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Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF
As of June 27, 2026 at 23:55 UTC
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About Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF
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SCHE in Bitcoin terms
Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF is available in Roxom Terminal as an ETF page for investors who want to evaluate global market exposure without leaving a Bitcoin-denominated workflow.
- ETF pages expand Roxom's searchable global-market surface beyond single companies.
- BTC-denominated charting makes the ETF comparable to Bitcoin and other assets in the terminal.
- Related market hubs help users move from a specific ETF to broader BTC-priced markets.
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How to Buy SCHE
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Latest News
5 articlesThe Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF (SCHE) offers a lower expense ratio (0.07%) and higher dividend yield (2.60%) compared to State Street's SPDR Portfolio MSCI Global Stock Market ETF (SPGM at 0.09% and 1.70%). However, SPGM has delivered superior 5-year returns ($1,775 vs $1,373 on $1,000 invested) with lower volatility. SCHE focuses exclusively on emerging markets with significant China exposure (31%), while SPGM provides broader global diversification including 62% U.S. exposure, making it better suited as a core portfolio holding.
The Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF (SCHE) offers lower fees (0.07% vs 0.12%) and higher dividend yield (2.7% vs 1.8%) compared to the State Street SPDR MSCI ACWI Climate Paris Aligned ETF (NZAC). While SCHE provides pure emerging market exposure with over 2,200 holdings, NZAC offers global diversification with an ESG climate screen but behaves more like a U.S.-heavy growth fund with significant tech concentration.
A comparison of two popular emerging markets ETFs reveals distinct trade-offs: EEM delivers stronger 1-year returns (26.2%) but charges a higher expense ratio (0.72%) and exhibits greater volatility, while SCHE offers lower fees (0.07%), higher dividend yield (2.9%), and broader diversification across 2,217 stocks, making it more suitable for cost-conscious investors.
The article compares two ETFs: the Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF (SCHE) and the SPDR Portfolio MSCI Global Stock Market ETF (SPGM). SCHE offers higher dividend yield and one-year returns with emerging market focus but carries greater volatility, while SPGM provides broader global diversification with U.S. tech exposure and better long-term performance. The choice depends on investor preference for diversification versus emerging market growth potential.
IEFA (iShares Core MSCI EAFE ETF) and SCHE (Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF) both offer low-cost international equity exposure at 0.07% expense ratios, but differ significantly in focus and risk profiles. IEFA targets developed markets with higher dividend yield (3.4%), lower volatility, and stronger 5-year returns ($1,353 per $1,000 invested), while SCHE focuses on emerging markets with higher growth potential but greater volatility and lower yields (2.7%). The choice depends on whether investors prioritize stability and income or accept higher risk for growth potential.