Federal Reserve Chair Jay Powell announced Wednesday the central bank would hold off on further cuts for the month. The move comes amid stubborn inflation, which Powell pointed to alongside jobs numbers as reasons for the pause in cuts. That move comes after a flurry of rate cuts in the fall, which itself followed months of rate-cut hype. As 2025 looks set for only a few cuts now, investors may want to turn toward active fixed income to adapt.
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Why active fixed income compared to passive? Where passive funds sometimes struggle to properly replicate indexes, active fixed income ETFs go beyond what those indexes can offer. Active bond funds can better manage the varying expiration dates, bond calls, and credit ratings present in key bond categories.
What’s more, active fixed income strategies provide greater scrutiny to firms’ credit quality levels than their passive siblings. Should the economy begin to rock a bit due to tariffs or a collapse in red-hot valuations, close analysis of credit quality will be important.
For right now, however, it may be worth considering active fixed income as an alternative in core allocations. The year is still young, and with it, investors can still think a bit more broadly about a portfolio refresh. Many active strategies can provide that core approach with the aforementioned advantages over passive. While the Fed “intends” to hold rates steady, adaptability could benefit investors if pressure forces the bank to move sooner than it planned.
The T. Rowe Price QM U.S. Bond ETF (TAGG) offers one example. The strategy charges just 8 basis points to invest in investment-grade bonds with broad maturities.
Whether for the short term or as a new core allocation, active ETFs have a role to play. As the rate regime shifts, they can provide an appealing set of tools to adapt.
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