A new policy initiative from the Federal Reserve, through one of its governors, Stephen Miran, is bringing bank loan ETFs back in focus. His proposal to shrink the balance sheet while potentially allowing lower rates creates a tricky backdrop for floating-rate strategies that have thrived in a high-rate environment.

• Invesco Senior Loan ETF stock is taking a breather. Where are BKLN shares going?

Yield Tailwinds May Fade For Key ETFs

Some of the most popular bank loan ETFs could face challenges to their core investment thesis:

  • Invesco Senior Loan ETF (NYSE:BKLN)
  • SPDR Blackstone Senior Loan ETF (NYSE:SRLN)
  • iShares Floating Rate Bond ETF (BATS:FLOT)

All these ETFs have benefited from rising rates, as they have floating coupons. However, if the bank rates fall, even alongside balance sheet reduction, income generation could be lower for these ETFs, making them less attractive relative to regular bond ETFs.

Liquidity Boost Offers Partial Offset

The broader framework proposed by Miran, which includes relaxing liquidity rules and normalizing access to Fed facilities, could support for credit markets. This is because it could positively impact loan-heavy ETFs such as BKLN and SRLN through:

  • Lower default rates
  • Tighter credit spreads
  • More stable inflows

Price stability is one area where these ETFs could improve, even as income generation is negatively impacted. This is a trade-off that changes how investors evaluate these funds.

Rotation Risk Builds Across Fixed Income ETFs

If rates drift lower, investors could begin to rotate into duration-sensitive ETFs such as:

iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NASDAQ:TLT)
Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (NASDAQ:BND)

While floating-rate ETFs have bonds with floating coupons, these ETFs hold fixed-rate bonds, where prices will tend to appreciate when rates fall as existing higher-coupon bonds become more valuable. In contrast, floating-rate ETFs such as BKLN and FLOT will have coupons fall in response to lower rates. As such, there is little appreciation in prices. The difference in total return potential is likely what drives rotation between these ETFs in response to changes in the rate cycle.

The Big Shift

For the past two years, bank loan ETFs have been one of the key "higher for longer" trades. Miran's policy direction challenges this thesis.

Instead of being rate hedges, these ETFs could increasingly be viewed as credit plays, where returns depend more on spread compression than coupon income.

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