South Africa, 19 February 2026: While many South African investors believe they have diversified global portfolios, the reality often looks very different when the portfolios are scrutinised. To help investors address geographic concentration risk, Satrix has listed two new exchange traded funds (ETFs) on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE): the Satrix Stoxx Europe 600 ETF (JSE code: STXEUR) and the Satrix MSCI Japan ETF (JSE code: STXJPN).

The two funds serve as essential building blocks for investors looking to expand their portfolios beyond the dominance of the United States, capturing specific regional growth drivers, policy regimes, and business cycles.

Siyabulela Nomoyi, Quantitative Portfolio Manager at Satrix, says the strategic intent behind these launches is to allow investors to “complete the global picture”.
 

The “Global” Misconception

“When clients look at their portfolios, they often see ‘global’ exposure and assume they are fully diversified. However, because US stocks have run so hard, global exposure has largely become US mega-cap growth exposure,” explains Nomoyi. “If you look at the MSCI World Index, you are sitting with 60% to 70% exposure to the US. While these are great multinational companies, from a policy and regional perspective, the concentration risk is high.”

Nomoyi notes that in a changing world where central banks may no longer move in lockstep, with the US Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, and Bank of Japan navigating vastly different economic cycles, regional diversification has become a crucial tool for portfolio resilience.

Tapping Into Japan’s Distinct Return Profile

The Satrix MSCI Japan ETF (TER 0.35%) tracks the MSCI Japan Index, offering exposure to the large- and mid-cap segments of the market. Despite being the world’s third-largest stock exchange and a developed economy, Japan often accounts for about 4% of standard global indices.

“Investors are missing out on the cornerstone of Asian markets,” says Nomoyi. “Japan offers a very physical economy compared to the digital, software-heavy US market. You are gaining access to leaders in automation, robotics, precision engineering, and the auto industry. Furthermore, corporate governance reforms in Japan are driving a renewed focus on return on equity and dividend growth, unlocking value from companies that were previously hoarding cash.”

Nomoyi adds that the correlation between the JSE and the MSCI Japan index is remarkably low (around 0.22), and the yen has historically acted as a defensive currency, offering a distinct risk profile during times of global volatility.

The Benefit of Europe’s Broad Diversification Beyond the Eurozone

The Satrix Stoxx Europe 600 ETF (TER 0.25%) tracks an index of 600 components across 17 European countries. Crucially, unlike some other European-focussed products, this fund includes exposure to the United Kingdom.

“This is one of the most diversified developed market indices globally,” he says. “By including the UK, we avoid the narrowness of focussing only on the Eurozone. Investors get exposure to London-listed global multinationals, alongside European giants in pharmaceuticals, luxury goods, and energy. It creates a balance of large-, mid-, and small-cap exposure across a variety of sectors not heavily represented in the US or SA markets.”

Institutional Thinking for the Retail Investor

Satrix views these new listings as long-term geographic building blocks. This aligns with the leading provider of index-tracking solutions’ continued push to drive greater inclusiveness for investors by giving retail clients access to the same tools and strategic thinking used by institutional asset managers.

“We want the person on the street to think like an institutional investor,” adds Nomoyi. “Institutions don’t just buy ‘the market’; they think about policy regimes, economic structures, and where future growth will come from. By offering these specific regional exposures at highly competitive price points, we are empowering investors to construct portfolios that are robust, nuanced, and truly global.”
 

Global Exposure with Efficient Access

“We are expanding our offshore range not by chasing performance, but by giving investors the tools to diversify properly,” concludes Nomoyi. “With total expense ratios (TERs) of 0.25% for Europe and 0.35% for Japan, we are removing the cost barrier to sophisticated global portfolio construction.”

 

Disclaimer

Satrix Investments (Pty) Ltd is an authorised Financial Service Provider (FSP) in terms of the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act, 2002 (FSP no 43670). Satrix Managers (RF) (Pty) Ltd (Satrix) is an authorised Financial Service Provider (FSP no 15658) and a registered and approved Manager in Collective Investment Schemes in Securities. Collective investment schemes are generally medium- to long-term investments. With Unit Trusts and ETFs, the investor essentially owns a “proportionate share” (in proportion to the participatory interest held in the fund) of the underlying investments held by the fund. With Unit Trusts, the investor holds participatory units issued by the fund while in the case of an ETF, the participatory interest, while issued by the fund, comprises a listed security traded on the stock exchange. 

ETFs are index tracking funds, registered as a Collective Investment and can be traded by any stockbroker on the stock exchange or via Investment Plans and online trading platforms. ETFs may incur additional costs due to being listed on the JSE. Past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance, and the value of investments / units may go up or down. A schedule of fees and charges, and maximum commissions are available on the Minimum Disclosure Document or upon request from the Manager. Collective investments are traded at ruling prices and can engage in borrowing and scrip lending. A feeder fund is a portfolio that invests in a single portfolio of a collective investment scheme, which levies its own charges, and which could result in a higher fee structure for the feeder fund. International investments or investments in foreign securities could be accompanied by additional risks such as potential constraints on liquidity and repatriation of funds, macroeconomic risk, political risk, foreign exchange risk, tax risk, settlement risk as well as potential limitations on the availability of market information. The manager has the right to close the portfolio to new investors in order to manage it more efficiently in accordance with its mandate. Visit www.satrix.co.za for more information.