Tag Archives: bond ETFs; exchange-traded-funds

Bond ETFs Are Growing At Fastest Pace On Record

MarketMuse update profiles the billions of dollars that have flowed into bond ETFs over the past few years and an in depth look at the reasoning behind it courtesy of the Wall Street Journal .

wall_street_journal_logoInstitutions are piling into exchange-traded bond funds at the fastest pace on record, driven by forces reshaping the increasingly illiquid corporate-debt market and their desire to stay nimble ahead of expected interest-rate moves.

Bond ETFs took in $32 billion globally this year through Feb. 26, according to data from Bloomberg LP, in what has been the strongest start to any year since the funds began in 2002.

More than half the $20 billion that flowed into fixed-income ETFs atBlackRock Inc. ’s iShares unit in the first eight weeks of this year came from institutions such as insurers and endowments. In some large funds, institutional money in ETFs has more than doubled in the past few years, the firm said.

The shift is the latest good news for providers of exchange-traded funds, which essentially are index-tracking funds that trade like stocks. Bond ETFs are already popular with individual investors because they have low fees and are easy to trade, qualities that are now appealing to more sophisticated investors who typically focus on hand-picking individual debt securities to beat their benchmarks.

“There was a monster rotation into fixed-income ETFs in February,” coming out of sector-based stock funds, said Reginald Browne, global co-head of ETF market making at Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. He said a client recently traded $1.8 billion in bond ETFs in a single trade.

A host of factors is behind institutions’ adoption of bond ETFs, analysts say. Among them: Deteriorating liquidity in corporate bonds has frustrated large investors as many individual bonds have become difficult to buy or sell quickly at a given price, thanks in part to rules limiting banks’ risk-taking.

For the entire article from the Wall Street Journals’ Katy Burne, click here.

De-Mystifying Fixed Income ETFs and ETF HF Trading

indexuniverseCourtesy of Drew Voros & Matt Hougan/IndexUniverse.com

Phil Mackintosh, managing director and head of trading strategy for Credit Suisse, recently visited IndexUniverse’s San Francisco headquarters and sat down with IU’s Global Head of Content Matt Hougan and Editor-in-Chief Drew Voros to talk about fixed-income ETFs, high-frequency trading and other topics.

IndexUniverse: There was quite a brouhaha with fixed-income ETFs—the premiums and discounts. As an opening question, are ETFs a good tool for access in the fixed-income markets?

Phil Mackintosh: Absolutely. They have incredibly good spreads and can often offer investors cheaper and retail-level access to bonds instead of buying individual bonds one by one. Plus, with ETFs trading intraday, investors also have the benefit of being able to trade in and out of them when they want.

In fact, sometimes I think the ETF wrapper can make it so easy for investors to get in and out of an asset class that they forget there are still underlying assets that all need to be traded for arbitrage to occur.

The brouhaha you mentioned is a great example of that. Just after the Fed started to discuss tapering, rates rallied significantly in a short period of time, and bond valuations fell in the underlying bond market. This led to significant bond outflows in both mutual funds and ETFs. And these outflows seemed to cause high-yield bond ETFs, in particular, to sell at a discount to their NAV.

But the fact that high-yield ETFs temporarily traded below NAV was misleading due to the fact that the high-yield bond market itself is mostly illiquid, and as a result, the bond indexes that track it sometimes have difficulty reflecting fair value in fast-moving markets. We also saw this in the credit crisis, but hindsight shows that those ETF discounts were a lot closer to the fair value of the bonds than the underlying bond indexes were.

IU: Do you think investors understand that?

(CONTINUE TO THE FULL ARTICLE AT IU.com) Continue reading