The high trading-volume and price-discovery aspects that ETFs provided during the trials of March solidified their place in institutional portfolios, said Carolyn Weinberg, iShares global head of product.
“We needed a market event for some of the skeptics or institutions who theorized that they wouldn’t work to show and demonstrate that ETFs are important and critical tools,” she said. “It’s more challenging and likely more costly to find the individual bonds quickly and buy them in a time of market stress.”
Trading froze across bond markets in March as volatility surged, sapping liquidity in an asset class where even in normal times individual securities may not change hands for days. Fixed-income ETFs — which trade on exchanges and behave like stocks — acted as an exit route of sorts, with the funds selling off more quickly than their harder-to-unload holdings.
Average daily dollar trading volume in BlackRock’s $57 billion iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF — the biggest credit ETF — was 7.5 times greater than that of its five largest bond holdings from February through April. In the $28 billion iShares iBoxx High Yield Corporate Bond ETF, it was 25 times greater.
[More: Vanguard surpasses BlackRock in ETF inflows during first half]
Critics have long warned that the liquidity mismatch between bond ETFs and the securities they hold could exacerbate selling pressure and destabilize markets in a meltdown. However, before the Federal Reserve announced March 23 that it would intervene in credit markets, fixed-income ETFs provided investors with a vehicle to trade corporate bonds as underlying markets seized, according to S&P Global Ratings.
“ETFs are playing an increasing role in providing secondary market liquidity, which was on display during the recent volatility,” S&P Global analysts wrote in a report last week. “Record ETF volumes helped to support liquidity and, importantly, provide price discovery.”
Evidence is mounting that insurance companies are stepping up activity in the space. S&P Dow Jones data show that insurers bought more than $3.4 billion worth of bond ETFs in the first three months of 2020, versus about $600 million worth of equity ETFs. The ETFs were likely easier to access amid the height of the turmoil, according to CFRA Research.
“Insurers found the liquidity of fixed income ETFs appealing relative to accessing the cash bond market, as credit spreads widened amid elevated default risk and bond sellers outweighing buyers in March,” Todd Rosenbluth, CFRA’s head of ETF and mutual fund research, wrote in a report last week.
[More: Bond ETFs come of age]
The post BlackRock expects bond ETF assets to hit $2T by 2024 appeared first on InvestmentNews.
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