| From
our Canadian Bureau:
BGI
Canada Launches First Bond ETFs
By IndexFunds.com Staff
November 22, 2000 |
|
Two new bond exchange-traded funds (ETFs) managed
by Barclays Global Investors Canada began trading today on the
Toronto Stock Exchange (TSE). The two new Canadian ETFs are the
iUnits Government of Canada 5-Year Bond Fund (iG5) and the iUnits
Government of Canada 10-Year Bond Fund (iG10).
"These two new products provide investors with
a convenient and flexible way to diversify by asset class and,
when combined with our i60 Fund and other new iUnits funds, will
enable investors to build complete, balanced portfolios based
on iUnits," said Gerry Rocchi, President of BGI Canada.
| ETF name |
TSE ticker |
Total Assets ($ millions) |
Expense ratio |
| iUnits Government of Canada
5-Year Bond Fund |
XGV |
92 |
0.25% |
| iUnits Government
of Canada 10-Year Bond Fund |
XGX |
89 |
0.25% |
Source: www.iunits.com,
all data as of 11/22/2000
The two new iUnits funds are the world's first fixed-income ETFs.
However, the new
ETFs are not based
on a Canadian bond index. Instead, the funds will invest in one
"on the run" (most liquid) Government of Canada bond that
has a time to maturity that closely matches the benchmark bond maturity.
As a result, the iG5 and iG10 will never hold more than one security
at any time.
According to Steve Rive, General Manager of iUnits at BGI Canada,
indexing in bonds provides fewer advantages than equities indexing.
Oftentimes,
bond
indexes are comprised of thousands of bonds. However, the bonds
in a bond index generally vary very little in their gross returns
and offer lower diversification than stock indexes. Therefore, expenses
more than anything affect bond returns, and holding a great number
of bonds will generate higher expenses. The alternative, optimizing
the portfolio, also increases management expenses.
The iG5 and iG10 will distribute net income to unitholders on a
semi-annual basis and net realized capital gains on at least an
annual basis, according to BGI Canada.
BGI Canada also announced that it has filed a preliminary prospectus
for six new iUnits ETFs: a Canadian mid-cap, funds tracking information
technology, energy, financial, and gold sectors, as well as the
i60C Fund - based on the S&P/TSE Capped Index.