The Euro’s Next Move Will Make or Break FIDI’s 2026 Returns

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By Marc Guberti Published

Quick Read

  • FIDI’s portfolio is concentrated in rate-regulated utilities like ENEL and National Grid, making dividends vulnerable to regulatory decisions.

  • A euro drop below $1.13 or a dividend cut from top holdings would signal the currency tailwind and story have reversed.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks and Fidelity International High Dividend ETF wasn't one of them. Get them here FREE.

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The Euro’s Next Move Will Make or Break FIDI’s 2026 Returns

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The Fidelity International High Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA:FIDI) has quietly become one of the better performers in international income, returning 29% over the past year and 9% year to date through May 7. At about $28 a share, FIDI is trading near its post-launch highs, but the rally has been powered by a force most holders are not consciously tracking: a stronger euro and pound translating overseas dividends into more dollars. The fund still charges a 0.19% expense ratio, one of the cheapest entry points into developed-market high-dividend exposure, which makes the next 12 months a question of what could disrupt the currency tailwind and the specific names doing the heavy lifting inside the portfolio.

The dollar is doing the heavy lifting

The single most important macro factor for FIDI over the next year is the USD/EUR exchange rate, with the pound and yen following closely. The euro has run from $1.1106 in May 2025 to $1.1755 on May 1, 2026, sitting in the 79th percentile of its 12-month range. That roughly 6% appreciation is a meaningful slice of FIDI’s one-year return, because the fund’s dividends are paid in euros, pounds, Swiss francs, Canadian dollars, and yen before being converted.

What to watch: the FRED DEXUSEU series, updated daily, and the CME FedWatch tool for U.S. rate cut odds. A move back toward $1.13 on the euro would erase a chunk of forward returns even if the underlying companies raise payouts. The transmission mechanism is direct and unhedged. FIDI does not currency-hedge, so dollar strength flows straight into NAV. The rival Vanguard International High Dividend Yield ETF (NASDAQ:VYMI | VYMI Price Prediction), which posted a 35% one-year return, shares this exact exposure, so switching between the two is not a way to dodge it.

Check this monthly, and event-driven around ECB and Fed meetings. The 2022 episode, when the dollar index hit 20-year highs, dragged unhedged international dividend funds down even as European companies kept raising payouts in local currency.

A top-heavy book leaning on regulated utilities and tobacco

The fund-specific factor worth monitoring is the concentration in regulated European utilities and global tobacco names at the top of the portfolio. The two largest holdings, ENEL at 3.22% and National Grid at 2.79%, are rate-base utilities whose payouts depend on regulators in Italy and the UK signing off on allowed returns. Add British American Tobacco at 2.40% and Japan Tobacco at 2.37%, and roughly one out of every nine dollars in FIDI sits in companies whose dividends face explicit political and regulatory scrutiny.

The 10-year U.S. Treasury at 4.36% raises the bar these utilities must clear to keep their yield premium intact, particularly with the long end of the curve at 4.97% out at 30 years. Watch the next semiannual rebalance and any UK Ofgem or Italian ARERA rate decisions, plus dividend declarations from BTI and JT. A cut from any single top-five name would dent the yield profile faster than broad market moves.

The signal that matters

If the euro holds above $1.15 and ENEL, National Grid, and the tobacco pair maintain their declared payouts through the next two distribution cycles, FIDI’s setup stays intact. A break of $1.13 on the euro, or a single regulatory ruling that trims a top utility’s dividend, is the concrete signal that the story has changed. The VIX near 17 says the market is not pricing either outcome today, which is precisely why they are worth tracking.

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About the Author Marc Guberti →

Marc Guberti is a personal finance writer who has written for US News & World Report, Business Insider, Newsweek and other publications. He also hosts the Breakthrough Success Podcast which teaches listeners how to use content marketing to grow their businesses.

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