While the S&P 500 has slipped about 2% so far in 2026, international equities have quietly moved in the opposite direction. The gap is real, and the macro forces behind it are building. Germany’s historic fiscal expansion into defense and infrastructure, persistent questions about dollar strength, and US equity valuations that remain elevated relative to the rest of the world have all pointed toward the same conclusion: international stocks have attracted renewed attention not seen in years.
Three ETFs offer meaningfully different approaches to international equity exposure, ranging from a low-cost index approach to a factor-tilted active strategy to a high-dividend income play.
VXUS: The Broadest Bet on Everything Outside the US
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund (NYSEARCA:VXUS) is the simplest expression of the international rotation trade. It tracks the FTSE Global All Cap ex US Index, giving investors exposure to developed and emerging markets across thousands of companies in a single fund. With $110.9 billion in assets, it is one of the largest international ETFs available.
The performance gap versus US equities is already visible. VXUS has returned about 4% year-to-date through March 17, while SPY has lost ground over the same stretch. Over the past twelve months, VXUS returned 26%, a number that would have surprised most investors who spent years watching international underperform.
The cost case for VXUS is hard to argue with. The expense ratio is 0.05%, which means virtually nothing comes out of returns for fund expenses. For investors who simply want to own the world outside the US at minimal cost, this is the cleanest vehicle available. The tradeoff is that broad exposure also means owning the laggards alongside the leaders. When the rotation unfolds unevenly across regions, VXUS captures the average, not the best.
FENI: A Smarter Tilt Within Developed Markets
Fidelity Enhanced International ETF (NYSEARCA:FENI) takes a different approach. Rather than tracking a cap-weighted index mechanically, it uses Fidelity’s proprietary research model to identify long-term drivers of stock returns within the MSCI EAFE universe, tilting toward stocks with favorable quality, value, and momentum characteristics. The goal is to beat the MSCI EAFE Index over time, not just match it.
The early results support the approach. FENI has returned 27% over the past year and is up roughly 4% year-to-date, keeping pace with VXUS while targeting a more selective slice of developed markets. Since its November 2023 inception, the fund has gained about 61% from its starting price, though that covers a period of strong international performance broadly.
The expense ratio of 0.28% is higher than VXUS but modest for an actively managed strategy. Investors pay a small premium for the factor tilt and the expectation of index-beating returns. The key risk is that factor models can underperform during periods when the market rewards characteristics the model does not favor. FENI is also limited to developed markets, which means no emerging market exposure for investors who want it.
FIDI: Dividend Income With a European Lean
Fidelity International High Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA:FIDI) targets a different investor need. Rather than maximizing total return, it focuses on international stocks with high and growing dividends, delivering a 3.9% yield for income-focused investors.
The portfolio is heavily tilted toward Europe, which represents 56% of the fund — a concentration that matters right now given the continent’s fiscal shift. Financials dominate at 34%, and European banks have been among the clearest beneficiaries of higher rates and renewed government spending. Defensive sectors like consumer staples and materials round out the rest, providing ballast against cyclical swings and reinforcing the fund’s income-first orientation.
The top holdings — Enel, National Grid, Rio Tinto, Nestle, and British American Tobacco — are businesses built around predictable cash flows, and that stability has translated into strong results. FIDI has returned 30% over the past year and 6.6% year-to-date, outpacing both VXUS and the S&P 500, driven by the combination of dividend income and European equity re-rating.
The expense ratio of 0.19% is competitive for a dividend-focused strategy. The tradeoff is concentration. With more than half the portfolio in Europe and financials as the dominant sector, FIDI is a more targeted bet than it might appear. If European banks stumble or the continent’s fiscal expansion disappoints, the fund will feel it. The $212 million in assets also makes it a smaller fund, which is worth noting for investors concerned about liquidity.
How the Three Funds Compare
VXUS suits investors who want the broadest possible international footprint — developed and emerging markets combined — without paying up for active management or accepting regional concentration. FENI is the better fit for investors who want developed-market exposure but are willing to pay a modest premium for a factor tilt designed to beat the benchmark over time. FIDI is distinct in that it prioritizes income generation, making it more relevant for investors who need current yield alongside international diversification, though its heavy European and financials weighting means it carries more concentrated risk than either alternative.
All three have outperformed the S&P 500 year-to-date as of mid-March 2026. Whether that gap widens or closes depends on how the dollar, US valuations, and European growth evolve from here. Each fund represents a distinct approach to international equity exposure as that dynamic continues to unfold.
