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Home » Bond ETF flows surge, up a ‘shocking’ 60%, says BlackRock exec

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Bond ETF flows surge, up a ‘shocking’ 60%, says BlackRock exec

Times Desk
Last updated: June 25, 2026 5:37 pm
Times Desk
Published: June 25, 2026
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Buy short-dated TIPs if you are worried about inflation, says BlackRock's Laipply

Amid recent bouts of stock volatility and a new Fed chair coming into a complex inflation environment, the action in bond ETFs is sending an important signal to the market.

“Flows tell the story,” Steve Laipply, global co-head of iShares fixed-income ETFs at BlackRock, told CNBC’s Dominic Chu this week. And that is a story of rising investor interest in yield across the fixed-income market. “In the U.S., bond ETF flows are up a shocking 60% relative to last year,” Laipply said.

Laipply said a significant share of the flows are going into U.S. treasuries, but there also has been a significant move by investors into multi-sector income ETFs.

“The income story is very robust and enduring, because rates will continue to move around and ‘real yields’ are definitely an opportunity,” he said, a reference to bond yields net the rate of inflation. “Real yields reflect a growth story,” he said, led by the AI boom and the anticipated increase in productivity that is tied to it.

Investor interest in multi-sector income funds, according to Laipply, is also an indication of greater emphasis on “income per unit of duration.”

“The idea of getting a little more duration, but really still focusing on income … that’s sort of the sweet spot,” he said.

“As a bond investor, real yield is your very good friend,” George Bory, chief investment strategist of fixed income at Allspring Global Investments, told Chu.

How the Fed fits into the fixed-income investment picture

New Federal Reserve chairman Kevin Warsh has put the market on watch for signs of greater volatility in bonds as he shapes a new approach at the Fed. “The most significant one, at least right now, is about the lack of forward guidance,” Bory said. When the Fed telegraphed its every move, managing duration risk was a less active process for investors. Now there will be more of an “uncertainty premium” built into the market, he said.

At his first FOMC meeting last week, Warsh was clear about maintaining the Fed’s inflation-fighting credentials for the time being, Bory said.

“The very front end of the curve is now very steep, as the market is now pricing in multiple rate hikes from the Fed. You don’t have to move very far out the curve to start to see a very material increase in yields,” Bory said.

Laipply said recent declines in what is known as the breakeven inflation rate, which have been falling “very, very sharply” at both the short and long end of the treasuries curve, say to him that “the market is sniffing out something here.”

The breakeven inflation rate is a measure of the difference between standard treasury yields and treasury- inflation protected securities.

Laipply said with “breakevens’ where they are, it is not necessarily a bad time for investors still worried about inflation to consider short-dated TIPS. But many bond investors, he said, are “looking past this volatility, and no matter what yields are, they are at a level where income is very attractive relative to what it has been,” he said.

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U.S. 10-year treasury bond yield performance in 2026.

One of the biggest recent debates in the market among investors is the declining risk premium for holding stocks over bonds.

Bory described it as a “pretty attractive” environment for bond investors, but said there are caveats. “We need to be a little careful because credit spreads are very tight,” he said, and he added that he thinks those spreads are likely to “stick with us.”

Tighter credit spreads between various bonds along the traditional risk spectrum are typically a sign of higher investor confidence, but some worry potentially a sign of market complacency.

“Modest inflation is a meaningful tailwind to credit worthiness and I think we are in bit of a super-cycle for credit more broadly,” Bory said. He added that as a fixed-income investor he would be “happy to take the extra income, but won’t be too aggressive in going after it.”

The latest core inflation data from the government was at the highest level since October 2023, but it was in line with market expectations and reinforced the need for the inflation-fighting stance to remain at the Fed.

Oil prices are back at their pre-war level as tankers flow through the Strait of Hormuz again, though gas prices are likely to remain elevated, according to Chevron.

The labor market complicates the story for investors and the Fed as it attempts to balance its dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability. Laipply said about 90% of recent job creation has been in healthcare, government services, and leisure. “Most of the labor market is soft,” he said.

“The real trick is … how much weight do you put on that near-term inflation concern versus a softening labor market, or if you want to put it another way, a labor market that’s very, very concentrated,” Laipply added.

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