BlackRock sees market for exchange-traded bond funds topping $2T in next decade
Exchange-traded funds that buy fixed-income securities may boost their assets more than six- fold to $2 trillion in the next 10 years as they transform the way bonds are traded, according to BlackRock Inc. (BLK)
The industry that was ignited by the 2008 financial crisis has mushroomed to include $302 billion of assets in 550 funds since the July 2002 inception of the first such ETF, the iShares iBoxx Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund, BlackRock Inc.'s Matthew Tucker and Jennifer Grancio said in a report today.
“It's really changing how to invest in the fixed-income market” by making it more transparent and liquid, Tucker, head of BlackRock's iShares fixed-income investment strategy, said in a telephone interview. “The scope of application is so much broader than a mutual fund because investors can think of it as a real-time tool for managing risk and exposure.”
Growth of fixed-income ETFs will accelerate as money managers expand offerings to new debt markets in different countries, according to BlackRock, the world's biggest asset manager. The funds will also benefit from a likely shift in the average investor's holdings to include a greater proportion of debt, the report says.
ETFs typically allow individual investors to speculate on securities without directly owning them. Unlike mutual funds, whose shares are priced once daily, ETFs are listed on exchanges and are bought and sold like stocks. About 20 percent or less of share movement in fixed-income ETFs results in trades of the underlying debt, Tucker said.
U.S. Assets
ETFs in the U.S., which now hold $222 billion, may account for $1.4 trillion of assets within the next 10 years, the New York-based asset-manager said in the report.
BlackRock's investment-grade fund, which trades under the ticker LQD, was the most popular ETF in the three months ended June 30, attracting $2.56 billion, according to a July 6 report from IndexUniverse.com. Fixed-income ETFs grabbed 91 percent of the money flowing into the funds in the period, the data show.
Trading in ETFs is rising as investors seek easier and more flexible access to the bond market, even as trading volumes in the underlying securities drop. Corporate-debt securities held by the 21 primary dealers that trade directly with the Federal Reserve fell to $43.3 billion as of June 27 from a peak of $235 billion in October 2007.
“Liquidity in the bond market is supplied by brokers/dealers, and as many of these firms were struggling with their own financial issues, they pulled back from making markets in bonds,” BlackRock said in the report. “The credit crisis served as an inflection point for the fixed-income ETF industry, and it has never looked back.”
--Bloomberg News--