Forget EWZ. Franklin’s Brazil Twin Charges Two-Thirds Less, and It’s Up 30% This Year

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By David Beren Published

Quick Read

  • FLBR charges 0.19% versus EWZ's 0.59% and has outperformed by roughly 5 percentage points year-to-date in 2026.

  • FLBR excludes Nu Holdings and runs heavier exposure to Vale and Petrobras, a construction difference that has driven its 2026 edge.

  • Taxable EWZ holders with large embedded gains may need years to recover from switching, given the capital gains tax hit of 15 to 20 percent.

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Forget EWZ. Franklin’s Brazil Twin Charges Two-Thirds Less, and It’s Up 30% This Year

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The iShares MSCI Brazil ETF (NYSEARCA:EWZ) is the reflex trade for U.S. investors seeking single-ticker exposure to Brazilian large caps. It has been around since 2000, tracks the MSCI Brazil 25/50 Index, and sits on $88.51 billion in assets, making it the deepest, most liquid vehicle for the trade. EWZ holders own it for a reason: broad exposure to Vale, Petrobras, Itau, and the rest of the Bovespa heavyweights in one line item. The question is whether they are paying a premium for that convenience when a near-identical alternative has quietly done the same job cheaper and better this year.

That alternative is the Franklin FTSE Brazil ETF (NYSEARCA:FLBR), which tracks the FTSE Brazil RIC Capped Index and holds the same names in slightly different weights.

Where EWZ Falls Short

The expense ratio is 0.59%, per the iShares fact sheet dated March 12, 2026. The alternative charges 0.19%. On a $10,000 position, that is a 40-basis-point annual gap, or $40 a year, compounding for as long as the investor holds. For a country fund that is essentially a wrapper around the same 60 to 80 Brazilian large caps, paying triple the fee for the iShares brand is the structural flaw.

The performance gap in 2026 makes the case harder to ignore. Year-to-date through July 13, 2026, FLBR is up 17.65% versus 12.46% for EWZ. Over the trailing year, FLBR returned 37.61% against EWZ’s 34.44%. Same country, same names, roughly five percentage points of edge YTD.

The Advantage Mechanism

Two things drive the gap. First is the fee itself, which is a permanent headwind on EWZ. Second is index construction. FLBR’s FTSE Brazil RIC Capped Index applies caps differently from MSCI’s 25/50 methodology, resulting in slightly different weightings for the same names. FLBR’s top position, Vale at 11.39%, is heavier than EWZ’s Vale weight of 9.94%. FLBR also has no exposure to Nu Holdings, which is 9.18% of EWZ, because MSCI treats the Cayman-domiciled fintech as Brazilian. FTSE does not. In 2026, tilting toward the mining and energy heavyweights (VALE, PETR3, PETR4 combined at 27.60% of FLBR) has paid off relative to fintech exposure.

The smaller fund holds 82 positions, with the top 10 at 67.41% of assets. The larger fund’s top 10 sit at 56.55%. The first is slightly more concentrated at the top, which cuts both ways depending on which way the mega caps move.

Income investors also get more from FLBR. The fund’s 5.84% dividend yield reflects Brazil’s high-payout corporate culture (banks, miners, utilities) net of a lower fee drag. Country funds are not typically the place for yield-focused allocations, but if that is part of why a reader owns EWZ, FLBR captures that more efficiently.

The Real Tradeoffs

The smaller of the two funds is so by a wide margin. Net assets stand at $497 million as of March 31, 2026, against the larger fund’s roughly $88.51 billion. That gap shows up in bid-ask spreads and options depth. Retail-sized orders execute fine in the smaller fund, but institutions running large blocks or an active options overlay will find the larger fund’s liquidity worth the fee. For a buy-and-hold Brazil sleeve, the liquidity premium is not worth 40 basis points a year.

Currency risk, political risk, commodity cyclicality: both funds carry the same Brazil beta. Neither hedges the real. This swap does not change the risk profile in any meaningful way. Emerging-market single-country exposure remains volatile in either wrapper, and rate-cut expectations from Brazil’s central bank cut both ways for domestic equities.

Making the Move

In a tax-advantaged account (IRA, 401(k)), the swap is mechanical. The rotation from EWZ into FLBR executes in a single trade with no tax consequence. In a taxable account, the calculation is different. An EWZ holder sitting on the 85.4% ten-year gain will trigger long-term capital gains on the switch. The 40-basis-point fee savings will take years to offset a 15% or 20% tax hit on embedded gains. Newer positions, or positions near breakeven, clear that hurdle easily.

The Verdict for Brazil Holders

For an investor buying Brazil exposure today, or holding EWZ in a retirement account, FLBR is the cleaner expression of the same idea at roughly one-third the cost. For long-tenured EWZ holders in taxable accounts, the fee gap is real, but the tax friction may outweigh it. The swap is worth evaluating against the position’s specific cost basis, not against the headline expense ratio alone.

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

Photo of David Beren
About the Author David Beren →

David Beren has been a Flywheel Publishing contributor since 2022. Writing for 24/7 Wall St. since 2023, David loves to write about topics of all shapes and sizes. As a technology expert, David focuses heavily on consumer electronics brands, automobiles, and general technology. He has previously written for LifeWire, formerly About.com. As a part-time freelance writer, David’s “day job” has been working on and leading social media for multiple Fortune 100 brands. David loves the flexibility of this field and its ability to reach customers exactly where they like to spend their time. Additionally, David previously published his own blog, TmoNews.com, which reached 3 million readers in its first year. In addition to freelance and social media work, David loves to spend time with his family and children and relive the glory days of video game consoles by playing any retro game console he can get his hands on.

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