Hello everyone,
Right now, at the iShare’s official webpage, TLT is listed with a “Yield" of 2.90% and a "Yield To Maturity" of 4.00%.
I understand that the difference is because many of the bonds currently held in TLT trade below par at the moment. However, I struggle to understand how that “Yield To Maturity” actually materializes in an ETF that is constantly rolling bonds and therefore many don’t reach maturity. Perhaps TLT’s price increases as bonds are rolled over? I am just trying to understand what is the real yield an investor actually gets, regardless of whether it is gained via distributions or via embedding it into the price hikes.
Thanks!
Right now, at the iShare’s official webpage, TLT is listed with a “Yield" of 2.90% and a "Yield To Maturity" of 4.00%.
I understand that the difference is because many of the bonds currently held in TLT trade below par at the moment. However, I struggle to understand how that “Yield To Maturity” actually materializes in an ETF that is constantly rolling bonds and therefore many don’t reach maturity. Perhaps TLT’s price increases as bonds are rolled over? I am just trying to understand what is the real yield an investor actually gets, regardless of whether it is gained via distributions or via embedding it into the price hikes.
Thanks!
