1Wk·

Fidelity Global Quality Income ETF - Dividends with Class🚀

Many dividend ETFs focus on high distribution yields, but the Fidelity Global Quality Income ETF ($FGEQ (-2.72%) ) takes a different approach: quality comes first.

Instead of simply picking the highest dividend payers, this ETF specifically selects companies with solid profitability, stable balance sheets and sustainable dividend growth.


What makes this ETF special?

🔹 Quality strategy: Companies are filtered according to fundamental key figures, e.g. high return on equity and low debt ratio.

🔹 Global diversification: The ETF invests globally in industrialized countries, creating a good balance between regions.

🔹 Quarterly distribution: Ideal for investors who prefer regular cash flows.

🔹 Long-term focus: Instead of focusing on short-term dividend yields, the ETF pays attention to companies with sustainable distribution policies.


Difference to classic dividend ETFs

Many dividend ETFs simply pick the companies with the highest dividend yields and often these are companies with uncertain growth or unstable payouts.

The Fidelity ETF avoids this risk by including only solid companies with sustainable dividends.


Who is this ETF for?

Long-term investorswho value stability and solid companies.

Dividend investorswho prefer regular distributions with substance.

Quality-conscious investorswho focus on strong business models in addition to dividends.


💡 Conclusion: This ETF is perfect for investors who don't just want to collect dividends, but want to invest in financially sound and well-managed companies.

Quality beats quantity! 🚀

14
4 Comments

profile image
Among the criteria, I almost like $TDIV better
6
profile image
Interesting idea in principle. But compared to an MSCI World distributing fund, the dividend is only slightly higher, while the price return is significantly lower.
So at first glance, it doesn't look that lucrative.
3
profile image
But a question about its US counterpart: $FUSD

Why should you take the $FGEQ if it is already at 73% US share?

The US counterpart has yielded approx. 20 - 30% more returns compared to 2017 (the last 2-3 years), with lower TER costs and roughly the same dividend payout.

https://extraetf.com/de/etf-comparison?products=IE00BYXVGX24-etf,IE00BYXVGZ48-etf
1
Show answer
Join the conversation