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  1. Fixed Income Content Hub
  2. CLO ETFs: Recent Innovations
Fixed Income Content Hub
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CLO ETFs: Recent Innovations

Kirsten ChangJul 14, 2026
2026-07-14

The once obscure CLO ETF market has officially broken out of its niche shell and entered a new phase of growth. Heading into 2026, total global assets quickly topped $35 billion and have now surged past the $50 billion mark in early July. Year-to-date net inflows have swelled beyond $10 billion — crystallizing the asset class’s growing prominence in core fixed income allocations.

Key Takeaways

  • Global CLO ETF assets topped $50 billion in July 2026, driven by over $10 billion in YTD inflows.
  • AAA CLO ETFs yield 5%+ and mezzanine tranches yield 6.5% to 7%, outperforming short-duration fixed-income assets.
  • Reckoner’s RAAA uses 20% embedded leverage, delivering a 5.29% NAV return to outperform peers in early 2026.

Even with recent SOFR compression pulling 30-day SEC yields down from 2023–2024 peak levels, today’s AAA CLO ETFs still anchor portfolios with robust yields of 5% or more. Moving further down the capital stack, mezzanine CLO ETFs are stepping in to capture even juicier yields of 6.5% to 7%. All of these continue to offer significant pickup against short-duration fixed income assets.

However, the market is no longer defined simply by investor demand for floating-rate income. Instead, issuers are competing through increasingly sophisticated product design. While pioneering legacy funds still command massive volume, the latest class of CLO ETFs is introducing unprecedented structural innovation to retail credit investing.


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Solving the Duration Problem

For years, the primary hurdle preventing institutional investors from fully embracing CLOs was benchmarking. Traditional core fixed-income allocations are anchored to the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index — a flagship benchmark that structurally excludes floating-rate securitized assets like CLOs due to their lack of duration.

PGIM aims to solve this institutional point of friction with last month’s launch of the PGIM AAA CLO Aggregate Duration ETF (AAAD). Instead of simply buying senior debt, AAAD employs a deliberate derivative overlay utilizing futures, forwards, and swaps. This allows portfolio managers to synthetically extend duration to match the U.S. Agg, effectively delivering “core-like” duration profiles from an asset class that inherently carries almost none.

Solving the Global Access Problem

Product innovation has also gone global. Franklin Templeton recently launched its first-ever securitized debt ETF, the Franklin BSP CLO ETF (YCLO), with a focus on cross-border flexibility — a burgeoning trend. Sub-advised by alternative credit specialist Benefit Street Partners, YCLO exploits transatlantic relative-value opportunities by dynamically shifting capital between U.S. and European investment-grade CLO tranches. This allows allocators to capture a distinct localized “complexity premium” driven by diverging central bank policy environments and geographic credit spreads.

Solving the Yield & Tax Problem

Meanwhile, specialized boutique Reckoner Capital Management has been a structural disruptor by introducing leveraged tranches and tax-optimized distribution frameworks into the ETF wrapper.

To amplify senior debt returns without sacrificing credit quality, they launched the Reckoner Yield Enhanced AAA CLO ETF (RAAA ), which systematically embeds up to 20% portfolio leverage directly into a senior CLO structure.

On a recent webcast, Reckoner CEO John Kim explained why the senior capital stack is uniquely suited for this type of product engineering.

“Banks know that AAA CLOs are an incredibly safe asset class," he said. "If you are willing to take a little bit more volatility in the NAV and get 50 basis points of payment for that, then that’s what we’re doing for you in this fund. And it’s automatic … the repo’s all embedded inside the ETF itself.”

Since its mid-July launch last year, RAAA delivered an NAV return of 5.29% — outperforming all U.S.-listed AAA CLO ETFs in the first half of 2026.

Earlier this year, Reckoner also rolled out a tax-optimized suite built to break the mandatory monthly distribution model of standard bond ETFs. The lineup offers “Reinvesting”® versions — the Reckoner Yield Enhanced AAA CLO Reinvesting ETF (RAAR) and the Reckoner BBB-B CLO Reinvesting ETF (RCLR) — that compound value internally to minimize immediate taxable events, and “Annual” (Y) versions — the Reckoner Yield Enhanced AAA CLO Annual ETF (RAAY) and the Reckoner BBB-B CLO Annual ETF (RCLY) — that defer income recognition until a single year-end payout.

Major Brokers Join the Race

The sheer velocity of capital entering the space has forced other heavyweight managers off the sidelines. Fidelity made its highly anticipated debut earlier this year by launching a dual active strategy — the Fidelity AAA CLO ETF (FAAA) and the Fidelity CLO ETF (FCLO) — leveraging an aggressive 12-month fee waiver structure to capture immediate market share.

While legacy giants like Janus Henderson and BlackRock still hold the lion’s share of absolute volume, these newer, active structural innovations are carving out major niches. The ETF wrapper continues to unlock new roads to a market long confined to Wall Street’s institutional shadow.

For more news, information, and analysis, visit the Fixed Income Content Hub.

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