Hi anon, thanks for your question. Do you mean they are trading in both USD and SGD and which is the better option? If so, I'm guessing if you would like to limit your forex exposure, then SGD would be the better option.
SGX should have done its due diligence before bringing it onboard for local investors so the investment should be safe/stable. The China government bonds under the ETF are A1 rated.
If you would like diversification into China government bonds with low cost (estimated total expense ratio at 0.25%) and some yield (the ETF’s underlying index is currently yielding 2.98%), this could be it.
For more information, you can check out the ETF's website at http://www.csopasset.com/sg/en/products/sg-wgbi... and also this news piece at https://www.etfstrategy.com/csop-debuts-in-sing....
Hope this helps.
Hi anon, thanks for your question. Do you mean they are trading in both USD and SGD and which is the better option? If so, I'm guessing if you would like to limit your forex exposure, then SGD would be the better option.
SGX should have done its due diligence before bringing it onboard for local investors so the investment should be safe/stable. The China government bonds under the ETF are A1 rated.
If you would like diversification into China government bonds with low cost (estimated total expense ratio at 0.25%) and some yield (the ETF’s underlying index is currently yielding 2.98%), this could be it.
For more information, you can check out the ETF's website at http://www.csopasset.com/sg/en/products/sg-wgbi... and also this news piece at https://www.etfstrategy.com/csop-debuts-in-sing....
Hope this helps.