World Fund
A world fund is a mutual fund or investment company that holds securities traded in multiple countries, including the investor’s home country (for U.S. investors, that typically includes U.S. securities). It is sometimes called a global fund, though that term can be ambiguous.
Key takeaways
- World funds invest across several countries, often including the investor’s home market.
- They reduce exposure to any single country’s economic or market swings through geographic diversification.
- Diversification can lower volatility and the risk of large losses, since weak performance in one region can be offset by gains elsewhere.
- World funds may limit exchange-rate risk compared with funds concentrated in foreign markets.
- For U.S. investors, world funds can allocate a substantial portion (commonly up to 75%) to U.S. securities.
How world funds work
World funds pool capital to buy a diversified mix of international and domestic securities. By spreading investments across regions and economies, these funds aim to:
* Smooth overall returns by balancing gains and losses across markets.
Reduce reliance on any single economy for performance.
Limit some currency-exchange risks because holdings can include both domestic and foreign-listed assets.
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Some analysts argue that globalization has reduced the benefits of country-level diversification, while others maintain that geographic diversification still provides meaningful risk reduction.
World funds vs. international funds vs. country funds
- World funds: Invest in securities from multiple countries, including the investor’s home country.
- International funds: Invest only in securities outside the investor’s home country (for U.S. investors, this excludes U.S. securities).
- Country (single-country) funds: Concentrate exclusively on the securities of one specific country.
Because world funds can include domestic holdings, they offer managers flexibility to choose top opportunities globally rather than being restricted to foreign markets or a single country.
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Considerations for investors
- Benefits: Broader opportunity set, reduced single-country risk, potentially lower volatility.
- Limits: Diversification does not eliminate all risks; funds remain subject to currency, political, and market risks in the countries where they invest. The effectiveness of geographic diversification can vary with global economic correlations.
Conclusion
World funds offer a balanced approach for investors seeking global exposure while retaining the ability to include domestic securities. They aim to diversify country-specific risk and smooth returns by drawing from multiple markets, but investors should weigh these benefits against remaining geopolitical, currency, and market risks.