
"India's long‑term setup is familiar by now. The country has overtaken China as the world's most populous nation, and multinationals shifting production out of China continue to steer new manufacturing investment toward India. The shorter‑term picture is less tidy. Large caps have slipped in 2026, with INDA down about 9% year-to-date and IND off nearly 10% through early May."
"INDA tracks the MSCI India Index and holds a market-cap-weighted basket of Indian large- and mid-cap stocks. The investment logic is simple. If the goal is broad, liquid, low-friction exposure to the Indian equity market in a single ticker, INDA is the fund that institutional and retail investors default to, and it is the one most likely to be available in any U.S. brokerage account without quirks."
"The three ETFs below take very different approaches. One serves as the default liquidity vehicle, another filters the market through an earnings lens, and the third reaches further down the market‑cap ladder than most U.S.‑listed India funds."
India has surpassed China as the world's most populous nation and is emerging as a primary destination for multinational manufacturing capacity relocating from China. Three India-focused ETFs provide distinct approaches to capturing this structural growth opportunity. INDA, the iShares MSCI India ETF with $8.2 billion in assets under management, serves as the default liquidity vehicle through market-cap-weighted exposure to large and mid-cap stocks. EPI, the WisdomTree India Earnings Fund, applies a profitability filter to the Indian equity universe. IND, the Xtrackers MSCI India ETF, extends exposure into the broader mid- and small-cap market layer. Despite a 2026 pullback with large-cap indices down approximately 9-10% year-to-date through early May, the pullback creates a more compelling entry point for investors seeking exposure to India's long-term structural advantages.
Read at 24/7 Wall St.
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