Markets

‘T-bill and chill’ trade sees big influx from individual investors

1 Mins read

Move over Netflix.

The “T-bill and chill” trade looks like it’s gathering more steam with individual investors, according to Vanda Research.

The roughly $38.6 billion SPDR Bloomberg 1-3 Month T-Bill ETF
BIL
just raked in more than $40 million in retail funds on Nov. 1, the biggest one-day influx since Vanda began tracking the data in the beginning of 2014.

The ETF tracks 1-month
BX:TMUBMUSD01M
and 3-month
BX:TMUBMUSD03M
Treasury bills, where yields have shot up with the Federal Reserve’s increases to its short-term policy rate, currently in a 5.25% to 5.5% range, a 22-year high.

“BIL was not the only ETF experiencing large inflows, however,” the Vanda Research team wrote Thursday, in a weekly note. They also pointed to the battered $41.2 billion iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF,
TLT
which “continues to see outsized net buying from the retail community” as well as the $34.6 billion iShares National Muni Bond ETF
MUB
and the $17.4 billion iShares 0-3 Month Treasury Bond ETF
SGOV,
which has an ultra-short duration.

All four ETFs gained on Thursday, even as the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA
shot up 1.7% and the S&P 500 index
SPX
posted a 1.9% gain, its best day in about six months. Stocks rallied as investors appeared more optimistic that the Fed might be done raising rates in this cycle.

“Clearly, income-seeking individual investors are taking advantage of the new high-rate regime, which had been missing from the investment landscape since the pre-GFC years,” Marco Iachini and the Vanda team wrote.

And it hasn’t been only retail investors flocking to short-term bond funds.

See: Short-term bonds dominate fixed-income ETF flows again in October — with a single fund getting outsize portion of investors’ money

Hedge-fund billionaire Ray Dalio in September said cash is “temporarily” good. Other heavy hitters, including DoubleLine Capital’s Jeffrey Gundlach, also have been touting short-term Treasurys at 5% yields in recent months.

However, Gundlach on Wednesday told CNBC that he has grown more worried about the $33.6 trillion national debt and about a potential looming recession, which could spark layoffs and rate cuts.

The Vanda team said higher bond yields mean “the bar for equities’ role in a retail portfolio has shifted higher,” but also that the “first test will come about when markets start to price in Fed rate cuts more aggressively.”

Read the full article here

Related posts
Markets

U.K. pension funds to disclose domestic investment as London stock market falters

1 Mins read
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt on Saturday said U.K. pensions will have to disclose how much they have invested domestically, in a move meant…
Markets

Why the stock market ‘doesn’t look very bubbly’ to Ray Dalio right now

2 Mins read
“‘When I look at the U.S. stock market using these criteria, it — and even some of the parts that have rallied…
Markets

S&P 500 scores gains last seen in 1971 as AI hopes fuel ‘second’ leg of rally

1 Mins read
U.S. stocks kicked off March in fresh record territory, with the S&P 500 clinching another big week of gains.  On Friday the…
Get The Latest News

Subscribe to get the top fintech and
finance news and updates.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *