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Lu Wang

New York

Stocks Reporter at Bloomberg News

cross-asset reporter at Bloomberg. https://t.co/2vshPVdQqy

Featured in: Favicon bloomberg.com Favicon uol.com.br (+1) Favicon msn.com Favicon nih.gov Favicon globo.com Favicon indiatimes.com (+1) Favicon washingtonpost.com Favicon time.com Favicon yahoo.com (+10) Favicon arxiv.org

Articles

  • 1 week ago | bloomberg.com | Lu Wang

    (Bloomberg) -- Barclays Plc is challenging claims that the rise of passive investing is distorting the bond market, arguing there’s an alternative explanation for why credit trades are clustering around the end of the day. Strategists at the bank including Zornitsa Todorova published a note this week saying the widespread use of a type of transaction known as delayed Treasury spotting more likely accounts for the shift.

  • 2 weeks ago | news.bloomberglaw.com | Lu Wang |Justina Lee

    More corporate debt is changing hands near close, study showsAbout 9% of volumes occur within one minute of indexes pricingCredit trading is increasingly migrating to the end of the Wall Street day, echoing a long-term trend in equities that has fueled a debate over how index funds are reshaping the market.

  • 2 weeks ago | bloomberg.com | Lu Wang |Justina Lee

    (Bloomberg) -- Credit trading is increasingly migrating to the end of the Wall Street day, echoing a long-term trend in equities that has fueled a debate over how index funds are reshaping the market. About 9% of daily trading volume in US investment-grade corporate debt occurred within one minute of the close of key indexes in the first nine months of last year, according to academic researchers studying reported trade data. Less than a decade ago, that figure was below 0.6%.

  • 2 weeks ago | news.bloomberglaw.com | Isabelle Lee |Caleb Mutua |Lu Wang

    Investors looking to move big blocks of corporate bonds have long relied on exchange-traded funds listed on stock exchanges to jump in and out of positions. But now, they’re increasingly trading directly in the debt market.

  • 2 weeks ago | bloomberg.com | Isabelle Lee |Caleb Mutua |Lu Wang

    (Bloomberg) -- Investors looking to move big blocks of corporate bonds have long relied on exchange-traded funds listed on stock exchanges to jump in and out of positions. But now, they’re increasingly trading directly in the debt market.

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Lu Wang
Lu Wang @luwangnyc
9 Jun 25

RT @isabelletanlee: Credit portfolio trading is booming -- closing in on ETFs. The two feed off each other, says Barclays: “Take ETFs out o…

Lu Wang
Lu Wang @luwangnyc
30 May 25

For anyone on Wall Street still clinging to a time-honored macro-investing playbook, Trump 2.0 has been a source of endless punishment https://t.co/crJa5fVu1E with @denitsa_tsekova

Lu Wang
Lu Wang @luwangnyc
22 May 25

RT @isabelletanlee: Investors are increasingly embracing automated ETF trading despite extreme volatility. Tradeweb saw a record 82% of all…