Investors dump bond ETFs as interest rate hikes loom

Investors dump bond ETFs as interest rate hikes loom
$6.1 billion yanked through the middle of March; withdrawals on pace to top the record $8.6 billion pulled in June '13 after taper tantrum
MAR 17, 2015
Investors dumped exchange-traded funds that invest in bonds ahead of Wednesday's Federal Reserve statement on concern officials would get closer to raising interest rates. Investors pulled $6.1 billion this month from bond ETFs through March 16, or 1.9% of total fund assets, according to TrimTabs Investment Research data. If withdrawals continue at that pace it would surpass the record $8.6 billion monthly outflow those funds recorded in June 2013, after the Fed signaled when it might start winding down its bond-buying program. The sellers of Treasury-bond ETFs missed a rally after the Fed on Wednesday released its latest policy statement and indicated it would keep a slow pace when it starts raising rates. That pushed yields on the 10-year Treasury note down to 1.95% Wednesday afternoon in New York. In 2013, the so-called taper tantrum sent the yield on the 10-year note soaring to 2.61% on June 25 from 1.63% eight weeks earlier, imposing steep losses on bondholders. (More: Investors pile into bond ETFs ... at the wrong time) “When interest rates go up, the prices of current bonds go down,” David Santschi, chief executive officer of TrimTabs, said. “The outflows are happening mostly because institutional investors are concerned the Fed will raise rates in the middle of this year rather than later this year or early next year.” SHIFT IN EXPECTATIONS Investors yanked cash from a different set of funds this time around, which highlights a shift in expectations about monetary policy. The biggest outflows this month have come from funds investing in U.S. government debt and bonds with longer duration, a gauge of interest-rate risk. The widespread rout in June 2013 hit emerging-market bond funds particularly hard, as they lost 11% of their market value on concern that liquidity would dry up. “In a rate tightening, you would move out of long-term bonds because that stuff gets hit worst,” said Eric Lichtenstein, senior managing director for Cantor Fitzgerald's ETF business. (More: Despite good news, bank ETF trails market) Government-bond funds have seen withdrawals of about $3.6 billion this month, or 7.4% of fund assets, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Long-term bond funds have lost $1.2 billion, or 6.4% of their assets. The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF has lost 17% of its asset size this month. It recently closed out its biggest three-week withdrawal since its inception in 2002. DRASTIC DECISIONS Still, “no one's making drastic decisions,” said Mr. Lichtenstein. “It's really parsing the Fed, and selling bonds to buy equities, because they don't want to miss the next 3% move.” The Fed's statement came at the end of its latest two-day policy committee meeting. It said the Fed is “unlikely” to raise rates at its April meeting but could do so as soon as June if the central bank sees further labor-market improvement and is “reasonably confident” that inflation will rise. ETFs investing in global stocks have brought in $26 billion of investor cash so far this month, or 1.6% of their asset value. The broader bond-ETF outflows seen in March follow five consecutive months of inflows totaling $46.8 billion, or 11.7% of fund assets, according to a March 16 TrimTabs report.

Latest News

Clients expect to know if you use AI, but don’t realise that their portfolios are likely exposed
Clients expect to know if you use AI, but don’t realise that their portfolios are likely exposed

Janus Henderson Investors research reveals demand for transparency, but lack of awareness of AI’s prevalence in the corporate world.

Retirement dream looking more like a luxury as cost-of-living squeezes savings
Retirement dream looking more like a luxury as cost-of-living squeezes savings

New research reveals rising expenses, forced early exits, and a widening gap between how long people live and how long their money lasts.

Advisor moves: LPL, Raymond James, Brighton Jones raid the talent pool
Advisor moves: LPL, Raymond James, Brighton Jones raid the talent pool

Firms continue their quest to attract and retain the best advisor teams.

Most advisors say AI portfolio construction is worth $500 a month
Most advisors say AI portfolio construction is worth $500 a month

A survey from TacticalMind AI found 69% of advisors say a high-quality AI platform that makes investment recommendations and constructs portfolios is worth $500 monthly, while research-only tools are valued closer to $250.

CAIS embeds Claude AI into advisor workflows for alternatives intelligence
CAIS embeds Claude AI into advisor workflows for alternatives intelligence

The alts tech provider's latest integration lets advisors query fund data and surface portfolio insights without leaving their primary workspace.

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management

SPONSORED Durability over scale: What actually defines a great advisory firm

Growth may get the headlines, but in my experience, longevity is earned through structure, culture, and discipline