After 10 years and under $100 million in assets, many ETFs still trading are on life support, before possibly being sent to the graveyard. However, last week assets in the previously obscure iShares Systematic Bond ETF (SYSB) rose approximately ten-fold. As of November 20, SYSB managed $633 million, up from $67 million on Monday. BlackRock runs $185 billion in model portfolios to support advisors’ asset allocation efforts. Many of these incorporate their own iShares ETF and are adjusted a few times a year by the BlackRock Target Allocation model portfolio team.
When an ETF gets added to or removed from the models, it draws attention due to the scale of BlackRock’s efforts.
The BlackRock Factor Pivot: Reducing Growth Overweight
Michael Gates, lead portfolio manager for BlackRock’s Target Allocation ETF model portfolio suite, explained the changes made in mid-November in a client communication shared with TMX VettaFi.
“Market leadership has continued to rotate, with momentum strategies capturing recent trends and value exposures providing important balance,” Gates wrote. “While growth remains a vital theme, we are deliberately reducing some overweight to growth by adding to value, and pivoting from quality to momentum.”
Though the note did not refer to specific equity ETFs, VettaFi spotted significant movement. On November 19, the iShares S&P 500 Value ETF (IVE) added $3.2 billion to its coffers. This was the highest one-day flow for the $45 billion ETF in 2025. Meanwhile, the $20 billion iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF (MTUM) pulled in $1.3 billion the same day, its highest in over a year. To fund this allocation shift, we believe the iShares MSCI Quality Factor ETF (QUAL) bore the brunt. The $47 billion ETF had a $4.2 billion redemption in one day.
The Fixed Income Call: Systematic Risk Management
Gates and team increased its overweight to equities to reflect a bolder risk-on approach. This is supported by cooling inflation, robust earnings, and an improved fiscal and trade policy outlook. However, there was a notable change within the fixed income allocation that caught our eye.
“Bond valuations remain stretched, with spreads near historical tights and limited compensation for credit risk,” wrote Gates. “To help navigate these conditions, we are allocating to a systematic bond fund that dynamically adjusts credit exposures, seeking attractive opportunities while maintaining risk controls by screening for value and quality credit exposures and ensuring diversification akin to our benchmark.”
Gates acknowledged SYSB as the related new allocation, which explains the asset spike. This fixed income move, however, is not BlackRock’s only high-conviction model-driven allocation this year. In mid-May, the firm initiated an allocation to the iShares A.I Innovation and Tech Active ETF (BAI) and has subsequently added to its exposure. BAI is currently a $7 billion fund, but in early May had under $150 million. The quick success of BAI highlights the significant influence BlackRock’s models hold over asset flows.
SYSB’s Emergence: Allocation and Performance
Given SYSB’s recent emergence and savior from ETF obscurity, let’s look closer at SYSB.
As of mid-November, it had an 80% stake in investment grade bonds and 20% in high yield bonds. Investment grade bonds included corporates, mortgages, and Treasuries. The fund earns a Morningstar rating of three stars. However, the fund’s 7.5% annualized three-year total return is in the top 1% of its fund category as of November 20. The index ETF charges a net expense ratio of 0.25%.
Relative to the iShares Core Universal USD Bond ETF (IUSB) that had 6% in high yield bonds, SYSB was overweight, though this will not always be the case. Rather than BlackRock’s model portfolio tactically adjusting the credit exposure using ETFs, the systematic index approach makes that easier. In a risk-off environment, SYSB could be underexposed to high yield.
We recently wrote how VettaFi is reimagining traditional market-cap weighted benchmarks to deliver indexes with broader market coverage, lower turnover, and, ultimately, a more precise tool kit for measuring bespoke portfolios.
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