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iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF
As of May 30, 2026 at 09:15 UTC
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About iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF
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Latest News
5 articlesSouth Korea's stock market has surged 55% year-to-date, driven primarily by semiconductor giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix capitalizing on AI-driven demand for memory chips. However, ETF investors should be aware that Korea ETFs like EWY are heavily concentrated bets on semiconductors rather than diversified country exposure. To mitigate concentration risk, investors are considering broader emerging market ETFs (EEM, VWO) or developed market alternatives (VEA, EFA), as well as single-country alternatives like Japan's EWJ.
VXUS and EEM are both international stock ETFs, but they differ significantly in approach and performance. VXUS offers broader diversification across developed and emerging markets with a lower 0.05% expense ratio and higher 2.99% dividend yield, while EEM focuses on emerging markets with a higher 0.72% expense ratio. Despite EEM's stronger 1-year return of 54.4% versus VXUS's 40.5%, VXUS has delivered superior long-term performance since 2011 (6.7% annualized vs. 4.2%) with lower risk and better diversification.
MEXC has listed the 16th batch of Ondo Finance tokenized stock trading pairs, adding four new spot pairs including a tokenized version of Eaton Corporation and three iShares ETFs (Emerging Markets, EAFE, and India). The listings expand user access to real-world assets onchain with 24/7 trading availability.
The article compares two ETFs: NZAC (State Street SPDR MSCI ACWI Climate Paris Aligned ETF) and EEM (iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF). EEM outperformed over the past year with 26.2% returns versus NZAC's 11.2%, but NZAC has better long-term performance over 3, 5, and 10-year periods. NZAC offers lower fees (0.12% vs 0.72%) and climate-focused ESG screening, while EEM provides higher dividend yield and deeper liquidity but carries greater volatility.
IEFA and EEM are two international ETFs with distinct characteristics. IEFA targets developed markets with a low 0.07% expense ratio, higher 3.6% dividend yield, and lower risk (30.41% max drawdown), making it suitable for income-focused and risk-averse investors. EEM focuses on emerging markets with higher growth potential, delivering 26.2% returns over the past year versus IEFA's 14.5%, but carries a higher 0.72% expense ratio and greater volatility (37.82% max drawdown).