China Is Down Sharply in 2026. These 3 ETFs Let You Buy the Dip on Emerging Markets
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KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF (KWEB) is down 17% year-to-date with concentrated exposure to 30 Chinese internet companies led by Alibaba at 12.2% and Tencent at 10.8%, while iShares MSCI China ETF (MCHI) is down only 7% year-to-date by diversifying across sectors including banks, energy, and consumer names like China Construction Bank and PetroChina, and iShares J.P. Morgan USD Emerging Markets Bond ETF (EMB) offers 5.4% yield from sovereign debt across emerging markets with $16.5B in assets despite down 2% year-to-date from rising Treasury yields.
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Rising U.S. Treasury yields are pressuring emerging markets bond prices while China’s equity ETFs face regulatory and geopolitical headwinds, creating a choice between concentrated internet exposure through KWEB, diversified Chinese equities through MCHI, or income-focused emerging markets bonds through EMB depending on risk tolerance and return expectations.
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Emerging markets have rarely been easy to own, and 2026 is proving no exception. China-focused equity ETFs are down sharply year-to-date, rising U.S. Treasury yields are creating headwinds for EM bonds. For investors who believe in the long-term case for global growth outside the U.S., these dislocations have historically preceded periods of recovery, though timing that recovery has never been straightforward. The three funds below offer three genuinely different ways to access that thesis.
KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF (NYSEARCA:KWEB) is the sharpest tool on this list for investors who want concentrated, deliberate exposure to China’s internet economy. The fund tracks the CSI Overseas China Internet Index and holds nothing outside that mandate. Every position is a China-based company whose primary business is internet or internet-related, covering e-commerce, social media, online gaming, fintech, and digital logistics.
The portfolio is built around roughly 30 holdings, with Alibaba Group Holding at 12.2% and Tencent Holdings at 10.8% anchoring the top. Below those two, the fund spreads across names like PDD Holdings at 6.9%, Meituan at 6.6%, and Trip.com Group at 4.7%. Sector-wise, Consumer Discretionary accounts for 42.3% of the fund and Communication Services for 40.7%, meaning nearly the entire portfolio sits in two sectors tied to consumer spending and digital engagement.
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The fund carries $8 billion in total net assets and an expense ratio of 0.70%, which is competitive for a specialized single-country sector fund. The dividend yield sits near 6.7%, though that figure reflects distributions from underlying holdings rather than a deliberate income strategy.
The tradeoff here is volatility. KWEB is down nearly 17% year-to-date and has lost more than 54% over five years. That five-year figure reflects the 2021 regulatory crackdown on Chinese tech and the years of recovery since. Investors choosing this fund are making an explicit bet on China’s internet sector, with all the policy, regulatory, and geopolitical risk that entails. The concentrated mandate means there is no cushion from energy, financials, or state-owned enterprises when sentiment turns.
Where KWEB bets entirely on the internet sector, iShares MSCI China ETF (NYSEARCA:MCHI) spreads its exposure across the full Chinese equity market. Managed by BlackRock and tracking the MSCI China Index, this fund covers large and mid-cap Chinese companies across every major sector, including technology, financials, energy, consumer, and healthcare.
The holdings tell the story clearly. Tencent is the top position at 16.35%, and the internet names familiar from KWEB show up here too: PDD, Meituan, Baidu, JD.com, NetEase. But alongside them sit China Construction Bank, Bank of China, PetroChina, Zijin Mining, and BYD. That mix of tech giants and state-owned enterprises is what makes MCHI structurally different from KWEB. When Chinese internet stocks face regulatory pressure, the banks and energy companies in MCHI can partially offset the damage.
The fund holds $7.4 billion in assets with an expense ratio of 0.59% and a portfolio turnover of just 12%, reflecting its passive, index-tracking approach. That low turnover confirms the fund is not actively trading around Chinese policy shifts; it is simply holding the market.
The performance difference versus KWEB is instructive. MCHI is down about 7% year-to-date versus KWEB’s nearly 17% decline, and over one year MCHI is actually up about 2% while KWEB is down 16%. That gap illustrates exactly what diversification across sectors does in a volatile single-country environment. The tradeoff is that MCHI will also underperform KWEB during a strong internet rally, since the sector represents a smaller slice of the portfolio.
Investors who want China equity exposure but are uncomfortable concentrating entirely in tech will find MCHI the more defensible position. Those who believe the internet sector specifically is where China’s growth story plays out will find it too diluted.
The first two funds on this list are equity plays on China specifically. iShares J.P. Morgan USD Emerging Markets Bond ETF (NYSEARCA:EMB) offers something structurally different: income-oriented exposure to the broader emerging markets growth story, denominated in U.S. dollars and backed by sovereign and quasi-sovereign government bonds.
The fund tracks the J.P. Morgan EMBI Global Core Index and holds USD-denominated government debt from issuers across Latin America, Asia, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Because the bonds are dollar-denominated, investors avoid currency risk from individual EM currencies, which is one of the primary reasons EM bond funds historically blow up. The sovereign issuer base also means the credit risk profile is different from corporate EM debt, though individual country risk remains real.
EMB holds $16.5 billion in assets and carries an expense ratio of 0.39%, making it one of the more cost-efficient ways to access this asset class. The dividend yield is approximately 5.4%, which is the primary reason income-focused investors own it. Over the past year, the fund has delivered total returns of about 8%, a clear contrast to the drawdowns in KWEB and MCHI during the same period.
The current interest rate environment is the key risk to understand. The 10-year Treasury yield sits near 4.34%, up from a 12-month low near 3.97%. Rising Treasury yields compress the price of existing bonds, including those held by EMB. The fund is down roughly 2% year-to-date, which reflects that rate pressure. Investors collecting the yield still come out ahead over a full year, but the price volatility is real and accelerates when U.S. rates move sharply.
EMB also carries country-specific credit risk. A sovereign default or political crisis in a major issuer country can hit the fund directly, and those events are not correlated with U.S. equity market movements in any predictable way.
KWEB is for investors who have a specific, high-conviction view on China’s internet sector and can tolerate sharp drawdowns in exchange for concentrated exposure to that theme. MCHI suits those who want broad Chinese equity exposure with the cushion of diversification across sectors, accepting that the highs will be lower and the lows will be higher. EMB belongs in a different conversation entirely: it is the choice for investors who want emerging markets in their portfolio but prefer income and reduced equity volatility over capital appreciation, particularly in an environment where equity uncertainty has returned.
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