Investment
Features
FeesSafety
Academy
More
Pluang+

Compare iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETF (EWH) vs Vale SA (VALE) Price & Performance

iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETFTrade
Vale SATrade

Price performance (Past 24H)

Key statistics

iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETF vs Vale SA — how do they compare? iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETF trades at $22.05, while Vale SA trades at $14.33 (market cap $61.19B). The key difference: Vale SA pays a 8.58% dividend while iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETF pays none, and Vale SA is trading nearer its 52-week high, iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETF nearer its low. Which is the better fit depends on your goals.

EWHVALE
Sector
Broad Market / FactorBasic Materials
52-Week High
$24.55$17.82
52-Week Low
$20.15$9.53
Market Cap
$61.19B
Enterprise Value
$78.11B
Dividend Yield
8.58%

Aura AI Summary

Signals from Pluang's Aura AI — not financial advice

iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETF

EWH trades at $22.05, up 1.75% today, with a bullish technical signal from moving averages but overbought RSI readings. The ETF tracks Hong Kong equities, with recent momentum in Chinese tech stocks supporting performance. A dividend of $0.35 is scheduled for June 2026. Support and resistance cluster tightly around $22, indicating a critical price zone.

Outlook hinges on Hang Seng Index momentum and China's economic policies. Risks include regulatory scrutiny on Chinese firms and Asian market volatility. Analyst sentiment is mixed, with technical strength countered by valuation concerns in global markets.

Vale SA

No Aura AI signal available yet.

Returns comparison

Trailing returns across standard periods

Top news

Latest headlines on both assets

About iShares MSCI Hong Kong ETF

EWH tracks the MSCI Hong Kong 25/50 Index, providing broad exposure to large and mid-cap companies listed in Hong Kong. It focuses on the established pillars of the local economy, with heavy weightings in financials, real estate, and utilities, serving as a single-country diversification tool.

Read more on EWH

About Vale SA

Vale is the world's largest iron ore miner and one of the largest diversified miners, along with BHP and Rio Tinto. Earnings are dominated by the bulk materials division, primarily iron ore and iron ore pellets, with minor contributions from iron ore proxies, including manganese and coal. The base metals division is much smaller, primarily consisting of nickel mines and smelters with a small contribution from copper.

Read more on VALE