Listen to What Junk Bond ETFs are Saying

“The 50-day rolling correlation between the SPDR Barclays High Yield ETF and the S&P 500 is nearing 90 percent, the highest level reached in the eight years that junk ETFs have been available. The last time that the correlation between stocks and high-yield ETFs was this high was in early 2012,” according to CNBC.

Related: U.S. Corporate Bond ETFs Among Few Attractive Investment-Grade Options Left

As many ETF observers have noted, volume begets volume. These ETFs that track notoriously illiquid markets have been growing in popularity as investors sought out liquid instruments to express their views on the fixed-income market. While trading volumes in the fund have increased, trading in the underlying debt market has not been particularly elevated, reflecting the increased usage of ETFs as a more liquid proxy for exposure.

“Some believe that the appetite for risk has increased as concern about Brexit has evaporated in recent weeks. High-beta stocks have outperformed the market average so far this month, and short interest has declined for those stocks,” reports CNBC.

While we have witnessed robust volume and activity in these bond ETFs, some naysayers were worried that investors would rush out the last second to sell bonds in response to rising interest rates, which would make it costlier for high-yield bond ETFs to meet redemptions in a notoriously illiquid speculative-grade market.

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iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF