You can learn a lot about investing in global  telecom stocks by watching soccer...
Britain's Vodafone (NYSE:VOD),  Spain's Telefonica (NYSE:TEF), and Germany's T-Mobile (NYSE:DT) all jockey for  jersey placement in the world's top leagues, giving fans a constant reminder  which companies are aligned with their teams. As with NASCAR's ad-laden auto  racers here in the U.S., phone service providers hope team fervor translates to  brand loyalty.
In sports and business, though, sometimes the best teams  have to be pieced together to combine their strength...
That's why  Vodafone and Telefonica just announced a blockbuster deal to share network  infrastructure across Europe. Both companies' stock soared on the news, and so  did an international telecommunications all-star ETF, as you'll see  below.
Just as Manchester United and Arsenal players can still have it  out in league play but share their prowess when it comes time to don England's  jersey, Vodafone and Telefonica are maintaining a competitive spirit even while  they recognize a major mutual benefit.
Hundreds of millions of dollars in  savings will come to both companies through the infrastructure tie-up,  eliminating coverage gaps and allowing them to concentrate on retail customer  service in Germany, Spain, Ireland, the UK, and possibly the Czech  Republic.
In a joint statement Monday, Vodafone and Telefonica asserted  the two "will continue to compete strongly against each other in local markets,  while giving [their] customers enhanced mobile coverage in more places, using  fewer mast sites."
They're also piggybacking on existing regulatory  clearances, sharing signal radius without changing the nature of either  company's international operations. That's a big deal in today's increasingly  protectionist business environment, where a political permit roadblock could  mean millions in lost revenue and opportunity cost.
Unfortunately, if  you're in the wrong telecom ETF, you could be missing out on the benefits to  both of these worldwide companies.
Choosing the Right Global Telecom ETF  
The iShares Dow Jones U.S. Telecom ETF (NYSE:IYZ) has been outperforming  the S&P 500 over the past six months, which is good.
But it's not as  good as the performance of its more internationally diverse cousin, the iShares  S&P Global Telecommunications Sector ETF (NYSE:IXP).
In this chart,  we see how well IYZ, IXP, and the S&P have done from fall into early spring.  Clearly the IXP has recovered higher from the market's mid-November  swoon.
With over 10% of its allocation in each, IXP will reap the  benefits of Vodafone and Telefonica's infrastructure sharing in Europe. But the  fund also gives you plenty of U.S. exposure, as the top holding is AT&T  (NYSE:A). Deutsche Telekom, which operates internationally as T-Mobile, is also  in the mix.
On top of all that upside potential, there's more to IXP than  the fund's company-by-country breakdown will tell you. As is the case with all  of the elite global ETFs, this global telecom team gets its kick from emerging  market investments that stretch far outside London, Madrid, or  Berlin.
Vodafone, through its many African subsidiaries, is actually the  major force behind much of that continent's "leapfrog" mobile phone market  expansion. That is, Vodafone is profiting from the fact that most African  customers are using their mobile handset as the primary means of communication,  skipping fixed-line service altogether. 
Over 75% of small business  owners in Sub-Saharan Africa use cell phones as their only line, not only for  convenience but also because of shoddy local fixed-line infrastructure. And  Vodafone is in prime position to take advantage of world-leading growth rates in  Africa's developing markets. 
In fact, some technology already in use in those emerging markets hasn't caught on yet in the richest countries. . . Phone-to-phone payments are common in Kenya, and migrant workers can communicate with their families both to talk and to send money home in just seconds.
Telefonica, for its part, has done a great job of  expanding into Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America. Like the O2 brand  Telefonica operates in the UK, Telefonica's Latin Movistar subsidiary is all  over soccer shirts in Latin America. Movistar is the largest operator in several  Latin countries, helping to balance out a Spanish market that is reeling from a  monumental real estate collapse and an overall financial malaise in the past  year.
In this recession, money still talks, and so do people.
Make  sure you dial the right number to reap the benefits of global telecommunication  trends we see unfolding, even during slow economic  times.
 
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