Corporate Bond ETFs Remain Favored Income Destinations

VCIT is also one of the least expensive corporate bond ETFs with an annual expense ratio of just 0.07%, which was recently lowered from 0.1%.

Some fixed-income traders are growing concerned that the steadily rising prices and lower spreads could diminish the speculative-grade debt market’s ability to generate overall positive returns even as rising interest rates cut down the value on bonds. Those concerns could lead spark inflows to investment-grade funds such as VCIT.

While the Federal Reserve has stopped implementing accommodative measures, global central banks, like the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan, have expanded their quantitative easing programs, pushing yields on their government debt into the negatives, which made U.S. bonds a relative bargain.

“Taking a look at the five-year weekly chart, you can see that the fund is trading with a defined uptrend. The ascending trendline has provided a consistent level of support over the years, and many active traders have used it as a guide for placing their buy and stop-loss orders. From a technical analysis perspective, the recent dip and subsequent recovery of the RSI indicator could be used as confirmation of a continued move higher just like it did back in late 2013,” according to Investopedia’s technical analysis of VCIT.

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