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PLUS High Dividend (161510) 🔎 In-depth

Hanwha Asset Management · Equity · Korea · Strategy · Factor · Price 2026.07.13 · Updated 2026-07-14

An ETF that selects and holds domestic stocks paying high dividends, aiming for steady dividend (income) returns. Managed by Hanwha Asset Management, it physically holds the actual stocks to track a FnGuide dividend-stock index directly. Its core is made up of names that have traditionally paid high dividends, such as financials (banks, brokerages, insurers) and telecom stocks.

Price as of 2026.07.13 close

Close₩24,875
Change-1.15%
NAV₩25,062
Premium / discount-0.75%
Market cap$1.6B
AUM (net assets)$1.6B
Volume1,114,770 shares
Turnover$18.8M
Benchmark indexFnGuide Dividend Stock Index
Benchmark close24,199.45

Understanding this ETF

🎯What it tracks

The benchmark index is a dividend-stock index calculated by FnGuide. Its method is to first screen for sufficiently actively traded names among the top 200 by free-float market capitalization listed on KOSPI, and then select the top 30 with the highest expected dividend yield. The core is that it prioritizes companies that 'pay high dividends' rather than simply large companies, and it sets each name's weight so that a higher dividend yield carries a larger weight. Constituents are regularly rebalanced twice a year, in May and November. The benchmark index closing value is 24,199.45.

🌊How it moves

Because it is centered on mature companies that pay high dividends, it tends to move relatively gently compared with growth-stock indexes that swing sharply. Note, however, that because the weight of financial stocks is large, the index also reacts to issues such as the interest-rate environment, bank earnings, and shareholder-return policy. On July 13, 2026, the close was ₩24,875, down -1.15% on the day; even though that day saw a broad shake-up in KOSPI on a plunge in large semiconductor stocks, this ETF's decline was smaller than the market average. This can be seen as an example of the ETF's character, with its low semiconductor weight and its focus on defensive sectors such as financials and telecom. As a domestic-stock product, there is no FX effect.

🧭Profile & traits

It is an income-oriented product suited to investors who value 'dividends that arrive steadily' over price gains. Its strengths are that it pays distributions regularly and, because the constituents themselves have high dividend tendencies, it can be expected to provide stable cash flow. On the other hand, because its growth-stock weight is low, it may rise relatively less when the market rallies sharply on technology stocks, and you should be aware that dividends can increase or decrease with corporate earnings and are not fixed. Also, given the high weight of financial stocks, it is affected by the financial-sector cycle, including interest rates and regulation.

📈Recent trend

Into 2026, the environment remained favorable for domestic high-dividend and financial stocks. As the government decided to introduce a temporary tax preference (separate taxation) on dividend income from high-dividend companies, interest in high-dividend stocks grew, and bank stocks were re-rated as a key beneficiary sector of the 'value-up' policy as strengthened shareholder returns such as share buybacks, cancellations, and dividend increases came into focus. Indeed, the domestic banking-sector index has risen sharply again since the end of 2024. This trend overlaps in direction with the names this ETF mainly holds.

💡In plain terms

In a word, it is an ETF that puts high-dividend banks, telecom stocks, and the like into one basket to collect dividends. It has less of a dramatic kick, but it is a stable, income-oriented product in which dividends arrive steadily.

Holdings & weights

The composition has a clear 'high-dividend, value stock' character. Financial stocks such as bank holding companies, brokerages, insurers, and card companies take the largest weights, and to these are added sectors with high dividend tendencies such as telecom, autos, and holding companies. Because the structure is close to equal-weighted, with the weights of the top names not differing greatly from one another, it is spread evenly across roughly 30 dividend stocks rather than concentrated in one or two. Near the top are financial stocks such as Industrial Bank of Korea, DB Insurance, NH Investment & Securities, Woori Financial Group, Hana Financial Group, Samsung Card, and Samsung Securities, along with names such as Kia and KT (please refer to the constituent table below for specific names and weights). Because it holds many mature large-cap dividend stocks rather than growth stocks, the index itself is somewhat defensive in character.

HoldingWeight
Industrial Bank of Korea0241105.41%
NH Investment & Securities0059405.37%
DB Insurance0058305.22%
Woori Financial Group3161405.08%
Kia0002704.77%
Samsung Card0297804.65%
Hana Financial Group0867904.49%
Cheil Worldwide0300004.37%
Samsung Securities0163604.27%
KT0302004.13%
Samsung Fire & Marine Insurance0008103.95%
GS Holdings0789303.85%
Korea Investment Holdings0710503.73%
JB Financial Group1753303.58%
HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering0095403.52%

As of 2026-07-13 · Source: Hanwha Asset Management — official constituent disclosure (PDF)

Classification

Asset typeEquity
RegionKorea
CategoryStrategy · Factor
Use caseIncome
ManagementPassive
LeverageStandard
ReplicationPhysical
FX hedgeDomestic (N/A)
IssuerHanwha Asset Management
Listed2012/08/29
High dividend

Notes & cautions

ETF terms explained
NAV (net asset value)The real per-share value of the assets the ETF holds. The market price generally trades near this figure.
Premium / discountHow much the market price trades above (+) or below (−) NAV. The closer to 0%, the more fairly it is priced.
Tracking errorHow far the ETF's return drifts from its benchmark index. Smaller is better — it means the ETF follows the index closely.
AUM (net assets)The total pool of assets in the ETF. Larger AUM generally means smoother trading and a lower delisting risk.
Benchmark indexThe index the ETF aims to follow. The ETF's price reflects this index's moves.
Leverage / inverseLeverage products move at a multiple (e.g. 2x) of the index's daily move; inverse products move opposite to the index — the index falls, they gain. Both are volatile and mainly for short holding periods.
FX hedge / FX exposureFor overseas-asset ETFs, hedging the currency fixes returns against exchange-rate swings ((H) in the name); leaving it unhedged is FX exposure.

Korea FSC securities market-price API (data.go.kr) · ETF classification & tagging: our own descriptive categorization

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