Updated
Updated · The Motley Fool · Jun 20
State Street's RWO Tops XLRE by 4.7 Points as 0.08% Fee Trades Off With Global Reach
Updated
Updated · The Motley Fool · Jun 20

State Street's RWO Tops XLRE by 4.7 Points as 0.08% Fee Trades Off With Global Reach

3 articles · Updated · The Motley Fool · Jun 20

Summary

  • RWO returned 15.8% over the past year versus XLRE's 11.1%, giving investors stronger recent performance in exchange for a much higher 0.5% expense ratio versus 0.08%.
  • That trade-off reflects strategy: XLRE holds 31 mostly U.S. real estate names tied to the S&P 500, while RWO owns about 220 stocks across U.S., developed and emerging markets.
  • Over five years, XLRE turned $1,000 into $1,177 against RWO's $1,118, while both posted similar max drawdowns of about 33% to 34%.
  • Income is also close, with RWO yielding about 3.2% to 3.3% versus XLRE's 3.1%, even though both share top holdings including Welltower, Prologis and Equinix.
  • The comparison leaves investors choosing between cheaper, concentrated U.S. exposure in XLRE and broader global diversification in RWO, along with added currency and regional property-market risk.

Insights

With lower fees and better 5-year growth, is the U.S. real estate ETF the smarter long-term investment?
Is a 'global' real estate fund truly diverse when over 70% of its assets are still in the U.S.?
As remote work empties offices, how will these funds adapt to survive the coming commercial property shake-up?