we have to thank Motley Fool for this blurb.
Announcing the launch of yet another ASX exchange-traded fund, the
Global X Australia ex Financials & Resources ETF (ASX: OZXX).
This ETF is one that is difficult to classify. It functions in a similar manner to an index fund, holding the 100 largest companies on the ASX by
market capitalisation. However, it also
actively excludes a huge chunk of our share market –
bank and
mining shares.
A normal ASX index fund is dominated by banks and miners. Just take the
iShares Core S&P/ASX 200 ETF (
ASX: IOZ). This ASX 200 index fund tracks the largest 200 companies on the ASX share market without further qualification.
This means that
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (
ASX: CBA),
National Australia Bank Ltd (
ASX: NAB),
Westpac Banking Corp (
ASX: WBC), and
ANZ Group Holdings Ltd (
ASX: ANZ) are the second, fourth, fifth, and sixth largest positions in this ETF, accounting for just over 18.5% of the entire ETF’s weighting.
Mining and energy giants
BHP Group Ltd (
ASX: BHP),
Woodside Energy Group Ltd (
ASX: WDS), and
Rio Tinto Limited (
ASX: RIO) add another 15.6%.
So that’s a lot of concentration in just two sectors.
The Global X Australia ex Financials & Resources ETF takes these sectors out of the equation. Instead, this ETF’s current largest holdings (in order) consist of
CSL Limited (
ASX: CSL),
Wesfarmers Ltd (
ASX: WES),
Telstra Group Ltd (
ASX: TLS),
Woolworths Group Ltd (
ASX: WOW), and
Transurban Group (
ASX: TCL).
Because this is a new ETF, we don’t yet have any kinds of performance metrics to analyse it. But it would certainly make for a closer look for any investor worried about overexposure to banks or miners in an ordinary ASX index fund.
The Global X Australia ex Financials & Resources ETF charges a management fee of 0.25% per annum