What To Make Of The Pullback In Treasury Bond ETFs

 | Feb 20, 2015 07:16AM ET

The pullback in Treasury bond ETFs over the last three weeks has caught many fixed-income investors off guard. The stock market volatility in January pushed yields on the U.S. 30-Year Note Yield (TYX) to all-time lows, which consequently led to strength in funds such as the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (ARCA:TLT)) and Vanguard Extended Duration ETF (NYSE:EDV).

This flight to quality seemed like a no-brainer at the time given the uncertainty surrounding the direction of equities and the unbelievable low and/or negative yields in international bond markets. A credit-risk free U.S. Treasury trending strongly higher and with yields many times higher than an equivalent foreign issuer was just too good to pass up.

However, those that bought near the January highs may be feeling some buyer’s remorse as the focus shifts to better than expected economic data fueling expectations of a 2015 Fed rate hike. Of course, longer duration securities are going to be far more susceptible to interest rate swings as we experience a pullback in bullish sentiment for Treasuries.

As you can see in the 3-month chart below, TLT is roughly 10% off its high, while EDV is approximately 15% lower. Both ETFs are now showing essentially flat performance in 2015.