
TSE:ZID
This summary was created by AI, based on 6 opinions in the last 12 months.
The BMO India Equity Hedged to CAD ETF (ZID-T) has received mixed reviews from various experts. Some analysts advise avoiding the ETF due to its current downward trend, suggesting that it may be better to wait for signs of recovery and momentum before investing. There are insights that the ETF broke below a significant price point, leading to a cautious outlook. However, some see potential, highlighting the long-term growth opportunities in India due to demographic advantages and improving infrastructure. Comparisons with other ETFs such as XID suggest that ZID may offer better diversification and lower fees, making it appealing for long-term investors despite current volatility. Technical analysis indicates a possible breakout pattern, which adds a degree of optimism, but concerns about government corruption and macroeconomic factors remain.
Which India ETF would you prefer for the long-term? This one from the Bank of Montréal is good. They’re relatively homogenous. What you get when you start getting a country specific ETF in Canada, is generally something that tracks a broad benchmark and there is not a lot to choose between them. If you have a US one, you get additional tax reporting problems and there is currency hedging. If you buy something in US$ and then the Cdn$ appreciates, you are going to get the return of the underlying benchmark, but you are going to have to give some of that back when you convert the currency.
There is a lot of hopefulness about what Mohdi is going to be able to do in India. He doesn’t know that this has translated as yet into good returns, or how long it is going to take. They have clearly had a problem of being the non-aligned country for a long time. Bureaucracy is a huge problem, and the country has all kinds of problems. On the other hand, as a growth story it could be terrific. This is a tough one to pick.
When you get down to the country ETF’s, they are a little bit different certainly than the industry ETF’s. A lot of it comes down to familiarity, i.e. if you know India, spent time there or come from an Indian background. 10 stocks represent 90% of this index. If you want to go into something like this, just look at the top 10 stocks. If you know them and are comfortable with them that’s great. Otherwise he would be careful.
Right now emerging markets are probably not on the favourite list of many strategists and portfolio managers. However, he would put India at the top of that list comparing it against China, Brazil, Russia, etc. Keep in mind that this is a net importer of commodities. Lower commodity prices are beneficial to them. He likes that they have very positive political leadership on how it is helping the financial side of things. Demographics look good. If you do want exposure to emerging markets, India is a pretty strong name to hold.
(A Top Pick March 11/15. Down 9.36%.) This has been a little soft over the past month, but he has owned this along with an individual Indian stock for the past year. Generally speaking the government is pretty supportive of the economy and the stock market. He also likes the formation. This is in a long-term uptrend, and he views a recent pullback is a buying opportunity. The 200 day moving average has not been cracked.
India. He really likes India and small caps are the way to play it. He started to get out when we started re-testing the highs. He is going to buy dips in India because he loves the story. He makes decisions based on risk and return. If you like it long term then stick with it.