08.26.2016

Buy Side’s Appetite for Credit ETFs Grows

08.26.2016

Although credit-based exchange traded fund market is relatively a small and nascent market for institutional investors, industry watchers expect the market to growth.

There is an uptick in the use of these, said Colby Jenkins, an analyst at industry research firm Tabb Group.

“It is not so much for price discovery, but for a means of managing beta,” he explained.

Credit ETFs offer asset managers a liquid and more transparent place to park cash on a short-term basis compared to single-name corporate bonds.

“They can pull their money in and out these credit ETFs as they are waiting to find the right bonds for a longer-term strategy,” Jenkins added.

Reginald Browne,head of ETF trading at Cantor Fitzgerald, also sees credit ETFs reducing the opaque nature of the secondary credit market’s price determination due to credit ETFs’ transparent nature.

“If you look at the various high-yield ETFs in the marketplace, those ETFs trades nearly $500 million daily at greater than the bid-ask spread,” he said.

Jenkins noted that the spreads of highly liquid ETFs might range between 2 or 3 bps while the baskets of underlying instruments might have spreads between 25 and 50 bps.

Browne is not that worried about what effects systemic re-pricing could have on the perceived illiquid asset class, which has been a question he’s answered regularly.

Such an event likely would affect other credit-related instruments harder, he believes.

“The fixed-income ETFs are 3% of an $8 trillion corporate bond market, Browne said.
What happens in other vehicles like mutual funds and special memorandum accounts? With ETFs, you have a transparent view and instant pricing while with a mass disruption of mutual funds you would not.”

For more on ETFs:

Pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments and other institutional asset owners are sitting on vast troves of data -- but extracting value from that data is more challenging than ever.

#AssetOwners #DataQuality

Technology costs in asset management have grown disproportionately, but McKinsey research finds the increased spending hasn’t consistently translated into higher productivity.
#AI #Fiance

We're in the FINAL WEEK for the European Women in Finance Awards nominations – don't miss your chance to spotlight the incredible women driving change in finance!
#WomenInFinance #FinanceAwards #FinanceCommunity #EuropeanFinance @WomeninFinanceM

ICYMI: @marketsmedia sat down with EDXM CEO Tony Acuña-Rohter to discuss the launch of EDXM International’s perpetual futures platform in Singapore and what it means for institutional crypto trading.
Read the full interview: https://bit.ly/45xRUWh

Load More

Related articles

  1. The contracts are the first to manage duration risk through an intercommodity spread with Treasury futures.

  2. The firm launched its targeted block trading solution in U.S. credit in mid-May.

  3. When choosing service providers, asset managers need to share their data and technology requirements upfront.

  4. The industry needs to assess the continued rise of non-bank players in liquid and private credit.

  5. Banks' Risk Management Seen as Lagging

    Action is needed to better monitor these transactions which created problems that led to the 2008 crisis.

We're Enhancing Your Experience with Smart Technology

We've updated our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy to introduce AI tools that will personalize your content, improve our market analysis, and deliver more relevant insights.These changes take effect on Aug 25, 2025.
Your data remains protected—we're simply using smart technology to serve you better. [Review Full Terms] | [Review Privacy Policy] By continuing to use our services after Aug 25, 2025, you agree to these updates.

Close the CTA