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The 16 Vanguard domestic funds that switching benchmarks hold a total $367 billion in assets, including the $197 billion Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund, which will now track the CRSP U.S. Total Stock Market Index. The Vanguard foreign stock funds switching to FTSE indexes hold about $170 billion, including the $67 billion Vanguard Emerging Markets Stock Index Fund. The switch to new indexes will involve small changes in the stocks that the funds own. For example, Vanguard Emerging Markets Index will no longer own South Korean stocks, because the fund's new index
-- the FTSE Emerging Markets Index -- classifies that country among the world's developed markets. The index the fund had been using previously, MSCI Emerging Markets, classifies South Korea as an emerging market. The index transitions at each fund will be staggered over coming months. They affect all share classes for the 22 funds, including shares available to average investors, as well as those geared toward institutional investors, such as companies offering 401(k) plans. No index changes are planned for other Vanguard U.S. stock index funds tracking benchmarks from Russell and Standard & Poor's. Vanguard's announcement may in part be a response to recent moves by a smaller fund industry rival, Charles Schwab Corp., to cut fees at some of its index funds to levels below those charged by comparable Vanguard funds, said Daniel Wiener, an editor of an independent newsletter on Vanguard's mutual funds. For example, Schwab last month cut fees at its 15 ETFs. "Indexing, particularly through ETFs, is going to get cheaper and cheaper, and Vanguard is not going to let someone else, be it Schwab, iShares or any of its other competitors, take the mantle of
'lowest-cost' from its shoulders," said Wiener, who also runs who runs Adviser Investments, a manager of more than $2 billion for individual investors. BlackRock Inc.'s iShares unit, the industry leader in ETFs based on ETF assets managed, issued a statement in response to Vanguard's move indicating that iShares would "deepen" its existing index-licensing relationship with MSCI. "MSCI is the gold standard of global and international equity indexes
-- the near-universal choice of professional investors," said Mark Wiedman, global head of the iShares ETFs.
[Associated
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