This Fidelity ETF Pays You a 3% Yield to Keep Winning Big

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By Omor Ibne Ehsan Published

Quick Read

  • A weakening U.S. dollar and European fiscal stimulus are fueling international developed market stocks to dramatically outperform the S&P 500, and Fidelity Enhanced International ETF (FENI) is capturing that momentum with roughly 3% in annual dividend income.

  • Fidelity Enhanced International ETF uses quantitative stock selection to beat the MSCI EAFE Index benchmark, returning 45% over the past year versus 37% for iShares MSCI EAFE ETF (EFA) and keeping pace with Vanguard Total International Stock ETF (VXUS) — all while charging just 0.28% in expenses.

  • FENI’s entire performance track record coincides with international outperformance since its November 2023 launch, and the fund’s currency exposure works both ways: the weak dollar has been a tailwind, but dollar strength would become a headwind no stock selection can overcome.

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This Fidelity ETF Pays You a 3% Yield to Keep Winning Big

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International developed market stocks have beaten the S&P 500 by a wide margin year to date, and one Fidelity ETF is quietly riding that wave while paying investors roughly 3% in dividends. Fidelity Enhanced International ETF (NYSEARCA:FENI) uses a quantitative approach to pick stocks from the MSCI EAFE Index, aiming to outperform the benchmark rather than replicate it. With an expense ratio of just 0.28% and assets now approaching $9 billion, the fund has grown fast since its November 2023 launch.

How FENI Works

The fund tilts the portfolio toward stocks with favorable factor characteristics (value, quality, momentum) while staying close enough to the benchmark to avoid wild tracking error. This is pure stock selection within developed international companies across Europe, Japan, Australia, and the UK. The roughly 3% yield comes from the underlying dividends of those international companies, which tend to pay more generously than their U.S. counterparts. Over the trailing four quarters, FENI distributed approximately $1.15 per share in dividends, ranging from $0.17 to $0.36.

Why International Stocks Are Winning Now

A weakening U.S. dollar has been the biggest catalyst: when the dollar falls, returns from foreign-denominated assets get a natural boost when converted back. European fiscal stimulus, particularly defense spending increases, has injected new energy into economies that spent years in austerity mode. U.S.-based investors have pulled tens of billions out of domestic equities in early 2026, with capital flowing toward international markets at the fastest pace in over a decade.

International developed market stocks still trade at a steep discount to U.S. equities on a price-to-earnings basis, giving them more room to re-rate higher. JP Morgan’s global equity team has noted that dollar weakness alone could sustain international outperformance for an extended cycle, especially if U.S. growth moderates relative to the rest of the developed world.

Performance Versus Peers

FENI has returned 45% over the past year, which beats iShares MSCI EAFE ETF (NYSEARCA:EFA) at 37% over the same period. That gap of roughly 8 percentage points is meaningful for an actively managed fund charging 0.28% in fees. Against Vanguard Total International Stock ETF (NYSEARCA:VXUS), which returned 44% over the trailing year, FENI has kept pace while offering a more targeted developed-market approach.

Year-to-date, FENI is up 8%, compared to 6% for EFA and 8% for VXUS. Fidelity’s quantitative stock selection is generating incremental alpha over the passive EAFE benchmark without dramatically changing the risk profile.

Three Key Tradeoffs

  1. Short track record. FENI launched in November 2023, meaning its entire existence has coincided with international outperformance. There is no data showing how the quantitative model performs during sustained U.S. dominance or a global downturn.
  2. Income variability. Quarterly distributions fluctuate widely. Investors relying on FENI for predictable income should plan around the lowest recent payout, not the highest. International dividend schedules are less uniform than domestic ones, and currency movements add unpredictability.
  3. Currency exposure works in both directions. The weak dollar has been a tailwind, but if the dollar strengthens, FENI’s returns will face a headwind no stock selection can overcome. The fund does not hedge currency exposure, so investors are making an implicit bet on continued dollar softness.

FENI functions as a core international equity holding for investors who want active management at near-index pricing and are comfortable with the currency bet. Anyone treating the past year’s 45% return as normal should recalibrate expectations quickly.

Photo of Omor Ibne Ehsan
About the Author Omor Ibne Ehsan →

Omor Ibne Ehsan is a writer at 24/7 Wall St. He is a self-taught investor with a focus on growth and cyclical stocks that have strong fundamentals, value, and long-term potential. He also has an interest in high-risk, high-reward investments such as cryptocurrencies and penny stocks.

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