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Gundlach-Driven Stampede Into Invesco ETF Sputters

Gundlach-Driven Stampede Into Invesco ETF Sputters

(Bloomberg) -- After billionaire Jeffrey Gundlach’s remarks spurred a rush into an ETF filled with leveraged loans last month, the fund has fallen out of favor.

Gundlach-Driven Stampede Into Invesco ETF Sputters

The $5.5 billion Invesco Senior Loan ETF, or BKLN, has seen outflows for five straight weeks, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Just in February, investors have yanked more than $560 million from the exchange-traded fund, which is now on pace for its worst month of withdrawals since October 2018.

A key reason for profit taking after massive inflows in the previous five months is the Federal Reserve’s stance. Floating-rate debt is very sensitive to changing monetary policy -- and tends to do better as interest rates rise. While officials have indicated they could leave borrowing costs unchanged for months, some investors are betting on a reduction amid risks stemming from the coronavirus outbreak.

Gundlach-Driven Stampede Into Invesco ETF Sputters

The disease has worsened the outlook for the global economy, and that affects the view of central banks around the world, said James Pillow, a managing director at Moors & Cabot Inc. “As expectations for an FOMC rate cut have increased, the interest for floating-rate debt has drastically abated.”

Interest-rate cuts by the Fed lessened the appeal of floating-rate debt last year, which was the worst for leveraged-loan fund outflows since Refinitiv Lipper began keeping data in August 2003.

Investors withdrew a net $213.5 million from BKLN in the latest session for which data is available -- reducing the fund’s assets by 3.7% to the lowest level since Dec. 6. It was the biggest one-day decrease since June. The ETF has attracted net inflows of $235.8 million in the past year.

The fund lured investors earlier in 2020 after Gundlach, the chief executive officer at DoubleLine Capital, said on his annual “Just Markets” webcast that a retiree who wants to earn a 7% return with low duration and volatility risk could buy BKLN. However, Gundlach also said there are risks to investing in the ETF if the economy weakens.

“It’s not a just buy-and-put-it-away,” Gundlach warned during his webcast.

In that same week, U.S. leveraged-loan funds saw their first influx of money in almost four months and the largest since October 2018, according to Refinitiv Lipper data.

--With assistance from Sam Mamudi, Randall Jensen and John Gittelsohn.

To contact the reporter on this story: Claire Ballentine in New York at cballentine@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeremy Herron at jherron8@bloomberg.net, Rita Nazareth, Josh Friedman

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.