Junk Bond ETFs Still Cruising as Yields Plumb Fresh All-Time Lows | Page 2 of 2 | ETF Trends

HYG is up 5% so far this year after posting a total return of about 12% in 2012, according to Morningstar.

Investors have piled into speculative grade corporate debt and the related ETFs in search of yield as the Federal Reserve holds interest rates extremely low. Also, corporate default rates are subdued with companies shoring up their balance sheets after the credit meltdown.

“If we carry on like this, we may have to change the name of the asset class to ‘not-so-high-yield’ bonds,” The Wall Street Journal reports. “Fund managers don’t care. The important number for them is the spread between returns on junk and returns on Treasuries. On that front, junk is still some 4.5 percentage points above Uncle Sam’s paper—a rich premium and well above the crazily tight spread of 2.4 percentage points seen just before the financial crisis.”

The junk bond ETFs have rallied to their highest levels since 2008.

SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF

Full disclosure: Tom Lydon’s clients own HYG and JNK.