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  1. Core Strategies Content Hub
  2. Rising Volatility Reveals Opportunities in Corporate Bonds
Core Strategies Content Hub
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Rising Volatility Reveals Opportunities in Corporate Bonds

Nick Peters-GoldenApr 23, 2026
2026-04-23

It’s the big story so far in 2026. Alongside AI, geopolitical market volatility is creating dislocations for investors to target. While some are more immediate and some are longer term, the ETF wrapper offers strategies that can attack all kinds of sectors. In corporate bonds, for example, growing volatility could create opportunities. The right ETF can separate the corporate bond wheat from the chaff.

Key Takeaways:

  • Volatility has had an impact already this year, with investors facing challenges to their portfolios.
  • Bond markets are one of the areas impacted, inviting investors to refresh their holdings therein.
  • Corporate bond dislocations may offer opportunities for an active ETF like KORP to exploit.

Why are corporate bonds seeing these dislocations, and how can investors targe them? Economic pressure caused by rising energy prices is one key factor. Those prices, potentially set to be elevated for much of 2026, have a knock on effect on the rate market. Should inflation actually rise this year, or faith in U.S. debt fall, investors will have a harder time predicting the rate market.

As American Century Investments Vice President and Senior Portfolio Manager Jason Greenblath pointed out in a recent piece of analysis, this matters for corporate bonds. Corporations still need to borrow money for all kinds of purposes. When more firms issue debt at the same time, he wrote, that can see certain issuers make concessions.

“To stand out, an issuer might offer a pricing concession — meaning the new bond could have a slightly higher yield (and a somewhat lower price) than similar bonds already trading,” he wrote.

Phenomena like that show why having an active, research-backed ETF matters. The American Century Diversified Corporate Bond ETF (KORP B-) presents just such an opportunity. The fund charges a 29 basis point fee to actively invest in U.S. corporate debt. It looks to maintain a duration of five to seven years, with a slight lean towards BBB-rated debt, the lower class of investment-grade debt.

See more: With No End in Sight in Hormuz, Get Income ETFs Now

That has helped KORP return 8.4% over the last one-year period, according to ETF Database data, outperforming the ETF Database Corporate Bonds ETF Category average in that time. It provided a 5.09% 12-month trailing distribution rate as of March 31. The fund represents a solid option to adapt to uncertain times in corporate bonds.

For more news, information, and analysis, visit the Core Strategies Content Hub.

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