A big trend right now is investors looking for opportunities beyond the U.S. market. If you want to diversify your portfolio away from U.S. stocks and bonds, one way to do it is to buy an international bond fund, like the Vanguard Total International Bond ETF (NASDAQ: BNDX).
But if you want to earn higher yields and are willing to accept some additional risk, you could buy the Vanguard Emerging Markets Government Bond ETF (NASDAQ: VWOB). This international bond fund lets you own government debt from up-and-coming markets. The VWOB has outperformed the BNDX and another popular bond index fund, the Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (NASDAQ: BND), for the past year.
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Here are a few reasons why you might want to consider the VWOB for your bond portfolio — and why you should also beware of the risks.
When you buy emerging-market bonds, you are investing in debt issued by foreign governments from nations with emerging economies. That includes countries with economies that are more developed than some of the world’s poorer nations, but that have not yet reached the more prosperous levels of advanced economies like the U.S., Japan, Canada, or Western Europe.
Some emerging economies represented in the Vanguard Emerging Markets Government Bond ETF include:
The Vanguard Emerging Markets Government Bond ETF holds 902 bonds and charges an expense ratio of 0.15%. It has delivered average annual returns (by net asset value) of 2.6% for the past five years, 9.99% for the past three years, and 11.6% in the past year.
High yields on bonds can be tempting. But emerging markets’ government debt tends to be riskier than advanced economies’ debt. Some of these countries are politically unstable, vulnerable to economic crises, or otherwise might struggle to repay their debts to bond investors like you.
Let’s compare the risk of emerging market government bonds to U.S. bonds. For example, about 41% of the emerging-market bonds in the VWOB have a credit rating of BB or lower, making them speculative grade. But in the Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF, 69% of the fund’s bonds are U.S. government bonds (generally considered some of the safest in the world), while the other 31% of the bonds have investment-grade credit ratings of BBB or higher.


