Held by
0
portfolios on TandT
Bookmarked by
0
users
Avg position size
—
of holders' portfolios
13F filers
1
institution
52-week range
$52.38 – $54.58
45% from low
Exchange
NASDAQ
ETF
Borrow rate
0.51%
Easy to borrow
| Symbol | Price | Today | Mkt cap | P/E |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IGIBiShares 5-10 Year Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF | $53.38 | +0.13% | $18.2B | — |
| DGRWWisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Fund | $95.40 | +0.77% | $17.1B | — |
| EMBiShares J.P. Morgan USD Emerging Markets Bond ETF | $96.82 | +0.29% | $14.2B | — |
| ETHAiShares Ethereum Trust ETF | $12.24 | +2.94% | $7.5B | — |
| FTECFidelity MSCI Information Technology Index ETF |
No company description on file.
No one on the platform currently holds IGIB.
| Institution | Shares | Reported |
|---|---|---|
| Renaissance Technologiesas of 2025-09-30 | 210,100 | $11.4M |
| Ex-date | Per share | Pay date |
|---|---|---|
| 2026-06-01 | $0.2162 | 2026-06-04 |
| 2026-05-01 | $0.2171 | 2026-05-06 |
| 2026-04-01 | $0.2194 | 2026-04-07 |
| 2026-03-02 | $0.2140 | 2026-03-05 |
| 2026-02-02 | $0.2094 | 2026-02-05 |
| 2025-12-19 | $0.2118 | 2025-12-24 |
| 2025-12-01 | $0.2136 | 2025-12-04 |
| 2025-11-03 | $0.2113 | 2025-11-06 |
| 2025-10-01 | $0.2134 | 2025-10-06 |
| 2025-09-02 | $0.2083 | 2025-09-05 |
No one on the platform has traded IGIB yet.
| $278.34 |
| +2.15% |
| $16.8B |
| — |
| IEIiShares 3-7 Year Treasury Bond ETF | $117.78 | -0.03% | $18.5B | — |
| IWSiShares Russell Mid-Cap Value ETF | $164.93 | -0.12% | $17.2B | — |
Source: Financial Modeling Prep · peers by sector/industry
| 2025-08-01 | $0.2080 | 2025-08-06 |
| 2025-07-01 | $0.2058 | 2025-07-07 |
| Execution date | Ratio |
|---|---|
| 2018-08-08 | 2-for-1 |
No recent Form 4 filings on EDGAR — either no insider transactions reported recently or this isn't a SEC-registered issuer.
$IGIB I'm adding to ret. accounts today and will add to taxable accts after the dividend drops. 2/
View on StockTwits ↗$IGIB Adding 5-10 Yr av. 6ish yrs duration Corporate Bond ETF on falling interest rates... Current average is about 6 yrs. (if you want to capture more upside on falling rates, you can do that IMO by looking at other longer duration ETFs). - At 53.32 it's at 58% vs the predicted short term trading Opportunity Range™ for today. ST Trend is up... - Av Yield to Mat. 5.14%, Opportunity Ranges™ are short term predicted trading ranges that can change daily. A range position near or nearing 100% indicates "overbought" and one near or nearing 0% indicates "oversold." Overshoots above or below the ranges indicate pressured buying/selling, respectively...
View on StockTwits ↗$SPY $TLT $SGOV $BND $IGIB Good article from Wolf. As I’ve mentioned several times recently, I don’t see a rate hike in 2026. However, when looking at the 2 year yield, it’s remaining elevated above 4%. Currently sitting at 4.17% So the bond market is basically saying at least .25-.50 basis point hike is coming within 6 months. I think by Q3 the 2 year settles back in the 3.8% range. I do still believe the 10 year stays in the 4-4.5% range and the 30 year above 5% Longer dated debt is going to cost more. When the next recession hits, the 2 year could fall back to 3% and the 200 basis point spread will form. By late 2027 into 2028 2.75-3% on the 2 3.75-4% on the 10 4.75-5% on the 30 I’m still calling for the 200 point spread to form. I’ve posted the periods of time this spread occurred. https://wolfstreet.com/2026/06/18/era-of-powell-was-dovish-is-over-warshs-five-taskforces/
View on StockTwits ↗$BND $IGIB $KORP $BGT $DLY You’ll want to own some bond funds over the next 5+ years. https://youtu.be/R8FRCfazsg4?is=2AoXk4knZR_EtqPZ
View on StockTwits ↗$SGOV $TLT $BND $IGIB $SCHP The FED will let inflation run through 2026. I’m in the camp with GS and JPM. No rate hikes in 2026 and by mid 2027 the FED will actually be cutting rates. Mining companies are going to have a great H2 2026. Energy companies will roar in 2027. When the next recession is actually named, energy tickers will be at ATH’s. The US government has placed us in a position that they can’t raise rates. The interest on the debt will cripple us. What we have is a debt implosion about to occur. The jobs data isn’t showing the real issues unfolding. Jobs are being cut left and right. Unemployment 4.3% isn’t real. It’s 8% and by the end of 2027 we will see 6+% unemployment and the real unemployment will be 12-15% on the U6 data. I’m holding 9 treasury/bond funds now. In H2 2026 I’m going to keep increasing my SGOV, TLT, SCHP. I will also keep my BND and NUV position. Will eliminate DLY, BGT, IGIB and KORP. Restructuring my portfolio weekly/monthly
View on StockTwits ↗7/7: Dassault Systèmes prints €1B 5-year senior bond at 3.375% and refinances €750M revolver to June 2031 maturity $DASTY $IGIB $LQD $IEUR
View on StockTwits ↗$TLT $BND $IGIB $BGT $SCHP At this point, the bond market isn’t happy. History demonstrates that a bear steepening of the bond yield curve—where long-term interest rates rise faster than short-term interest rates—is a relatively rare macroeconomic event that historically serves as a powerful late-cycle warning sign for a looming recession and stock market correction. Analyzing historical bond data going back to 1960 reveals specific structural outcomes for the economy, fixed income, and equities: 1. High Probability of Imminent Recession when a bear steepener occurs late in an economic cycle, especially if the yield curve is shifting out of a deep inversion, it historically functions as a "royal flush" of recession warnings. I’m still calling for a mid 2027 named recession. I personally believe the recession has already begun.
View on StockTwits ↗$SGOV $BND $TLT $IGIB $VGSH What’s it going to be? Rate hike in July or the FED continues to pause? If the straight of Hormuz reopens prior, I say the FED rate remains unchanged. Let’s see what happens. The bond market is screaming rate hike. https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/the-fed-will-have-to-raise-interest-rates-in-july-to-appease-bond-vigilantes-yardeni-says/ar-AA23uP8J
View on StockTwits ↗$SPY $TLT $BGT $IGIB $SGOV Well, bond yields are screaming higher. Driven by fear of the short term yield pricing in 2-3 FED rate hikes the next 12+ months. I don’t see the FED raising rates. They will leave them at 3.5-3.75% for several more months. Our country can’t afford to pay more interest on our debt. Inflation will be left to run wild for the next few months based on the theory oil prices will fall and things are transitory again. Let’s see if the 2 year won’t fall back towards 3.8% in the coming weeks. I’m still continuing with my restructuring plan. Adding more fixed income and staying overweight miners and energy. The question for me now is, do I go more overweight short term treasuries in case I’m wrong? I will be watching this closely. I still like hedging with TLT for 2027 purposes, but my intermediate bond funds are in limbo. Let’s see what this coming week brings.
View on StockTwits ↗$DLY $DBL $PHK $TLT $IGIB Private credit is getting written down daily. Redemption requests will continue pouring in. I’ve used the 2000-2008 cycle for several years now as a comparison to where we are now. In 2020 is where it began. For this is a 2020-2028 cycle. My call for a recession has been mid 2027 for some time now. I personally believe the recession has already begun. While I’ve been accumulating more fixed income funds the last few months, I still have more restructuring planned. My bond sleeve approach or (Barbell) approach will continue moving forward. Short duration funds (0-3 years ) SGOV VGSH KORP BGT Mid duration funds (3-10 years) SCHP BND BNDX IGIB NUV Long duration funds 10+ years TLT Currently, I still believe the long end yields move higher, but by holding a balance of all durations, I should capture a consistent yield. I will reinvest dividends monthly and compound share count. 30% allocation https://youtu.be/iTzIflpxZ2Q?si=4GPjIqTPL8_Y_Q0d
View on StockTwits ↗$SPY $TLT $BND $IGIB $KORP A lot of good data from Wolf in this article. The final chart is simply brutal. This chart basically says it all. Not only are we a debt ridden country, businesses and individuals are maxed out. Can the market move higher, yes it can, but I’m still going to continue restructuring my portfolio and taking profits this year and rotating to the out of favor bond market. For me, the upside risk has to be countered with more fixed income. By accumulating short/mid/long dated bond and treasuries, it will allow some drawdown protection. I’m up to about 19% fixed income now. Accumulating: BGT BND BNDX IGIB KORP SCHP SGOV TLT VGSH I’m also holding these below, but they will be sold this month. DLY NUV RFI End goal 30% fixed income and for the summer, I might move an extra 10% into SGOV? 25-30% miners 20-25% energy 10% food producers https://wolfstreet.com/2026/04/30/without-government-spending-trade-gdp-rose-by-2-5-in-q1-boosted-by-ai-investments/
View on StockTwits ↗$SGOV $TLT $BND $BNDX $IGIB For several months I’ve been accumulating different bonds funds. Basically building a bond sleeve or a barbell type bond portfolio. Protecting the short and long end. Meaning, if The FED drops to 2% due to a recessionary environment, the TLT and SCHP defend it. If the FED has to raise rates back to 5+% Then SGOV and BGT handle this well. I will continue analyzing my bond fund picks and portfolio. I’m seriously wondering now if it’s even possible for The FED to lower rates. Energy and material costs are going to prove very inflationary into 2027+ I’m staying long miners, energy and bond funds. That’s my main sector picks.
View on StockTwits ↗$BND $BNDX $IGIB $SCHP $TLT Where the Money is Moving Bond Funds: For the first time since early 2023, aggregate bond indexes are again out-yielding short-term Treasury bills, making it more attractive for investors to "step out of cash". Equities: Some analysts predict a more dramatic shift into risk assets like stocks and alternative investments (e.g., Bitcoin) starting in Q3 or Q4 of 2026, as money market returns are expected to "collapse" toward their cycle bottom.
View on StockTwits ↗$TLT $BND $IGIB $SCHP $BNDX Rotation Timing: While many expected outflows to begin in 2024, money market assets reached new all-time highs in early 2026. Analysts point to several factors determining when this "wall of cash" finally moves: Yield Erosion : As the FED continues its rate-cutting cycle— the benchmark rate projected to drop to roughly 3.4% by the end of 2026—the primary incentive for holding cash is fading. High-yield CD rates, which were in the 5% range in 2024, have already begun falling toward the mid-3’s The "Zero-Rate" Threshold: Historically, money market assets only see significant declines when rates approach zero or during major economic shocks. If rates remain above 3%, many institutional investors may continue to treat cash as a viable "core tool" for liquidity and volatility buffering. Bond Reinvestment Risk: The shift into bonds is already underway for proactive investors. The longer-term bonds now offer the potential for price appreciation as rates fall.
View on StockTwits ↗$BND $VGSH $IGIB $BNDX $SGOV Many people ask why I’m moving more to fixed income and a somewhat more conservative approach? I turned 50 last July. Why 30% is a Common Recommendation Balancing Growth and Protection: By age 50, you are likely in your peak earning years but closer to retirement. A 70/30 stock-to-bond split allows for continued growth to combat inflation while providing a "bulwark" of stable assets to reduce overall portfolio volatility. The "Rule of 110": Many modern advisors suggest subtracting your age from 110 to find your stock allocation. For a 50-year-old, this equals 60% stocks and 40% bonds, making your 30% choice slightly more growth-oriented but still within a typical range. De-risking Early: Starting to build your fixed income sleeve now helps mitigate "sequence-of-returns risk"—the danger of a market crash occurring just as you prepare to retire. So, for now I’m moving towards 30% fixed income, but I will not rule out 40+% by year end.
View on StockTwits ↗Recent $TICKER stream from stocktwits.com — refreshed every 5 minutes. Sentiment tags are self-reported by posters. Not investment advice.