Index Funds Called WEBS Reduce the Cost of
Investing Abroad
With foreign markets generally stronger this year, a new
way to invest abroad has appeared at a good time. WEBS,
an acronym for World Equity Benchmark Shares, represents
an investment in a portfolio of publicly traded foreign
stocks in a selected country. Each WEBS Index Series seeks
to generate investment results that generally correspond
to the price and yield performance of a specific Morgan
Stanley Capital International (MSCI) index.
You sell these shares rather than redeeming them, but
there the similarity to closed-end country funds ends. WEBS
are equity securities, not mutual funds. WEBS shares trade
continuously like any other publicly traded U.S. stock. In
contrast, mutual fund shares do not trade in the secondary
market, and are normally bought and sold from the issu-
ing mutual fund at prices determined only at the end of
the day. The new funds create and redeem shares in large
blocks as needed, thus preventing the big premiums or
discounts to net asset value typical of closed-end country
funds. As index portfolios, WEBS are passively managed, so
their expenses run much lower than for current open- or
closed-end country funds.
WEBS shares offer U.S. investors portfolio exposure to
country-specific equity markets, in a single, listed security
you can easily buy, sell, or short. Unlike American Deposi-
tory Receipts (ADRs) that give you an investment in just
one company, WEBS shares enable you to gain exposure to
a broad portfolio of a desired foreign country’s stocks. You
gain broad exposure in the country or countries of your
choice without the complications usually associated with
buying, owning, or monitoring direct investments in for-
eign countries. You also have the conveniences of trading
on a U.S. exchange and dealing in U.S. dollars.
Some investors may prefer the active management,
diversity, and flexibility of open-end international equity
index funds as a way to limit currency and political risks
of investing in foreign markets. As conventional open-end
funds, however, the international funds are sometimes
forced by net redemptions to sell stocks at inopportune
times, which can be a particular problem in foreign mar-
kets with highly volatile stocks.
You pay brokerage commissions on the purchase and
sale of WEBS, but since their portfolios are passively man-
aged, their management and administrative fees are
relatively low and they eliminate most of the transaction
charges typical of managed funds.
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