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State Street SPDR Dow Jones International Real Estate ETF
As of May 30, 2026 at 10:47 UTC
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About State Street SPDR Dow Jones International Real Estate ETF
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Latest News
5 articlesThe article compares two real estate ETFs: Vanguard's VNQ, which focuses on domestic U.S. real estate with a low 0.13% expense ratio and $64.6B in AUM, and State Street's RWX, which provides international real estate exposure but charges a higher 0.59% expense ratio with only $276.9M in AUM. Both offer identical 3.6% dividend yields, but VNQ has outperformed RWX over the past year (13.44% vs 12.40%). The choice depends on whether investors prefer domestic focus with lower costs or international diversification.
RWR and RWX are two State Street real estate ETFs with distinct strategies: RWR focuses on U.S. REITs with lower fees (0.25% expense ratio) and $1.8B in AUM, while RWX offers international real estate exposure at higher cost (0.59% expense ratio) with $310.5M in AUM. RWR delivered smaller drawdowns over five years, while RWX posted higher one-year returns. The choice depends on whether investors prioritize cost-efficiency and domestic focus (RWR) or geographic diversification (RWX).
HAUZ emerges as the superior international real estate ETF compared to RWX, offering a significantly lower expense ratio (0.10% vs 0.59%), higher dividend yield (3.91% vs 3.36%), broader diversification with 408 holdings versus 120, and better long-term performance since 2013 (3.3% annual returns vs 1.4%). While RWX showed stronger 1-year returns, HAUZ's cost efficiency and income generation make it the more attractive choice for investors seeking international property exposure.
VNQI and RWX are international real estate ETFs with different approaches: VNQI offers broader diversification across 682 holdings with lower fees (0.12% expense ratio) and higher dividend yield (4.27%), while RWX concentrates on 119 holdings with higher fees (0.59%) but delivered stronger 1-year returns (21.8% vs 15.9%). The choice depends on investor preference for diversification versus regional concentration.