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State Street SPDR Bloomberg High Yield Bond ETF (JNK)

96.10 -0.30 (-0.31%)
At close: May 4 at 4:00:00 PM EDT
96.10 0.00 (0.00%)
After hours: May 4 at 6:02:46 PM EDT
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  • Previous Close 96.40
  • Open 96.34
  • Bid --
  • Ask --
  • Day's Range 95.92 - 96.36
  • 52 Week Range 94.30 - 98.24
  • Volume 3,643,692
  • Avg. Volume 5,979,730
  • Net Assets 6.96B
  • NAV 96.30
  • PE Ratio (TTM) 20.13
  • Yield 6.68%
  • YTD Daily Total Return 1.38%
  • Beta (5Y Monthly) 0.67
  • Expense Ratio (net) 0.40%

The fund generally invests substantially all, but at least 80%, of its total assets in the securities comprising the index and in securities that the Adviser determines have economic characteristics that are substantially identical to the economic characteristics of the securities that comprise the index. The index is designed to measure the performance of publicly issued U.S. dollar denominated high yield corporate bonds with above-average liquidity. -null-.

State Street Investment Management

Fund Family

High Yield Bond

Fund Category

6.96B

Net Assets

2007-11-28

Inception Date

Performance Overview: JNK

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Trailing returns as of 5/1/2026. Category is High Yield Bond.

YTD Return

JNK
1.38%
Category
0.51%

1-Year Return

JNK
9.18%
Category
6.60%

3-Year Return

JNK
8.70%
Category
7.89%

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Holdings: JNK

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Sector Weightings

Research Reports: JNK

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  • Raising price target

    Enterprise Products is a North American provider of midstream energy services to producers and consumers of natural gas, NGLs, crude oil, refined products, and petrochemicals. The partnership's assets include over 50,000 miles of natural gas, NGL, refined product, and petrochemical pipelines; 260 million barrels of storage capacity for NGLs, refined products, and crude oil; and 14 billion cubic feet of natural gas storage capacity. The company completed its IPO in July 1998. The company is not a component of the S&P 500. Enterprise currently employs about 7,700 people.

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    Price Target
  • Recent weakness offer buying opportunity

    Freeport-McMoRan is a leading international mining company based in Phoenix. It operates geographically diverse assets with significant proven and probable reserves of copper, gold, and molybdenum. The company's portfolio of assets includes the Grasberg minerals district in Indonesia, one of the world's largest copper and gold deposits; the Morenci minerals district in North America; and the Cerro Verde and El Abra mines in South America. The company has approximately 28,500 employees. FCX shares are a component of the S&P 500.

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  • The flood of earnings reports continues this week, with about 1,500 public

    The flood of earnings reports continues this week, with about 1,500 public companies reporting results for their last quarter. The April jobs report also will come out. Last week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.5%, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq both rose 1%. Year to date, all three indices are in positive territory, with the DJIA up 3%, the S&P 500 higher by 6%, and the Nasdaq up by 8%. On the earnings calendar, highlights for the week include Palantir on Monday; AMD, Shopify, Arista Networks, Pfizer, and Anheuser-Busch on Tuesday; Walt Disney, Marriott, Uber, CVS Health, DoorDash, and Warner Bros. Discovery on Wednesday; McDonald's, Airbnb, Shell, and Cloudflare on Thursday; and Toyota on Friday. On the economic calendar, new data is pending on the labor market. Job Openings and New Home Sales will be reported on Tuesday; private payrolls report data from ADP on Wednesday; and the April Nonfarm Payrolls report on Friday. Turning to economic data, gas prices remain elevated and rose eight cents last week, hitting an average of $4.12 per gallon for regular gas. The Atlanta Fed GDPNow forecasts calls for GDP growth of 3.5% in the first quarter, up from the 1.2% forecast given just last week. The Cleveland Fed Inflation Nowcast calls for CPI of 3.6% in April and 3.9% in May. The CPI print was 3.3% in March. Mortgage rates moved higher last week, up seven basis points, with the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage now at 6.30%, according to FreddieMac. The next Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting is on June 17, with odds at 7% for a rate cut. President Trump's nominee to be the next Fed chairman, Kevin Warsh, has been voted through on the Senate side. The next step is to be confirmed by the House of Representatives. Jerome Powell's term as chairman expires on May 15, but he will remain on the FOMC as a governor. Taking a deeper dive into performance so far in 2026, a leading industrialized global stock market index, the ETF EFA, is up 6% year to date, and the leading emerging market ETF (EEM) is up 17% year to date. U.S. growth stocks are up 1% year to date based on the IWF ETF, while value stocks (IWD) are up 9%. Crude oil prices continue to be volatile. On Friday, oil was at $103 per barrel, up 77% year to date. In other asset classes, AGG bonds are down 1%, gold is up 6%, and Bitcoin is down 11%. The U.S. dollar is flat, tracking DXY. The VIX Volatility Index was at about 17 on Friday, below its historical average of 20. Turning to sector performance, the list from first to worst so far in 2026, as of April 24, is Energy (+31%), Materials (+13%), Industrials (+12%), Consumer Staples (+11%), Real Estate (+11%), Utilities (+10%), Communication Services (+10%), Information Technology (+8%), Consumer Discretionary (+3%), Financials (-4%), and Healthcare (-6%). By comparison, the S&P 500 is up 6% year to date.

  • The flood or earnings reports continues this week, with about 1,500 public

    The flood or earnings reports continues this week, with about 1,500 public companies reporting results for their last quarter. The April jobs report also will come out. Last week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.5%, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq both rose 1%. Year to date, all three indices are in positive territory, with the DJIA up 3%, the S&P 500 higher by 6%, and the Nasdaq up by 8%. On the earnings calendar, highlights for the week include Palantir on Monday; AMD, Shopify, Arista Networks, Pfizer, and Anheuser-Busch on Tuesday; Walt Disney, Marriott, Uber, CVS Health, DoorDash, and Warner Bros. Discovery on Wednesday; McDonald's, Airbnb, Shell, and Cloudflare on Thursday; and Toyota on Friday. On the economic calendar, new data is pending on the labor market. Job Openings and New Home Sales will be reported on Tuesday; private payrolls report data from ADP on Wednesday; and the April Nonfarm Payrolls report on Friday. Turning to economic data, gas prices remain elevated and rose eight cents last week, hitting an average of $4.12 per gallon for regular gas. The Atlanta Fed GDPNow forecasts calls for GDP growth of 3.5% in the first quarter, up from the 1.2% forecast given just last week. The Cleveland Fed Inflation Nowcast calls for CPI of 3.6% in April and 3.9% in May. The CPI print was 3.3% in March. Mortgage rates moved higher last week, up seven basis points, with the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage now at 6.30%, according to FreddieMac. The next Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting is on June 17, with odds at 7% for a rate cut. President Trump's nominee to be the next Fed chairman, Kevin Warsh, has been voted through on the Senate side. The next step is to be confirmed by the House of Representatives. Jerome Powell's term as chairman expires on May 15, but he will remain on the FOMC as a governor. Taking a deeper dive into performance so far in 2026, a leading industrialized global stock market index, the ETF EFA, is up 6% year to date, and the leading emerging market ETF (EEM) is up 17% year to date. U.S. growth stocks are up 1% year to date based on the IWF ETF, while value stocks (IWD) are up 9%. Crude oil prices continue to be volatile. On Friday, oil was at $103 per barrel, up 77% year to date. In other asset classes, AGG bonds are down 1%, gold is up 6%, and Bitcoin is down 11%. The U.S. dollar is flat, tracking DXY. The VIX Volatility Index was at about 17 on Friday, below its historical average of 20. Turning to sector performance, the list from first to worst so far in 2026, as of April 24, is Energy (+31%), Materials (+13%), Industrials (+12%), Consumer Staples (+11%), Real Estate (+11%), Utilities (+10%), Communication Services (+10%), Information Technology (+8%), Consumer Discretionary (+3%), Financials (-4%), and Healthcare (-6%). By comparison, the S&P 500 is up 6% year to date.

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