Stock price when the opinion was issued
The whole bond space has been hurt substantially since May 22nd, when rates started creeping up. Prefers iShares Emerging Market Div (DVYE-N) but he got stopped out of this. He would take a look at getting back into this one. On the ZEF, he would want to know how much of it is corporate versus government, preferring to be a little bit more on the corporate side.
Basically, a hedged version of the emerging markets bond strategy. Emerging markets dropped quite quickly when Trump won the election, and that was when he bought emerging-market bonds. With these, you want to be a little careful as to when you hold them and when you don’t. A lot depends on what is happening in that part of the world on currencies, etc. This pays a pretty decent yield of 4.5%+. You have to be a little more active in this area.
Some conservative ideas for the next recession ahead for a senior? He would suggest this one, a BMO emerging-market bond ETF. Growth is really anemic in the West and bond yields in the US and Canada are 2% over 20-30 years, but bond yields in other parts of the world are 5%-6%. You’re taking on the little more volatility, but getting a lot more yield.
ZEF-T vs. ZHY-T. The question is credit risk. You have emerging market risk with ZEF-T and so you get extra yield. When you do the correlation of the higher yield, they trade more like an equity than a bond. ZEF-T is an equity type risk, where as ZHY-T is more like fixed income. He does not think it is the time to step into either of these.
Prefers VEE-T. Emerging market bonds are a sexy way to go.