Seeking Alpha

Broad US Bond ETFs List
(click on symbol for data and articles)

Barclays iShares Broad Bond ETFs
iShares Lehman Aggregate Bond Fund (AGG)
iShares Lehman Government/Credit Bond Fund (GBF)
iShares Lehman Intermediate Government/Credit Bond Fund (GVI)

State Street ["SPDR"] Broad Bond ETFs
SPDR Lehman Aggregate Bond ETF (LAG)
SPDR Lehman High Yield Bond ETF (JNK)

Vanguard Broad Bond ETFs
Vanguard’s Short-Term Bond ETF (BSV)
Vanguard Intermediate-Term Bond ETF (BIV)
Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF (BLV)

What Are They?

  • Like bond mutual funds, bond ETFs provide exposure to bonds by tracking indexes with fixed duration. In other words, bond indexes contain bonds with various maturity dates, managed so that the entire index has a fixed average maturity. If projected interest rates rise, the price of a bond ETF falls.
  • Broad bond ETFs contain a mixture of government (also known as "Treasury") and corporate (also known as "credit") bonds. The corporate bonds in these index ETFs generally have high credit ratings.

Why & How To Use Them

  • Bonds are a core component of diversified portfolios, as they behave differently to stocks and therefore dampen volatility. Bonds are also safer (ie. less volatile) than stocks and generate interest income, making them particularly suitable for people in and nearing retirement. However, bonds tend to produce lower long-term returns than stocks, so younger investors who can tolerate more short-run volatility often opt for a low or zero allocation to bonds.
  • Buying a broad bond ETF makes portfolio management easy. But you loose flexibility in two areas. First, broad bond ETFs don't allow you to manage duration. If projected interest rates rise, the price of bond ETFs will fall, and the longer the duration the greater the potential fall. Second, different types of bonds have different tax status, and broad bond ETFs don't allow you to pick the type of bonds that might be most suitable from a tax perspective.
  • Broad bond ETFs tend to have low expense ratios.

What to Look Out For

  • Individual investors and institutions can buy US Government bonds with zero transaction fees from Treasury Direct. The savings and superior control versus a bond fund may be worth the extra bother of managing a portfolio of individual bonds.
  • As an alternative to these ETFs, consider also US government bond ETFs.

Further Reading

This page is part of The Seeking Alpha ETF Selector which sorts ETFs by type, highlights how to use them and what to look out for, and provides links to articles that discuss key issues for investors.

Print this article with comments

This article has 2 comments:

  •  
    Have we missed out any ETFs here? Or any Seeking Alpha articles that are important to understanding them? If so, please leave a comment and let us know!
    2007 May 01 03:44 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Does anyone know the difference between the iShares Lehman Aggregate Bond Fund (AGG) and the iShares Lehman Government/Credit Bond Fund (GBF) and the SPDR Lehman Aggregate Bond ETF (LAG)?
    2007 May 31 02:51 AM | Link | Reply
More by SA Editors
Other articles by SA Editors »