Banking, finance, and taxes

Actively Managed Short-Term Bond ETF Launches, Fees May Get in the Way

AdvisorShares has announced the launch of the Newfleet Multi-Sector Income ETF (NYSEMKT: MINC). The new fund is an actively managed exchange traded fund (ETF) that is said to be managed with a value-driven fixed income strategy. The fund is sub-advised by Newfleet Asset Management under Virtus Investment Partners.

While this sounds like a great alternative to short-term bond investing, we want you to pay close attention to the fee structure here against the current interest rate environment. The fees may actually offset the boost in performance from an actively managed strategy.

Actively managed ETFs are still relatively new and are far less common than most of the pure index-tracking ETFs we see. AdvisorShares is one of the top players in actively managed ETFs. Its website shows 17 actively managed ETFs that have about $630 million in total assets. The MINC ETF “seeks to provide current income consistent with preservation of capital, while limiting fluctuations in net asset value due to changes in interest rates.” It sounds like a money-market fund alternative.

It is said that there is a three-step process focusing on sector analysis and allocation, security selection and portfolio construction. It is also said to use an opportunistic approach to actively manage the ETF by overweighting and underweighting 14 different bond sectors. The long and short of the matter is that this ETF seeks to represent an alternative to short-term investments.

The Net Asset Value launch price will be $50.00 with 1,100,000 shares outstanding. Its top two holdings are short-term Treasury notes and bills:

  • US TREASURY N/B 0.25 2/28/2015 at 49.11% weighting
  • US TREASURY N/B 0.375 3/15/2016 at 24.56% weighting

What is interesting is that the fees are not extremely high for actively managed ETFs, but they will be a potential issue for investors seeking to outperform short-term rates when short-term rates are so low at the same time that the fees have to be paid.

The management fee is 0.65% and other expenses are 0.12%, giving it a gross expense ratio of 0.77%. A fee waiver and expense reimbursement of 0.02% gives this ETF a net expense ratio of 0.75% for at least the first year after inception. The two-year Treasury note yields only 0.25% as of now, and the five-year Treasury note yields only 0.80%.

The problem we have with this ETF is not the strategy, because we really feel as though investors need an actively managed strategy like this to beat the low-rate or no-rate environment. We are just concerned that all of the income based on the current yield curve and low-rate environment will just pay the management fees of the ETF.

Travel Cards Are Getting Too Good To Ignore (sponsored)

Credit card companies are pulling out all the stops, with the issuers are offering insane travel rewards and perks.

We’re talking huge sign-up bonuses, points on every purchase, and benefits like lounge access, travel credits, and free hotel nights. For travelers, these rewards can add up to thousands of dollars in flights, upgrades, and luxury experiences every year.

It’s like getting paid to travel — and it’s available to qualified borrowers who know where to look.

We’ve rounded up some of the best travel credit cards on the market. Click here to see the list. Don’t miss these offers — they won’t be this good forever.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.

AI Portfolio

Discover Our Top AI Stocks

Our expert who first called NVIDIA in 2009 is predicting 2025 will see a historic AI breakthrough.

You can follow him investing $500,000 of his own money on our top AI stocks for free.