Investing in Bond ETFs
Bond ETFs or fixed income ETFs passively tracks government and corporate bond indices. Usually bonds are held in ETF portfolio until maturity and then the money from payoff is reinvested in new bonds. The unavailability of an active secondary market makes it difficult to analyze the liquidity of bonds tracked; this is more common with ETFs tracking corporate bonds. Most ETFs overcome this problem by tracking a small number of liquid bonds in the portfolio rather than tracking all of them; the process is representative sampling.
Bond ETFs holders receive monthly dividends on bond interests and annual dividends on capital gains. The greatest advantage of bond ETFs is the protection from interest rate changes (remember ETFs can also be short traded). Other advantages include 1) diversification – as with a low amount one can invest indirectly into many bonds (even international bonds), 2) lower expense ratio than bond mutual funds, and 3) current and historical prices. Disadvantages include 1) trading costs and management costs which make them unsuitable for small and frequent trades, 2) not suitable for short-term profits and 3) the returns are usually lower compared to stocks and other financial instruments.
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