Global shares
INCM
Betashares S&P Global High Dividend Aristocrats ETF · Betashares
Roughly 100 to 200 large global companies (outside Australia) that have a long history of paying dividends — each one has increased or held steady its dividend every year for at least the last ten years.
What the fee costs you
The management fee is 0.39% a year. Here’s what that works out to in dollars:
A 0.39% yearly fee works out to about $39 a year per $10,000 invested.
A rough guide based on the headline fee only. Other costs (such as brokerage or buy/sell spreads) aren’t included.
The basics
- Issuer
- Betashares
- Asset class
- Global shares
- Number of holdings
- ~100–200
- Where it invests
- Global developed markets, around three-quarters United States, with Japan, Canada, Switzerland and Germany making up much of the rest.
- Income paid
- Quarterly
- Currency hedged
- No — It's unhedged, so for an Australian investor the value also moves with the Australian dollar against foreign currencies, on top of the markets themselves.
Its character
An income-tilted take on global shares: it screens for companies with a decade or more of steady or rising dividends, which tends to favour established, slower-growth businesses over fast-growing tech. The result usually leans toward sectors that pay reliable income.
What to keep in mind
The dividend screen narrows it to fewer companies than a broad world fund and tilts it toward income-paying sectors, so it can look and move differently from the wider market. It still leans on the United States and carries currency movements for an Australian holder.
How this fund relates to others
A dividend-screened subset of the developed-world universe; it overlaps with broad global funds in their large income-paying names but tilts away from the high-growth tech companies those funds also hold.
Figures last verified 2026-06-22against the issuer’s factsheet and PDS.