Traders Rush to Safety in Loan ETFs Again on Interest-Rate Pain

Investors plowed record cash into a pair of leveraged loan ETFs last week, in a high-conviction bet that the Federal Reserve will be slow to slash interest rates.

The nearly $20 billion Janus Henderson AAA CLO ETF (ticker JAAA) saw more than $1.2 billion of inflows last week — the biggest weekly haul since its inception in 2020. The SPDR Blackstone Senior Loan ETF (SRLN), meanwhile, took in more than $600 million, continuing its winning streak of 12 out of 13 weeks.

A prolonged period of elevated rates is a boon for both funds. Leveraged loans have been one of the best-performing credit asset classes last year, handing investors a roughly 9% return, accounting for both price gains and interest payments, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Since these loans pay floating rates, they generate more income as yields rise.

“The securitized loan space is where investors are piling cash because they are more diversified, safer havens and produce strong yields,” said Mohit Bajaj, director of ETFs at WallachBeth Capital.

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