Educational material. Not investment advice.
If you invest in bonds passively, the core problem is simple: how do you live through changing rates without constantly trying to call the next move? In 2026, that’s why bond ladders are back in the spotlight. A bond ladder spreads your bond exposure across multiple maturities so you receive cash flows regularly and can reinvest at the new yields as the rate cycle evolves.
Traditionally, ladders were built from individual bonds. Today, many investors build them with bond ladder ETFs and especially target-maturity ETFs (ETFs with a defined maturity year).
A bond ladder is a bond portfolio (or a set of bond ETFs) where money is split across maturities — for example, some exposure matures in 2026, some in 2027, 2028, and so on.
Why investors use it:
In practice, many ladder setups use several bond ETFs with different maturity buckets (short / intermediate / long) and you combine them to create ladder-like exposure.
The downside: most standard bond ETFs are perpetual — they keep rolling bonds inside the fund, so the ETF itself doesn’t finish.
A target-maturity ETF holds a basket of bonds aligned to a specific maturity year. The structure behaves more like “hold-to-maturity in a wrapper”: as the target year approaches, rate risk typically declines, and the fund may liquidate/return capital at the end of the term (depending on the product design).
If you need cash to become available in a specific year, target-maturity ETFs are usually the cleaner tool.
When rates and the yield curve move in waves, bonds create two common pain points:
A ladder is the compromise: short-to-mid maturities give flexibility, while longer maturities lock yields for longer.
Duration measures how sensitive bond prices are to changes in rates. Higher duration = bigger price moves.
Short duration: lower volatility, but reinvestment yield changes faster.
Long duration: higher volatility, but more upside if rates fall and longer yield lock-in.
A ladder lets you hold duration as a package, not as a single bet.
Common setups:
5-year ladder (e.g., 2026–2030): compact, good for goal-based planning.
7–10 years: more stable reinvestment machine.
Spacing is often 1 year (classic ladder) or 2 years (fewer trades).
Passive investors typically pick:
Using high yield as the core of a ladder can backfire: in stress regimes HY can behave more like equities.
Example logic (no specific tickers):
Allocate equally, or tilt a bit toward the short end if you want less price volatility.
When the 2026 rung matures/liquidates, reinvest the proceeds into a new far-end rung (e.g., 2031).
This is how the ladder rolls forward without market timing.
Often once per year is enough (right after the nearest rung finishes). Larger portfolios sometimes rebalance semi-annually.
A barbell approach concentrates exposure in short + long maturities with little in the middle. It can work, but it often involves more implicit rate views.
For a passive investor in 2026, a ladder usually wins on practicality: fewer scenario bets, more consistent reinvestment.
A ladder often creates waiting periods: cash arrives, but you may prefer to buy the next rung in a better liquidity window or split entries.
During those pauses, some investors park operational cash in fixed-yield tools.
A bond ladder turns a bond allocation into a predictable mechanism: you pre-plan maturities, reduce rate risk through a diversified duration profile, and reinvest regularly without guessing the next move. A ladder built from standard bond ETFs can be flexible, while target-maturity ETFs are often better when you want rungs tied to specific years and a more predictable reinvestment cycle.