Foreign Demand for U.S. Yields Bolsters Treasury Bond ETFs | ETF Trends

Without the Federal Reserve pulling the trigger on an interest rate hike, overseas fixed-income investors have piled into more attractive U.S. government debt, bolstering U.S. Treasury bonds and related exchange traded funds.

Over the past month, the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEArca: IEF) gained 1.5%. Additionally, the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEArca: TLT) rose 4.6%, PIMCO 25+ Year Zero Coupon US Treasury (NYSEArca: ZROZ) increased 7.2% and Vanguard Extended Duration Treasury ETF (NYSEArca: EDV) added 7.0%. The long-term Treasury bond ETFs are also testing a long-term, 200-day simple moving average. [Demise of Treasury ETFs Over-exaggerated]

Yields on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes dipped to 2.15% Monday, a two-month low, and have declined about 34 basis points since a June high.

Pushing down yields and supporting the U.S. Treasuries market, European investors have been throwing money into higher yielding U.S. bonds on the diverging policies between the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank, report Joel Lewin and Gavin Jackson for the Financial Times.

European investors are betting that U.S. bonds have more or less priced in a Fed interest rate hike, so any further further strength in the U.S. dollar relative to the euro could compensate them if the U.S. bonds dip on a tighter Fed monetary policy – a stronger greenback would add to USD-denominated Treasury bond yields when converted into the weaker euro for European investors.

“Investors are thinking I can take a small bit of pain on my bonds if I make it back on the currency,” Sean Taor, head of debt capital markets in Europe for the Royal Bank of Canada, told the Financial Times.

The Fed has already stated it will raise interest rates from its record near-zero levels sometime this year. Market observers have speculated that the Fed could hike rates as soon as September while others are betting on a December rate hike.