I will have cash available after selling out of my Schwab intelligent portfolio account. I'd like to put at least most of it to work as soon as the transaction takes place. My thought was to put the money into an existing fund I already hold, CGBL, Capital Group Core Balanced ETF. It's a pretty new fund run by a very experienced management team and I've been very happy so far with this fund. Thanks to
@Mark for bringing it to my attention a while back.
I thought I'd ask the question though, are there other ETF
balanced funds out there in the 50-70% equity holding category that are worth comparing CGBL too?
A couple funds that popped out on an initial filter search:
OCIO ClearShares OCIO ETF
AOR iShares Core Growth Allocation ETF
RISN Inspire Tactical Balanced ETF
LEUTHOLD CORE ETF, LCR is also an option I'm considering for some of the $. I've held that one before.
Comments
I haven't looked at active CGBL in detail. Its ER is 33 bps, inception 09/2023. Of the 5 managers, 2 (Berro, Lee) are common with 12 managers of the giant ABALX.
But on my watchlist is Franklin INCM, an active ETF at 38 bps, 06/2023- , by the managers of the giant FKIQX.
https://www.franklintempleton.com/investments/options/exchange-traded-funds/products/36262/SINGLCLASS/franklin-income-focus-etf/INCM
There aren't many balanced ETFs around, so active INCM and CGBL are good finds. Being new shouldn't matter if they are cousins of existing mutual funds.
I own LCR which I wished was lower, but they have a good track record, and I like that are tactical.
Are you referring to 'mutual' funds or ETF's which is what the OP asked about?
https://www.mutualfundobserver.com/2024/03/outperforming-actively-managed-etfs/#ShortListofGreatOwlFunds
@golub1, you make a good point on some of these ETFs mentioned having high exp ratios. But CGBL has only a .33% exp ratio. Quite a bit lower than the TRP or Fidelity balanced mutual funds.
From my following and researching CGBL, I have been pleased with its behavior. Its fixed income sleeve Core Plus. The only reason I have not invested in it is because of potential high distributions from its fixed income sleeve (bonds with market discounts) if I were to put it in a taxable account. But may be with good inflows, some of that distribution will be picked up by shareholders coming in later. Any thoughts?
I am staring at when to put a slug into rsp
As a retired and conservative investor, I naturally agree with your mantra.
However, I use the following non-ETF funds with excellent risk/reward profiles and all with SD<10:
QDSNX, JHQAX, BLNDX, CBLDX and ICMUX.
The only ETF fund I use is TFLO.
By the way, JHQAX has an extremely low tax cost ratio of 0.23 according to M*.
So far, so good.
Fred
This approach is simple to execute, has low expenses, and good risk-adjusted past performance.
https://www.portfoliovisualizer.com/backtest-portfolio?s=y&sl=60vGLZ2IHHbVmPAjuywMqr
https://www.morningstar.com/etfs/arcx/cgbl/portfolio
(select "Bond" next to "Portfolio" toward upper left)
What is your concern with CGBL discount bonds? It looks like the ETF's high interest is coming from the coupons, not any discount. Average coupon yield is 5.32% vs. 3.90% for its peers. It's coupon, not discount, accounting for high YTM.
For whatever discount is due to OID, the fund declares and distributes accretion (progression toward par value/reduction of discount) annually. Consequently at maturity all OID is accounted for. In short, OID bonds do not realize a big gain at maturity or sale.
Market discount is different. The rule is that investors (whether individuals or funds) can treat it the same way as OID (declaring it as annual income, gradually accreting), or defer all accretion (gain) until maturity or sale. It sounds like the latter is what you are concerned about.
However, this portfolio has a roughly counterbalancing amount of premium bonds (weighted average price is 99.27). So ISTM gains on discount bonds (generally treated as ordinary income) could be balanced out by losses on premium bonds (sometimes treated as negative ordinary income).
The links below give details on taxation of discount and premium bonds and how funds are required to handle OID "phantom interest" - what the last reference calls a "situation".
Schwab, When Should You Pay Taxes on Discount Bonds?
Baird, Tax Treatment of Bond Premium and Discount
K&L Gates, Introduction to Original Issue Discount
(last couple of slides describe how OID bonds in a mutual fund portfolio creates a "situation")