The Fidelity International High Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA:FIDI) is Fidelity’s answer for U.S. investors seeking yield from outside the S&P 500 without paying a premium. FIDI tracks a Fidelity-built index screening developed-market large- and mid-caps for above-average yield and payout sustainability, then weights names toward higher-yielding survivors. Today the fund trades around $27.50 with a 0.18% net expense ratio. The question is whether FIDI’s quarterly distribution holds up against currency swings, tariff threats, and a fragile European earnings cycle.
How FIDI actually pays you
FIDI is a pass-through equity-dividend fund: distributions are funded by cash dividends its European, Canadian, Japanese, and Australian holdings pay, converted to dollars. Over the last four quarters the ETF has distributed $0.436, $0.198, $0.254, and $0.265, for a trailing total near $1.15 and an indicated yield of roughly 4.1%. The lumpy quarterly profile is normal for international dividend funds because European companies concentrate payouts in spring, when annual dividends are voted at shareholder meetings.
That mechanic matters for safety: FIDI does not smooth distributions. When underlying companies cut, FIDI cuts. The pandemic stress test shows this clearly. Q2 2020 collapsed to $0.059 and Q4 2020 to $0.088, before normalizing in 2021.
The income engines under the hood
The top ten positions account for about 27% of assets, so a handful of names drive the check. The biggest are TotalEnergies at 3.52%, Equinor at 3.4%, Canadian Natural Resources at 2.82%, Enbridge at 2.73%, and Nestle at 2.62%.
- TotalEnergies and Equinor are highly regulated utilities with rate-base growth tied to grid build-out and renewables. Their dividends are formally policy-linked (Total in France, Equinor in Norway) and covered by regulated cash flow. Both carry meaningful leverage, but coverage from operating cash flow has been adequate, and neither has signaled a cut. Canadian Natural Resources is also a senior oil and natural gas company and one of Canada’s largest hydrocarbon producers.
- Nestle is the anchor of dividend safety. It has raised its payout for decades, generates double-digit free cash flow margins, and recently slowed buybacks rather than touch the dividend. This is the holding least likely to disappoint.
Currency, tariffs, and the total-return picture
Because FIDI is unhedged, your distribution rises and falls with the dollar. The weaker dollar that ran through 2025 and into 2026 has been a tailwind: FIDI returned 25% over the past year and 10% year to date. Tariff escalation on European autos, steel, and pharma would hit the cyclically exposed slice (SSAB, Rio, Nutrien), though the utility, staples, and tobacco core is largely domestic-revenue and insulated.
How it stacks up against VYMI
The closest peer is the Vanguard International High Dividend Yield ETF (NASDAQ:VYMI), which has delivered 31% over the past year and 79% over five years, versus FIDI’s 67%. VYMI is broader, holds emerging markets, and has been the better total-return vehicle. FIDI’s case is narrower: a developed-market, low-cost, higher-concentration yield play.
The verdict
FIDI’s distribution is durable but lumpy. The utility and staples core covers the base payout from regulated and consumer cash flow, while Rio and materials drive the Q2 spike that can disappoint in a commodity downturn. For an income investor who can accept quarter-to-quarter variability and unhedged currency exposure, the 4% yield is real and well-funded. Investors wanting a smoother check and broader diversification, including emerging markets, will get a better total-return profile from VYMI at the cost of a slightly lower headline yield.