to take a call on China and that region, there are X funds (normal, not ETFs) already available that invest in China to varying degrees. These are the Fortis China-India fund, Miraes China Advantage Fund and the JP Morgans JF Greater China Equity Offshore Fund.
However, investors just need to be clear that investing in China-related stocks is not a diversification but an independent call about China.
Written by: Mr. Dhirendra Shah
I would like to add a few more words
as far as I now it can't be considered as direct bet on china as Mainland China has a separate index called shanghai composite. so it's one more No to the above
It's true that emerging markets provide good returns but Hangseng might not be the only aswer if we have something like BRC Fund(Without I-India) then it can be called diversification across geographies(though R, C belong to Asia). So something like ABCS is needed
Australia -- Mines and Minerals
Brazil -- Agriculture and allied products
China -- Manufacturing
Saudi -- crude.
The problem with Hangseng is only 50% of Mainland china's companies are listed in Hangseng so what we effectively needed was Shanghai Composite to reflect China not Hangseng
The Hang Seng ETF, which is called Hang Seng BeES, will be available for trading on the National Stock Exchange (NSE). The interesting thing about this ETF is that it offers the Indian investor a way to diversify geographically in an easy and convenient manner. On the face of it, such diversification should be a good idea because it would offer an investor an asset that may counteract a weakness in one area withbetter returns in another.
However, thats the theory. We need to see whether such diversity is actually offered by the Hang Seng. The connection between two investments can be of many different types. The ideal would be if the two assets have a negative or inverse correlation. This means that when one asset does badly, the other does well. Traditionally, gold and stocks and stocks and bonds were supposed to have such correlations. Certainly, the Indian stock markets and the Hong Kong market do not have this kind of correlation.
In fact the two markets actually have a direct correlation. When one does well, the other does well too. The correlation is very high. Over the past five years, the two indices had a correlation of 0.93 on a scale where perfect correlation is 1 and perfect inverse correlation is -1. The closer the correlation is to -1, the more useful two assets are as diversification for each other. In this sense, buying the Hang Seng ETF is completely useless from the diversification point of view.
However, thats a theoretical point of view. If two markets gain and lose together but one generally does better than the other, then for the practical investor seeking to maximise his gains, thats a useful kind of diversification. In this sense, the Nifty has better performance over the past five years. However, if one looks a little more closely, then this better performance is basically limited to the pre-2006 period and to the recovery from the crash last year. Past performance is just a good source of 20:20 hindsight, which is ultimately useless.
Going forward, diversifying into the Hang Seng is basically a call on whether China will do better than India and whether this difference will be large enough to be useful. My guess is that it wont be. Hang Seng being available on NSE will give the punters yet another security to play with. For fund investors who genuinely want to take a call on China and that region, there are X funds (normal, not ETFs) already available that invest in China to varying degrees. These are the Fortis China-India fund, Miraes China Advantage Fund and the JP Morgans JF Greater China Equity Offshore Fund.
However, investors just need to be clear that investing in China-related stocks is not a diversification but an independent call about China.
Written by: Mr. Dhirendra Shah
I would like to add a few more words
as far as I now it can't be considered as direct bet on china as Mainland China has a separate index called shanghai composite. so it's one more No to the above
It's true that emerging markets provide good returns but Hangseng might not be the only aswer if we have something like BRC Fund(Without I-India) then it can be called diversification across geographies(though R, C belong to Asia). So something like ABCS is needed
Australia -- Mines and Minerals
Brazil -- Agriculture and allied products
China -- Manufacturing
Saudi -- crude.
The problem with Hangseng is only 50% of Mainland china's companies are listed in Hangseng so what we effectively needed was Shanghai Composite to reflect China not Hangseng