Among Asia’s major economies, China has long been the benchmark against which other countries’ growth is measured. India, currently the continent’s third-largest economy behind China and Japan, appears poised to take the baton of economic growth leadership.
India’s economic rise carries with it implications for exchange traded funds such as the WisdomTree India Earnings Fund (EPI). The first U.S.-listed ETF to invest directly in locally traded India equities, EPI is a force in the country’s ETF category. Over the past three years, the WisdomTree ETF beat the MSCI India Index by 2,240 basis points while displaying comparable annualized volatility to the India benchmark.
Performance like that may be hard to repeat. But the long-term case for EPI is supported by robust expectations for the economy to which the ETF provides exposure.
“We expect Asia-Pacific’s growth engine to shift from China to South and Southeast Asia. And we project China’s GDP growth to slow to 4.6% in 2024 (2023: 5.4%), edge up to 4.8% in 2025, and return to 4.6% in 2026. We see India reaching 7.0% in 2026 (6.4%); Vietnam, 6.8% (4.9%); Philippines, 6.4% (5.4%); and Indonesia remaining steady at 5%,” according to S&P Global.
India Advantages
The $1.62 billion EPI, which turns 16 years old in February, has some advantages in that it’s not heavily reliant on India’s export story to drive returns. That could be a perk at a time when Asia exports are volatile and vulnerable to economic contraction in Western nations.
One of the other primary benefits offered by EPI is that it focuses on profitable Indian companies. That’s a clear advantage at a time when more investors are scrutinizing balance sheets and eschewing companies with large debt obligations and vulnerability to high interest rates.