How Retirees Are Using ESGD to Pair ESG Values With International Dividend Income

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By Austin Smith Published

Quick Read

  • iShares ESG Aware MSCI EAFE ETF (ESGD) rose 20.55% over trailing twelve months and is up 3% year-to-date 2026, with a 2.19% dividend yield and 0.20% expense ratio. ASML, Novartis, Roche, HSBC, and Siemens are top holdings.

  • A weaker dollar and renewed investor appetite for non-US developed markets are driving international equity rallies, making ESGD’s diversified basket of dividend-paying multinationals attractive for retirees seeking values-aligned income.

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How Retirees Are Using ESGD to Pair ESG Values With International Dividend Income

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For retirees who spent decades building a portfolio aligned with their values, the final stretch of the journey presents a real tension: how do you maintain ESG principles while also generating income from international diversification? iShares ESG Aware MSCI EAFE ETF (NYSEARCA:ESGD | ESGD Price Prediction) is one of the few funds that tries to answer both questions at once.

What Role ESGD Is Designed to Fill

ESGD tracks the MSCI EAFE Extended ESG Focus Index, giving investors exposure to large- and mid-cap developed market companies outside the US and Canada that score well on environmental, social, and governance criteria. Think of it as the international equity sleeve of a retirement portfolio, filtered through an ESG lens.

The return engine here is straightforward: you own a diversified basket of profitable, dividend-paying multinationals across Europe, Japan, and the Asia-Pacific region. The fund holds over 400 positions, with top names including ASML, Novartis, Roche, HSBC, and Siemens. These are not speculative growth bets. They are established businesses with long histories of returning capital to shareholders.

The income component comes from the underlying companies’ dividends, passed through to investors semi-annually. The fund carries a 2.19% dividend yield and a very low 0.20% expense ratio, keeping costs minimal for a fund of this scope.

Does the Strategy Actually Deliver?

ESGD’s recent performance reflects the broader rally in international equities, driven by a weaker dollar and renewed investor appetite for non-US developed markets. Shares rose 20.55% over the trailing twelve months, a strong result for an ESG-screened fund. Year-to-date in 2026, the fund is up about 3%, though a sharp pullback of 4.17% in just one week in the week through March 9 is a reminder of how quickly sentiment can shift in foreign markets when macro conditions change.

The five-year return of 50% is respectable for an ESG-screened international fund, though it meaningfully trails the US large-cap benchmark over the same period — a tradeoff investors should weigh when sizing their international allocation.

The dividend trend tells a more encouraging story for income-focused retirees. Total distributions climbed from $1.19 in 2020 to $3.43 in 2025, with the most recent payment alone coming in at $1.79 per share. That variability matters: ESGD’s semi-annual structure means income is lumpy, not monthly, which requires planning for retirees who depend on distributions for living expenses.

At 2.19%, ESGD’s dividend yield sits well below the current 10-year Treasury yield of 4.15%. A retiree choosing ESGD over a Treasury is accepting less current income in exchange for growth potential, international diversification, and values alignment. That is a conscious tradeoff, not a yield advantage.

The Real Tradeoffs to Understand

Three constraints define who this fund actually suits. First, currency risk is real and ongoing. ESGD holds positions across the euro, yen, Swiss franc, British pound, and several other currencies. When the dollar strengthens, returns erode for US-based retirees even if the underlying companies perform well.

Second, the ESG filter does not eliminate all controversial holdings. Shell, for example, appears among the top 20 holdings despite being a major fossil fuel producer. The index methodology tilts toward higher ESG scorers within each sector rather than excluding entire industries, which surprises some investors who expect a stricter screen.

Third, the income is inconsistent year to year. The gap between $1.70 in 2022 and $3.43 in 2025 reflects both currency movements and the payout policies of underlying companies, neither of which ESGD controls. Retirees relying on this as a primary income source need a cash buffer for leaner distribution years.

ESGD is structured as an international equity fund for developed markets outside the US and Canada, with semi-annual, variable income distributions, an ESG tilt, and a focus on large- and mid-cap blue-chip companies. Investors evaluating income needs, currency exposure, and ESG alignment relative to fixed-income alternatives may find the fund’s characteristics relevant to their research.

Photo of Austin Smith
About the Author Austin Smith →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience in the markets. He spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched new brands in the personal finance and real estate investing space.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. Today he writes for 24/7 Wall St and covers equities, REITs, and ETFs for readers. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast.

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about me here.

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