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As the greenback crawls through one of its worst first-half performances in decades, investors are seeking both yield and shelter in global fixed income markets.
The U.S. dollar has been under pressure, dragged down by increasing political uncertainty, lower-than-expected economic data, and a growing consensus for several Fed rate cuts this year.
The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) dropped around 11% over the last six months, its sharpest decline since 1991. Although the fall of the dollar initially feels like bad news, it’s secretly laying the groundwork for global bond markets to make a comeback.
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As U.S. interest rates decrease, yields on home-country bonds drop, making them less attractive compared to their foreign brethren. At the same time, a weakening dollar increases the value of foreign interest payments converted back into U.S. dollars. The pair creates fertile soil for foreign fixed-income ETFs, especially hedged foreign ones.
And that’s just where a select group of strategic ETFs steps in:
iShares International Treasury Bond ETF (NASDAQ:IGOV): This ETF offers exposure to non-U.S. developed market governments, such as those of Japan, France, Germany, and the U.K. Importantly, it targets sovereign debt of highly rated nations, providing a vehicle for investors to diversify their bond holdings outside of the U.S. Treasury market.
Vanguard Total International Bond ETF (NASDAQ:BNDX): This ETF is a currency-hedged, income-focused investment. For those investors seeking international exposure but wanting currency volatility kept at arm’s length, BNDX is an attractive solution. BNDX invests in non-US investment-grade bonds, with a blend of sovereign and corporate issuers, while actively hedging currency risk.
With investors increasingly doubting the dollar’s longer-term resilience and the Fed set to loosen policy again, perhaps now is the moment to turn to the rest of the world for fixed income.
Hedged (such as BNDX) or unhedged (such as IGOV), international bond ETFs offer a means of enhancing yield potential, diversifying away from U.S. credit risk, and capitalizing on evolving global macroeconomic trends.
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