FoxScore

Analysis for iShares Floating Rate Bond ETF

Description & usage

The iShares Floating Rate Bond ETF invests in floating-rate U.S. corporate bonds with low duration sensitivity. It is used by investors seeking reduced interest-rate risk in fixed income allocations. Key drivers are credit spreads, short-term rates, default expectations, and fund flows.

Basic info

Symbol
FLOT
Type
ETF
Region
US
Sector
Bonds
Available history
11.2 years
Last trading day
04/02/2026
TER

Score overview

The overall score combines Performance, Stability and Trend into one comparable value.

Market context

DXY
120.89
US 10Y Real
1.99%
Fed Balance
$6.68T
CPI YoY
2.4%
Fed Rate
3.75%
US 10Y
4.35%
VIX
24.54
HY OAS
3.17%
Brent
$121.88
Core CPI
2.5%
US 2Y
3.84%
ISM PMI

Analysis summary

Technical asset picture

iShares Floating Rate Bond ETF (FLOT) currently has a total score of 46 points, placing it in the neutral range. The score is made up of Performance (27), Stability (78) and Trend (48). The profile is clearly uneven: Stability stands out while Performance lags.

Performance scores 27 points (weak). Least weak metric: 1Y return at -0.2 %. Main drag: 10Y return at 0.8 %. This points to a sharper upswing more recently.

Stability scores 78 points (strong). Best-ranked metric: max drawdown (3Y) at -2.1 %. Main drag: CAGR/drawdown ratio at 0.01. Higher Stability points are better and typically reflect calmer swings and smaller drawdowns-but prices can still fall.

Trend scores 48 points (neutral). Best-ranked metric: Price is about 0.3 % below SMA50. Weaker metric: 12M momentum at -0.1 %.

Overall, the picture is mixed: Stability does the heavy lifting while Performance holds the score back. On a metric level, max drawdown (3Y) stands out, while 10Y return lags.

Current market backdrop

The backdrop currently looks mixed and rather restrictive.

A strong US dollar currently paints a mixed risk picture.

High US real yields and elevated long yields lean toward a restrictive rate backdrop.

What that typically means here

For bonds and bond-heavy ETFs, higher yields and high real rates typically lean headwind for prices.

Note: ISM PMI was not used actively in the effect logic.

Historical evaluation and qualitative market context only, not investment advice.

Price chart

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