High-yield bond ETFs attract record demand from short sellers

Mar 1st, 2018 | By | Category: Fixed Income

By Sam Pierson, analyst at IHS Markit.

Sam Pierson IHS Markit

Sam Pierson, director of securities finance at IHS Markit.

Short demand for high-yield bond ETFs is at the highest level recorded, currently over $7bn in total.

Demand remains elevated despite a rally off the lows, which recovered half of the year-to-date losses for the products.

The ability to achieve HY short exposure via exchange-listed products has allowed a wider range of market participants to put the trade on, and has contributed to rising demand for the underlying HY corporate bonds, which is also at a post-crisis high.

The ETF short demand is equal to 26% of total borrow demand for the underlying issues.

Short sellers aren’t the only ones selling – the most popular high-yield bond ETF, the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (HYG US), has seen outflows of nearly $2.9bn so far in 2018, after seeing $1.4bn in outflows in 2017.

Source: IHS Markit.

Demand to borrow the SPDR Bloomberg Barclays High Yield Bond ETF (JNK US) has increased sharply in 2018 as the result of a relatively lower borrow rate than HYG; however, the gap has narrowed in recent weeks. While increasing demand was the dominant factor in rising borrow costs for both issues, the inventory from agent lenders in both securities has declined 10% YTD.

A fair amount of the demand for shorts, either expressed via the ETF or the underlying issues, will be based on a general desire to have short exposure to the asset class, as opposed to expressing a negative view on specific issues. It’s a more interesting exercise then to look at the issues and sectors which have the greatest short demand beyond index weight.

At a sector level, energy has the largest short demand beyond index weight, having less than 15% weight in the iBoxx High Yield Index (the underlying reference for HYG), while contributing 20% of constituent short demand.

The table below shows the most borrowed issues relative to index weight. It’s notable that there aren’t energy names at the top of the individual issue list, which is the result of a more even distribution of short demand across energy issues. Half of energy issues are more shorted than their index weight, versus only a quarter of issues in the other sectors.

Source: IHS Markit.

Given that there are a large number of HY issues not included in the indices, it’s worth noting that HY ETF demand is only equivalent to 15% of all HY borrows. The significance of ETFs as a source of demand is increasing, however, as they made up less than 5% of HY at the start of 2017.

(The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of ETF Strategy.)

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