Why It's Time to Approach Bond ETFs Differently | ETF Trends

For decades, the popular fixed-income investing adage held that you should allocate a certain percentage of your portfolio to bonds and increase that allocation as you age. But the times, they are a-changin’.

Jim Ross, president and senior managing director at State Street Global Advisors cautions, “Now is not the time to just buy some bonds and forget about it.” That approach could get you burned.

Ross instead urges investors to take a more active role in their fixed-income portfolio, especially as the threat of rising interest rates looms. That makes it more important than ever for investors to look at the bonds they hold and ensure that they’re diversified across the yield curve. It’s important to be nimble and reactive as interest rates rise and fall. [What the yield curve means for ETFs.]

As rates change, it affects bond exchange traded funds (ETFs) in different ways. A long-term bond fund will take a greater hit to its value when interest rates rise than a short-term bond fund. When interest rates fall, the reverse is true.

Just as you would take a diversified approach to the equity side of your portfolio – perhaps some allocation to emerging markets, some more to domestic stocks and so on – Ross urges investors to think of their fixed-income portfolio in the same way.

“If you look at where the inflows have been, it’s mostly core [bond]funds. Investors just go get the broadest thing out there,” Ross says. The trouble with that? “You’re taking on the risk of potential rate hikes.” [High-yield ETFs: Is the party over?]

You could also potentially be ignoring the bigger picture. When it comes to equities, investors often buy based on what they think will happen: small-cap may outperform large, or domestic stocks might outperform global ones.

“People need to look at bonds the same way.” Ross says. If you’re investing in a particular bond type because you have a specific view of the market, a broad fund won’t give you much of the exposure you’re seeking. [Benefits of international bonds.]

Ross is heartened by the increased allocation to fixed-income in many portfolios, up from 40% closer to 60%. But if bond funds represent that much of a chunk, he says, investors need to carefully consider what they should be buying.

If your view is that the U.S. dollar will continue to weaken, international Treasuries and both U.S. and non-U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) “make complete sense,” says Ross. [TIPS: Your questions answered.]