RIAs are Embracing these Active Bond ETFs in 2025

See which active fixed-income ETFs RIAs are adopting in 2025, as AdvizorPro and YCharts analyze fund flows, strategy performance, and rising advisor demand for active bond exposure.

Through a collaboration with YCharts, we analyzed one of the biggest stories of 2025 so far: the surge in RIA adoption of active fixed-income ETFs.

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In Q2 2025, fixed-income strategies led all asset classes, pulling in $49.9 billion in net new assets. In contrast, equity strategies saw $84 billion in outflows, and money market funds ended the quarter slightly negative, shedding $245 million.

As we’ve tracked throughout the year, one of the biggest drivers behind this shift is the growing ETF-tization of the fixed-income sleeve, or as Northern Trust’s David Abner put it, the evolution of ETFs into the “meat and potatoes” of advisor portfolios. In Q2 alone, $62.6 billion flowed into fixed-income ETFs, offsetting the $12.7 billion in outflows from bond mutual funds.


Moreover, over the past 12 months, despite making up 18.6% of fixed-income ETF AUM (As of June 30, 2025), active strategies captured 40% of the $292 billion in total flows.

 

To better understand which funds are winning with advisors, we analyzed RIA adoption of the top active fixed-income ETFs by YTD flows (AdvizorPro data as of March 31, 2025).

We focused specifically on Core, Core-Plus, and Multi-Sector bond strategies, where active managers have the broadest discretion to adjust duration, credit, and sector exposure.

Why Active?

Before diving into the biggest winners, it’s worth revisiting why active continues to resonate, particularly in the “40” part of a portfolio. 

In addition to a decades-high yield environment, one that has created attractive income opportunities while setting the stage for anticipated global rate cuts, advisors face a more complex landscape for managing duration. In this environment, the flexibility and discretion of active management have become increasingly valuable.

Over the past year, the efficacy of active management in the fixed-income sleeve has been compelling: Of the 66 active Core, Core-Plus, and Multi-Sector bond ETFs with a 1-year track record, 48 (72.7%) outperformed AGG as of June 30, 2025.

Active Fixed Income Leaders by the numbers

Again, when looking at active Core, Core-Plus, and Multi-Sector bond ETFs, here’s how things stand: 

  • Total YTD Flows: $23.5B
  • Most YTD Flows: PIMCO Multisector Bond Active ETF (PYLD) – $2.9B
  • Median Flows Relative to AUM: 19.68%
  • Total AUM: $107.2B
  • Largest (by AUM): Fidelity Total Bond ETF (FBND) – $19.5B
  • Median Size (by AUM): $155M
  • Median YTD Flows: $21.8M 
  • Median years since inception: 2
  • Median Net Expense Ratio: 0.39%
  • Lowest Net Expense Ratio: T Rowe Price QM US Bond ETF (TAGG) – 0.08%


With that backdrop in mind, let’s take a closer look at three big winners from the first half of 2025. Rounding out the full list of the top ten active Core, Core-Plus, and Multi-Sector bond ETFs by asset growth at midyear are: PYLD, BINC, JCPB, VCRB, FBND, JPIE, TAGG, JBND, CGCP, and EVTR.

PIMCO Multisector Bond Active ETF (PYLD)

Few firms are as revered in the fixed-income space as PIMCO. With the PIMCO Multisector Bond Active ETF (PYLD), they aimed to bring their decades of bond market leadership into a tax-efficient ETF wrapper designed for modern portfolios.

From the end of 2024 through Q1 2025, 58 RIAs added PYLD to client portfolios, marking a 22.4% increase QoQ and bringing the total number of reporting advisors to 317.

That momentum has translated into significant flows: $2.9 billion in net new assets year-to-date, accounting for over half of the fund’s total AUM as of June 30, 2025, quite the pace for a two-year-old strategy.

PYLD takes a notably different approach than its benchmark (represented by AGG). It holds just 17.6% in government bonds and a heavier tilt toward securitized fixed income (38.5%). The strategy also holds 11.4% in cash, giving managers flexibility to respond to shifting markets.

 

That flexibility has paid off. Since inception, PYLD has outperformed AGG on both a price and total return basis while navigating a volatile interest rate environment. The 10-year Treasury yield swung from nearly 5% in late 2022 to mid-3% in mid-2024 before returning to the mid-4% range in 2025.

 

iShares Flexible Income Active ETF (BINC)

While the fastest-growing product in the iShares family over the past two years has been their bitcoin ETF, IBIT, the growth of the iShares Flexible Income Active ETF (BINC) during the same period is nothing to sneeze at. In just two years, BINC has accumulated over $10 billion in AUM, with $2.6 billion of that total flowing in 2025 alone, representing more than a quarter of its assets as of June 30, 2025.

The strategy’s success is mirrored in its expanding adoption among RIAs. From the end of 2024 to the end of Q1 2025, 33 RIAs added BINC to their portfolios, a 7.7% QoQ increase, bringing the total number of advisors reporting BINC as a holding to 464. Of these, 14 manage over $100 billion in assets, and 240 manage over $1 billion, ranking BINC second in both baskets, only to FBND, the largest strategy in the cohort by AUM, among observed strategies.

BINC’s flexible, go-anywhere mandate sharply contrasts vanilla core bond exposures like AGG. As of mid-July, BINC held just 5.3% in government bonds, compared to AGG’s 47.1%. Instead, it leans heavily into corporates (29.2%) and securitized credit (29.2%), while maintaining 32% of the portfolio in derivatives. Geographically, BINC maintains a notably high exposure to Greater Europe, with 30.7% of its holdings allocated to the region.

 

Since its launch, BINC has capitalized on shifting interest rate environments, consistently outperforming the AGG on total return (18.3% vs. 9.1%) and NAV growth (5.4% vs. 1.2%). This strong performance comes despite significant fluctuations in the 10-year Treasury yield, which moved between 3.6% and nearly 5% during the period before settling at 4.2% in June 2025.

 

JPMorgan Core Plus Bond ETF (JCPB)

Backed by one of the most sophisticated fixed-income desks on Wall Street, the JPMorgan Core Plus Bond ETF (JCPB) continues to gain traction among RIAs. 

From the end of 2024 to Q1 2025, 19 RIAs added JCPB, representing a 7.0% quarter-over-quarter increase and bringing the total number of advisors reporting the strategy in client portfolios to 289.

That growing interest has been accompanied by meaningful inflows: $1.7 billion in net new assets in 2025, helping drive total AUM to nearly $7 billion as of June 30,  more than double where it stood a year ago.

As of mid-July 2025, the fund held just 11.0% in government bonds (vs. 47.1% for AGG), while overweighting corporate debt (30.7%) and particularly securitized fixed income (49.8%). It also maintains 8.5% in cash, offering optionality in a shifting rate environment.

 

Since inception through June 2025, JCPB generated a total return of 18.07%, outperforming AGG’s 10.73%. It also proved more resilient on a price basis, declining -6.12% versus -7.01% for AGG. That outperformance came during one of the most difficult stretches for bonds in decades, as sharp rate hikes and duration-driven losses defined the cycle, as the 10-year Treasury yield surged from 0.52% in 2020 to a peak of 4.98%.

 

Wrapping Up: Active Fixed Income in the Spotlight

As RIAs recalibrate portfolios in response to shifting rate expectations, tighter credit spreads, and growing client demand for income, active fixed-income ETFs have emerged as a preferred tool. Strategies like PYLD, BINC, JCPB, and the other funds referenced at the top of this report have proven their ability to deliver results and adapt in real time, helping advisors manage risk while pursuing returns in a volatile rate environment.

With more flows going to active bond ETFs than ever, and usage among billion-dollar RIAs on the rise, it’s worth tracking which strategies are winning. To stay ahead of the next wave of advisor adoption,subscribe to the Fund Flow Report for monthly updates on the trends, strategies, and asset classes reshaping portfolios.