Home > As Bonds Evolve, So Too Does The Aggregate
Print

As Bonds Evolve, So Too Does The Aggregate

September 20th, 2012

Matt Tucker: Fixed income might have the word “fixed” in its name, but there is nothing truly “fixed” about it – it’s actually a very dynamic asset class that is constantly growing and evolving.

While it’s one thing to say that, it’s another to see it in action, and you can do that by looking at the Barclays US Aggregate index. The Aggregate is the most commonly used fixed income benchmark by US investors, according to Morningstar and BlackRock data as of July 31. It is also the stated benchmark for a range of mutual funds and ETFs — both index and active. Think of it as the bond market’s equivalent of the S&P 500 index.  The same way you wouldn’t expect the S&P 500 index to hold the same companies it did when it was first published in 1957 (anyone remember Gimbel Brothers or Montgomery Ward?), you wouldn’t expect the Aggregate to look the same today as it did when it was launched.

If you were tracking the Aggregate since its inception, what would you have seen in the past 26 years? Let’s take a look back in time.

The Euro’s Demise Has Been Set in Motion: Are you protected?


"Nationalism will emerge. Healthier countries will not see fit to spend their hard earned money to bail out their less responsible neighbors."

CLICK HERE to get your Free E-Book, “Why It’s Curtains for the Euro”

History of the Barclays US Aggregate Index

Bond market indices appeared on the scene in the 1970s. The first indices were comprised of government and corporate bonds, while sectors like mortgage and asset-backed securities were still in their infancy. The Government Credit index was the first flagship benchmark; it was designed for pension plans and other taxable investors to be a benchmark for their bond portfolios. In 1986 mortgage backed securities were added to the Government Credit index to create a new benchmark and the Aggregate was born. Over time, the index rules for the Aggregate have evolved to reflect changes in market composition, bond issuance sizes and the sectors deemed investible by investors.

The Barclays US Aggregate Index is a market value weighted index, so as more bonds are issued in a sector or industry, the weight of that sector will increase in the index.  In addition, as the price of a particular bond or sector changes, so too does its weight in the index. (Keep in mind that the Aggregate index only includes the taxable US bond market, meaning muni bonds are excluded.)

How do these rules play out in the real world? Well, let’s look at Treasuries. We are all very aware of the increase in government debt that we have seen in the past few years. This issuance has driven the Treasury component of the Aggregate up from 21% in 2002 to 36% today. But look at the chart below. Despite this recent surge, this weighting is still far below what we saw in the 1980s and 1990s, when Treasuries reached a peak of 56%. In the 1990s the Treasury began buying back their outstanding debt, while Corporate and MBS issuers continued to bring new bonds to the market. As a result, the weighting of Treasuries fell in the Aggregate, while we saw the weightings of Corporates and MBS rise.

The chart shows other ways in which the history of the financial market in general and the bond market in particular are echoed in the Aggregate. We can see that securitized assets such as mortgage-backed securities (MBS) jumped in index weighting from 2006 until 2008, as more mortgage loans were originated to fuel the housing boom. But once the housing bubble burst, fewer mortgages were originated and the weight of MBS in the index dropped.

Let’s look at US Agency securities. These securities were originally included in the Government index until a stand-alone agency index was created in 1994. From there, we saw their issuance and index weight rise steadily in the Aggregate for the next decade. But that trend ended in 2009, when the two largest issuers in the index, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, entered government conservatorship and began to reduce the size of their balance sheets. With smaller balance sheets, their borrowing needs have declined and so too has the weighting of government agencies in the Aggregate index. Today, Agencies represent only 6.6% of the Aggregate.

As you can see, since 1986 the Aggregate index has remained anything but static. An investor holding an Aggregate-based fund will see that fund morph over time to reflect the economic realities of the day. Despite all of these changes, the Aggregate index has maintained a correlation with the S&P 500 index of 0.002 in the past 10 years, according to BlackRock and Bloomberg data as of July 31. That allows the index to provide diversification against riskier asset classes in a broad portfolio, and Aggregate-based funds can offer core bond market exposure. But just as the Aggregate has evolved, so too have bond funds. Investors looking for more customized exposure can mix and match segments of the Aggregate and combine them with other fixed income exposures to create a portfolio tailored to their investment needs.

Written By Matthew Tucker From The iShares Blog

Matthew Tucker has spent the past 16 years focused on fixed income analytics, portfolio management and strategy. As managing director of U.S. fixed income strategy at BlackRock, Inc., and a member of the Fixed Income Portfolio Management team, Mr. Tucker leads both product strategy for ETFs and North America and Latin America iShares strategies, as well as product delivery and client sales. He previously worked with Barclays Global Investors before it merged with BlackRock, and he led the U.S. Fixed Income Investment Solutions team responsible for overseeing product strategy for active, index, enhanced index, iShares and long/short products. Mr. Tucker was also a portfolio manager and a trader in fixed income focused on U.S. government securities.

He began his career at Barra, where he supported clients using the company’s fixed income analytics. Mr. Tucker holds a bachelor of business administration degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and is a Chartered Financial Analyst charterholder.

ETF BASIC NEWS


 

Tags: , , , ,

facebook comments:

  1. No comments yet.
  1. No trackbacks yet.

Copyright 2009-2012 ETFDAILYNEWS.COM

LOG