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5 China ETFs Up At Least 20% In Q4

Though the Chinese economy and securities have seen the height of volatility so far this year, the final quarter of 2015 seems quite steady, rather upbeat. This is quite a different picture from Q3 backed by compelling valuation after a bloodbath in August following currency devaluation and several cool economic data. China started to recoup losses from October with its A-Shares ETFs once again seeing runaway success in November. Apart from cheaper valuation, plenty of policy easing to jumpstart its ailing economy and hopes for further easing (as the economy is still reeling under pressure) helped Chinese equities ETFs to rule the top-performers’ list in the quarter-to-date frame (as of December 3, 2015). In October, China reduced the key interest rates by 25 bps, which marked the sixth slash since last November. Not only monetary policy easing, Beijing went on to enact a demographic reform and put an end to the country’s decades-long infamous one-child policy. Investors should note that China has long been working on stepping up domestic consumption, shedding focus on exports and intending to move to a ‘slower and more balanced growth’ economy. If this was not enough, the Chinese currency, the yuan, received a privileged reserve currency status from the IMF recently and joined the league of the major currencies, namely U.S. dollar, pound, euro and yen. China’s currency will have a weight of 10.92%, higher than the yen (8.33%) and the pound (8.09%), in IMF’s reserve currency basket from October 2016. As per the IMF, the step was the outcome of reformative measures presently being undertaken in China, which gives the “freely usable” tag to the yuan. It’s not that China investing is devoid of glitches. In fact, news about the Chinese securities regulators being stricter in their investigation into brokerages led the country’s stocks to suffer the deepest plunge on November 27 since the August uproar. Still, relentless constructive measures by regulators have saved China equities every time. One of China’s latest measures to calm the jittery market will be to launch a “circuit breaker ” on a benchmark stock index of the country next year. Per the new norm, a 5% one-day gain or loss in the CSI300 index (before 2:30 p.m.) would close trading in the country’s all equity indices for 30 minutes. Shifts of over 7% would result in closed trade for the rest of the day. In such a backdrop, investors might want to know about the top-performing China ETFs so far in Q4. For them, we highlight five Chinese equities ETFs that are still up at least 20%. KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF (NASDAQ: KWEB ) – Up 30.2% This product provides concentrated exposure to the Chinese Internet market by tracking the CSI China Overseas Internet Index. In total, the fund holds about 60 securities in its basket. The ETF has amassed $154.4 million in AUM and charges 71 bps in annual fees from investors. P owerShares Golden Dragon China Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PGJ ) – Up 27.7% The $185 million ETF holds about 77 securities. The expense ratio of the fund is 0.70%. The fund is heavy on IT (46.4%) and Consumer Discretionary (38.2%). As far as individual holdings are concerned, Ctrip.com (NASDAQ: CTRP ) takes the top position with a 10.27% weight followed by NetEase (NASDAQ: NTES ) (9.8%) and Baidu (NASDAQ: BIDU ) (9.0%). Guggenheim China Technology ETF (NYSEARCA: CQQQ ) – Up 27.3% This fund targets the overall technology sector in China and follows the AlphaShares China Technology Index, holding 76 stocks in its basket. Alibaba dominates the fund’s return with a 21.5% share while other firms hold no more than 9.4% of assets. In terms of industrial exposure, about 65% of the portfolio is allotted to Internet mobile applications while electronic components and semiconductors round off to the next two spots. The product manages an asset base of $58.4 million. The expense ratio comes in at 0.71%. KraneShares CSI New China ETF (NYSEARCA: KFYP ) – Up 24.1% This fund tracks the CSI China Overseas Five-Year Plan Index, holding about 140 securities in its basket. About one-third of the portfolio is skewed towards Consumer Discretionary, closely followed by Information Technology. The fund is unpopular as depicted by its AUM of $3.2 million. The expense ratio comes in at 0.71%. Deutsche X-trackers Harvest CSI 500 China A-Shares Small Cap ETF (NYSEARCA: ASHS ) – Up 22.4% This product is a combination of China A-shares and smaller capitalization. This ETF attempts to replicate the performance of the CSI 500 index, which tracks 500 small cap companies on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges. This $35.8 million fund charges 80bps in fees. Industrials (24.3%) and Consumer Discretionary (15.9%) are the top two sectors. Link to the original post on Zacks.com