Corporate Bonds Are Leading US Fixed-Income Gains This Year

 | Feb 07, 2019 06:51AM ET

Supported by the Federal Reserve’s recent pause on raising interest rates, corporate bonds are leading the US fixed-income sector higher in 2019. Junk bonds and long-term corporates are especially hot for the year-to-results through yesterday’s close (Feb. 6).

SPDR Bloomberg Barclays (LON:BARC) High Yield Bond (NYSE:JNK) is posting the strongest performance so far this year, based on a set of exchanged-traded funds that represent the major slices of the US fixed-income markets. At the end of Wednesday’s trading, JNK was up a strong 5.8% so far this year.

A short-term junk fund — iShares 0-5 Year High Yield Corp Bond (NYSE:SHYG) — is in second place with a 4.4% year-to-date pop.

Note that the third-strongest performer this year is in long-term corporates: Vanguard Long-Term Corporate Bond (NASDAQ:VCLT), which is up 3.9%. VCLT’s rally suggests that there’s a fair amount of confidence in the market that the Fed will continue to keep interest rates steady for the near term.

A healthy tailwind is blowing for the US investment-grade bond market overall year to date, based on Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (NYSE:BND). This ETF has climbed 0.9% this year through yesterday’s close (red line in chart below).