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Junk Bond ETFs Quench Traders’ Thirst For Liquidity

Summary High-yield bond investors are concerned about liquidity concerns in the primary markets ahead of a Federal Reserve interest rate hike. Nevertheless, junk bond traders have been turning to ETFs to meet their liquidity needs. Growing importance of ETFs in the fixed-income market. By Todd Shriber & Tom Lydon Participants in the high-yield bond market are once again fretting about liquidity as the Federal Reserve inches closer to raising interest rates. With the Fed likely on course to raise interest rates before the end of 2015, investors are once again questioning the ability of junk bond ETFs to endure a potential sequel to the taper tantrum of 2013. However, liquidity-starved junk bond traders are increasingly turning to ETFs, such as the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: HYG ) and the SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: JNK ) , as it becomes harder – and pricier – to trade junk-rated debt. “The growing size of trades in the funds tells the same story: Transactions of more than $1 million are making up about a quarter of volumes in the two biggest high-yield ETFs now, up from 15 percent in early 2012, according to a July 10 Deutsche Bank report,” reports Lisa Abramowicz for Bloomberg . HYG and JNK are the two largest high-yield bond ETFs by assets. The average trailing 90-day volume for the two ETFs is nearly 7.2 million shares compared to just under three million shares per day for the iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: LQD ) , the largest investment-grade corporate bond ETF. Due to new regulations and capital requirements imposed following the financial crisis, these same banks could be forced to cut inventories as well As investors found it more difficult to price fixed-income securities, many have turned to ETFs for their greater perceived liquidity. The potential problems ahead are associated with large redemptions in the ETFs or secondary markets. If enough people exit the funds, the ETF providers will have to swap shares for bond securities in the primary market. However, if there is not enough bond securities in the underlying market to meet redemptions , ETF investors may not be getting what they bargained for. Speaking broadly of fixed income ETFs, BlackRock (NYSE: BLK ), the world’s largest asset manager and issuer of HYG, said in a recent whitepaper, “Bond ETFs offer many of the benefits bond market reformers have long urged: they improve the ability of all investors to transact efficiently, with complete price transparency, and at lower transaction costs. Because bond ETFs trade on an exchange, they show investors what’s really going on, which is especially important when markets are stressed.” “ETFs have been increasingly providing institutions with a safety valve to get out of investments quickly. These days, big bond buyers are willing to fork over cash for that,” according to Bloomberg. Year-to-date, investors have pulled $797.6 million from HYG while adding $539.4 million to JNK. LQD has added over $2.4 billion in new assets. iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (click to enlarge) Tom Lydon’s clients own shares of HYG, JNK and LQD. Disclosure: I am/we are long HYG, JNK, LQD. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Harvesting Higher Yields With The Fallen Angel Bond ETF

Summary High-yield bonds have attracted significant investor attention in the current yield-starved environment. However, lower quality credit is usually associated with higher volatility and risk compared to investment grade credit. Can fallen angels capture the best of both words? This article seeks to compare the fallen angel bond ETF ANGL with three other U.S. corporate bond ETFs: LQD, JNK and HYG. Introduction The low interest rate environment that has prevailed for the past few years has shifted significant investor attention towards a range of income-generating securities, such as dividend stocks, REITS, MLPs, BDCs and high-yield bonds. Within the realm of high-yield bonds, the two largest U.S. high-yield bond ETFs are the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: HYG ) and the SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: JNK ), which have attracted around $14B and $10B in assets, respectively. However, high-yield bonds, due to their lower credit quality have also historically been associated with increased volatility and risk compared to investment grade bonds (see the iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: LQD ), which has $21B in assets). Not surprisingly, this leads to a common investor dilemma: should one go for the increased yield but higher risk of junk bonds, or the increased safety but lower yield of investment grade bonds? And is it possible to have some of both? Fallen angels Fallen angel bonds are those that were rated as investment grade when issued, but were then subsequently downgraded to non-investment grade status. Consequently, fallen angel bonds typically occupy the higher rungs (i.e., BB) of the non-investment grade bond credit ladder. The fall of a company from investment grade to non-investment grade status, sometimes due to a ratings cut of as little as one notch, can significantly impact the perceived risk and hence valuation of the company’s debt and equity. These bonds instantly become subjected to forced and indiscriminate selling by fund managers or indices that do not allow junk debt in their investment mandates. This can lead to substantial mispricing which therefore can create value in these bonds. According to data provided by the fund website , fallen angel bonds have outperformed high-yield bonds for 8 out of 11 calendar years since 2004, and with superior risk-adjusted returns to boot. The Market Vectors Fallen Angel Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: ANGL ) aims to capture the outperformance of fallen angel bonds. This fund appears to be little-known, with only 76 followers on Seeking Alpha. This article seeks to compare ANGL with three other U.S. corporate bond ETFs, LQD, JNK and HYG to evaluate the performance of the fallen angel ETF since inception and whether or not it has performed as expected. Credit profile The following table provides data for the credit quality distribution of these four funds (data from fund websites). ANGL LQD JNK HYG AAA – 1.7 – – AA – 10.82 – – A 0.64 47.86 – – BBB 1.56 38.25 – 2.29 BB 76.9 – 42.06 48.14 B 14.13 – 44.15 39.47 CCC 6.98 – 13.79 9.18 This data is also presented graphically. We can see from the data above that the majority of ANGL’s holdings are in BB bonds. LQD obviously contains only investment grade bonds, while JNK and HYG both only contain non-investment grade bonds. JNK and HYG appear to have a similar overall credit quality, with JNK having fewer BB bonds but more CCC bonds. Performance The following chart shows the performance of the four funds over the past 4 years (since inception of ANGL). ANGL Total Return Price data by YCharts We can see from the data above that ANGL has had the highest performance of 29.07% over the past four years. The two high-yield bond funds, JNK and HYG, had total return performances of 21.33% and 21.76%, respectively, while LQD had the lowest total return of 13.08%. The following table illustrates further performance metrics for the four bond funds. Data are from Morningstar, and return figures are annualized. Metric ANGL LQD JNK HYG Return (3Y) 9.98 4.41 7.08 7.04 Return (5Y) – 6.54 7.16 8.37 Return (10Y) – 5.41 – – Volatility (3Y) 4.34 5.22 4.91 4.59 Volatility (5Y) – 5.21 8.48 6.65 Volatility (10Y) – 7.07 – – Sharpe ratio (3Y) 2.21 0.84 1.41 1.50 Sharpe ratio (5Y) – 1.23 1.17 1.24 Sharpe ratio (10Y) – 0.58 – – We can see that over the past three years, ANGL not only had the highest return out of the four bond funds, but is also had the lowest volatility as well. This is surprising because one might have expected the ANGL to possess increased volatility compared to the investment grade bond fund LQD. The lowest volatility and highest return of ANGL causes the fund to exhibit a Sharpe ratio (2.21) that is significantly higher than the three other bond funds. This indicates that ANGL has exhibited the best risk-adjusted performance of the four funds ove the past three years. Fund data Relevant data for the funds are shown below and are from Morningstar . ANGL LQD JNK HYG Yield [ttm] 5.18% 3.37% 5.77% 5.37% Expense ratio 0.40% 0.15% 0.40% 0.50% Inception Apr. 2010 Jul. 2002 Oct. 2007 Apr. 2007 Assets $36.7M $20.8B $10.1B $5.37B Avg Vol. 8.7K 2.2M 6.8M 6.1MM No. holdings 173 1,371 801 1,010 Annual turnover 35% 9% 30% 11% Average maturity 10.17 12.21 6.34 4.93 Concluding thoughts In my opinion, ANGL is an excellent bond ETF that can form a core part of a well-diversified portfolio. It currently yields 5.18%, which is around 180 basis points greater than the investment grade bond fund LQD (3.37%) . Additionally, its yield is only 20 to 50 basis points less than that of JNK (5.77%) and HYG (5.37%), which are significantly “junkier” than ANGL. Additionally, its expense ratio is reasonable at 0.40%, which is the same as that for JNK and 0.10% cheaper than that for HYG. Importantly, fallen angel bonds have outperformed high-yield bonds on a risk-adjusted performance for 11 years (index performance), and for at least four years over both high-yield bonds and investment grade bonds (live ETF performance). Additionally, I believe that the mispricing that occurs upon the downgrading of a bond into non-investment grade status is an anomaly that should continue to persist into the future. The AUM of ANGL is only $36.7M, which is less than 1% that of the other three funds, but I expect this figure to rise as the performance of the fund becomes better known. However, this does lead to a trading low volume of 8.7K shares for ANGL, which may result in higher bid-ask spreads for investors. Additionally, the maturity of ANGL is at 10.17 years, which is lower than for LQD (12.21) but significantly higher than for JNK (6.34) and HYG (4.93). This suggests that ANGL might be more interest-rate sensitive than JNK and HYG. Surprisingly, however, ANGL has avoided damage from the mini-“Taper tantrum” of 2015 so far, posting even better total return performances compared to the lower-maturity funds JNK and HYG, while LQD has predictably slid. ANGL Total Return Price data by YCharts Disclosure: I am/we are long ANGL. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Lipper Fund Flows: Equity Funds Post Gains Amidst Greece News

By Patrick Keon The broad market equity indices rallied on the last trading day of the fund-flows week ended Wednesday, June 10, 2015, to reduce their overall losses for the week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 Index gained 236.36 and 25.05 points, respectively, on that day. This spike enabled both the Dow (-75.87 points) and S&P 500 (-8.87 points) to close the week with losses of only 0.41% each. Speculation about an impending Federal Reserve interest rate hike and about Greece dominated the financial news for the week. Stronger economic data pointed to an interest rate hike by the Fed this fall. The Labor Department reported that the economy had generated 280,000 new jobs for May – far more than anticipated. U.S. data services hinted at a possible upward revision to Q1 GDP as data suggested consumer spending was higher than initially estimated. And, New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley commented that he still expects there to be a rate hike this year. Greece started the week off on a down note, informing the International Monetary Fund on Thursday, June 4, that it intended to combine the four loan payments due in June into one lump-sum payment on June 30 (with the first payment due on Friday, June 5, being skipped). The markets did not react favorably to this news; both the Dow and the S&P 500 shed 0.9% on June 4. But the key piece of news contributing to this past Wednesday’s rally was that Greece, Germany, and France had agreed to ramp up negotiations in order to avoid a default by Greece. Turning our attention to the week’s fund-flow activity, Lipper’s fund macro-groups (including both mutual funds and exchange-traded funds [ETFs]) had aggregate net outflows of $7.5 billion for the week. Money market funds (-$7.2 billion), taxable bond funds (-$2.6 billion), and municipal bond funds (-$412 million) all suffered net outflows, while equity funds grew their coffers by $2.8 billion net. The majority of the outflows from taxable bond funds came from ETFs (-$2.0 billion), while mutual funds had $653 million leave. Within the ETF universe the two biggest individual net outflows came from high-yield products iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF ((NYSEARCA: HYG ), -$1.1 billion) and SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF ((NYSEARCA: JNK ), -$763 million). High yield was also the main culprit for mutual funds; the group saw $809 million leave. Municipal bond mutual funds had negative flows of $409 million net for the week. Continuing the trend we saw in taxable fixed income funds, high-yield muni debt funds were the single largest contributor (-$239 million) to the net outflows. ETFs (+$2.0 billion) accounted for the majority of net new money into equity funds, while mutual funds contributed $800 million to the inflows. The two largest net inflows among individual ETFs were into SPDR S&P 500 ETF ((NYSEARCA: SPY ), +$812 million) and Financial Select Sector SPDR ((NYSEARCA: XLF ), +$530 million). For mutual funds, nondomestic equity funds (+$1.6 billion) were responsible for all the positive net flows, while domestic equity funds (-$800 million) once again saw money leave their coffers. After taking in $8.0 billion of net new money the previous week, money market funds had net outflows of approximately the same amount (-$7.2 billion) this past week. Institutional money market funds were responsible for $5.5 billion of the week’s outflows.