| Barclays
to Launch Fixed-Income ETFs in July
By IndexFunds.com Staff
June 26, 2002 |
|
San Francisco-based Barclays Global Investors today announced
that four iShares tied to bond indexes will begin trading on the
American Stock Exchange on July 26. The fixed-income ETFs, the
first to trade in the U.S., will be linked to the Lehman 1-3 Year
Treasury Bond, Lehman 7-10 Year Treasury Bond, Lehman 20+ Year
Treasury Bond, and the Goldman Sachs Corporate Bond indexes.
All of the funds will have an expense ratio of 0.15% according
to the prospectus,
which puts them on par with the Admiral Shares of Vanguard's bond
index funds. The Admiral Share class (available to large or long-standing
accounts) of Vanguard's short- and intermediate-term bond index
funds have expense ratios of 0.17%.
Since bonds historically return less than equities, expenses
can have a significant impact on returns over time.
"The fact is that the range of potential returns of bond
funds is narrower than the range of potential returns of stock
funds," said Lee Kranefuss, CEO of BGI's Individual Investor
Business, in a statement. "By providing low expense ratios,
investors in iShares bond ETFs will have more capital working
for them."
However, bond ETFs may not offer the same tax efficiency benefits
as existing ETFs hitched to equity indexes.
"The only tax advantages ETFs have over regular mutual funds
are with regard to cap gains, which tend to be extremely small
with bond funds," said Morningstar analyst Christopher Traulsen.
"The bond ETFs will generate income just like regular bond
funds, and that income will be taxed at the same rate the income
for a bond mutual fund would be, i.e., your personal income-tax
rate."
BGI said three more fixed-income ETFs - the iShares Lehman Treasury
Bond Fund, iShares Lehman Government/Credit Bond Fund, and the
iShares Lehman Credit Bond Fund - will be launched at a later
date.