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PCY

Invesco Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt ETF

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r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

El Salvador Credit Default Jan 2023

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Most non-US sovereign debt funds are going to be of types of countries versus a single country. They will typically also track some index. You have to make sure you understand debt concepts like duration and credit risk. IGOV is a ultra short duration product. Most non-US sovereign debt funds are not short duration. So depending on what you are seeking and the duration - there are funds like: IGOV which are non-US developed countries with an average duration of about 7.5 years. GGOV which is USD hedged but holds about 1/3 US treasuries. And tracks the Bloomberg Global treasury USD hedged index. PCY which is an emerging markets sovereign debt ETF. There are more funds like this - but you have to understand that these are not considered risk-free rate investments.

Mentions:#IGOV#PCY
r/investingSee Comment

So there is an ETF you might be interested that invests in a basket of foreign sovereign debt. It spreads the risk out, but is pretty volatile. The real payout is the insane monthly dividend, not the price of the ETF. Ticker PCY.

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r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

PCY has exposure.

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r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

>Canadian bond and Index update \>@MtlExchange https://t.co/uBnVGG6PCY ^First ^Squawk ^[@FirstSquawk](http://twitter.com/FirstSquawk) ^at ^2022-11-07 ^14:24:24 ^EST-0500

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r/wallstreetbetsOGsSee Comment

That's bad. PCY, EMSH, FM, or what's the play you're looking at here?

Mentions:#PCY#EMSH#FM
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

My Play for everyone PCY = EMERGING MARKET INDX @ 21.7 while ATH was in the low 30s in the past 5yr. Why is it down? War. Buy 60% Hold 10% Sell 30%

Mentions:#PCY
r/investingSee Comment

I'm 30 and have about 80% of my portfolio in equities. I have 7.5% in bonds, a mix of BND, a total bond market ETF with \~2.0% dividend return , PCY, an emerging markets bond ETF with a \~4.5% dividend return, and VTC, a corporate bond fund ETF with a \~2.5% dividend return. I reinvest all dividends I receive. Finally, I have 12.5% in real estate (primarily VNQ), that offers sort of a compromise - some capital appreciation and some dividend return. As others have said, I don't typically expect the bond ETFs to grow with the market, but instead they'll be an income stream with more predictability / less downturn risk when I get closer to retirement. Good luck!

r/investingSee Comment

I’ve tried to look for ETFs with no luck unfortunately, there is PCY which holds a small amount of their government debt but with lots of exposure to other countries

Mentions:#PCY
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

If your having a bad day (or even a good day) [this](https://youtu.be/PCY0aeUx-Ns) should cheer you up

Mentions:#PCY