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Finally, a slew of economic reforms including four rate cuts this year have started to pay off and stimulate growth in Asia’s third-largest economy. This is especially true as India picked up momentum with 7.4% growth in the second quarter (ending September). While this is far below the year-ago growth of 8.9%, it is up from 7% recorded in the first quarter and the market expectation of 7.3%, as per Reuters. Bright Spots A major boost to the economy came from solid progress in the manufacturing, mining and service sectors. Agriculture, industrial, automobiles and consumer durables are witnessing strong growth while investments are also showing signs of recovery. Additionally, current account deficit has narrowed and the currency has moved up significantly. Further, lower oil prices and rising consumer spending have added to economic strength. In particular, the current account deficit has narrowed sharply to around 1.3% of GDP in fiscal 2014-2015, below 1.7% in fiscal 2013-2014. Trade deficit in the first seven months of the current fiscal (April-October) contracted to $77.76 billion from $86.26 billion. Though inflation rose to 5% in October from 4.41% in September, it is expected to decline once the festival season ends. The central bank expects inflation to reach 6% by January 2016 and then moderate to 5% by March 2017. Given the positive developments, India has now become the world’s fastest-growing economy, outpacing China, and remains a bright spot given that most emerging economies are struggling to revamp growth. The Reserve Bank of India expects the country’s economy to grow 7.4% annually for fiscal 2015-2016 and the World Bank projects economic growth of 7.5% for the current fiscal year, followed by further acceleration to 7.8% in 2016-17 and 7.9% in 2017-18. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) also sees robust growth prospects in India compared to the other emerging markets. It expects GDP growth to remain above 7% in the coming years fueled by more structural reforms. India ETFs to Buy Based on a speedy recovery and bright outlook, we recommend investors to buy India ETFs at least for the short term. For interested investors, we have found a number of top-ranked ETFs in the broad emerging Asia-Pacific space targeting India that have a Zacks ETF Rank of 2 or ‘Buy’ rating and are thus expected to outperform in the upcoming months. Among these, the following five funds could be good choices to play in the coming months and have potentially superior weighting methodologies which could allow them to continue leading the emerging Asia-Pacific space in the months ahead. iShares MSCI India ETF (BATS: INDA ) This ETF follows the MSCI India Total Return Index and charges 68 bps in fees per year from investors. Holding 72 stocks in its basket, the fund is highly concentrated on the top two firms – Infosys (NYSE: INFY ) and Housing Development Finance Corp. ( OTC:HSDGY ) – that together make up for 20.2% of total assets. Other firms hold no more than 6.63% share. Further, the product is slightly tilted toward the information technology sector at 21.7% while financials, consumer staples, health care, and consumer discretionary round off the top five. INDA is the largest and popular ETF in this space with AUM of over $3.5 billion and average trading volume of more than 2 million shares a day. The fund is down 7.9% in the year-to-date time frame. WisdomTree India Earnings Fund (NYSEARCA: EPI ) This product tracks the WisdomTree India Earnings Index, holding 238 profitable companies using an earnings-weighted methodology. Reliance Industries and Infosys occupy the top two positions with a combined 17.9% of assets while other firms hold less than 5.8% share. The fund is heavy on financials with one-fourth share, while energy and information technology also get double-digit allocation in the basket. The fund has amassed nearly $1.7 billion and trades in volume of more than 4.8 million shares a day. Expense ratio came in at 0.83%. The fund has lost about 9% over the trailing one year. iShares India 50 ETF (NASDAQ: INDY ) This ETF provides exposure to the largest 53 Indian stocks by tracking the CNX Nifty Index. It is pretty well spread out across components with none of the securities holding more than 7.73% of assets. With respect to sector holdings, financials takes the top spot at 26%, closely followed by information technology (16%), consumer discretionary (11%) and energy (10%). The product has managed assets worth $814.9 million and trades in good volume of nearly 320,000 million shares a day. It is the high cost choice in the space, charging 93 bps. The product shed 8.4% in the trailing one-year period. PowerShares India Portfolio (NYSEARCA: PIN ) This fund offers exposure to the basket of 50 stocks selected from the universe of the largest companies listed on two major Indian exchanges by tracking Indus India. The top two firms – Infosys and Reliance Industries – take double-digit exposure each while the other firms hold no more than 5.6% share. From a sector look, the fund is tilted toward energy and information technology, each accounting for over 20% share, followed by financials (12.1%) and health care (10.8%). The fund has amassed $431.7 million in its asset base and trades in solid volume of around 1.3 million shares a day on average. It charges a higher expense ratio of 85 bps and has lost 7.7% in the year-to-date timeframe. Market Vectors India Small-Cap Fund (NYSEARCA: SCIF ) This fund targets the small cap segment and tracks the Market Vectors India Small-Cap Index. In total, it holds 135 securities in its basket with none making up for more than 3.21% of assets. Here again, financials occupies the top position from a sector look at 28.3% while industrials, consumer discretionary, and information technology round off the next three spots. The fund has so far amassed $203.5 million in its asset base while charging 89 bps in annual fees. Volume is good, exchanging around 105,000 shares in hand a day. Bottom Line Given the current trends and favorable dynamics, India will likely get a solid boost. So a solid play on the country might be a good idea. This is especially true if investors take a closer look at the top-ranked ETFs in the space for excellent exposure and some outperformance in the coming months. Original Post Scalper1 News
Scalper1 News