{
    "type": "ETF",
    "ucits": true,
    "fund_name": "WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income UCITS ETF",
    "investment_objective": "Track the price and yield performance of the WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income UCITS Index, a rules-based, fundamentally weighted index of high dividend yielding emerging market companies screened by quality and momentum factors.",
    "primary_asset_class": "Equity",
    "geographic_focus": "Emerging Markets (Brazil, Chile, China, Czech Republic, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, Philippines, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey)",
    "replication_method": "physical",
    "swaps": false,
    "derivatives": false,
    "leverage": false,
    "inverse": false,
    "complex_factors": "",
    "classification": "non-complex",
    "supporting_data": "The ETF physically replicates the underlying index by investing in a representative sample of equity securities from emerging markets, as confirmed by the KIID, PRIIPs KID, and monthly factsheet. There is no mention of synthetic replication, swap agreements, total return swaps, or derivative instruments used as part of the investment strategy. The fund may use repurchase/reverse repurchase agreements and stock lending solely for efficient portfolio management, which does not constitute inherent derivative use for investment purposes. The risk profile is medium (SRRI 4 out of 7) with no leverage or inverse exposure. The fund invests directly in liquid equities and does not hold complex structured products or contingent convertible bonds. Costs are straightforward with a TER of 0.46% and no performance fees. The PRIIPs KID does not include any comprehension warnings or complexity flags. The index tracked is fundamentally weighted and dividend-based but does not involve complex derivative overlays or capital protection features. Counterparty risk is limited to operational and custody risks, not derivative counterparty risk. Therefore, under MiFID II criteria, this ETF is classified as non-complex."
}