“High yield bonds and preferred stocks… tend to do better than other fixed income categories when the stock market is strong, and when we’re coming out of a tightening cycle like we are now,” he told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” this week.
Hatfield’s ETF is up 10% in 2024 and almost 23% over the past year.
Hatfield’s team selects names that it deems are mispriced relative to their risk and yield, he said. “Most of the top holdings are in what we call asset intensive businesses,” Hatfield said.
Since its May 2018 inception, the Virtus InfraCap U.S. Preferred Stock ETF is down almost 9%.