Key stats
About Wisdom Short Duration Income ETF
WISD broadly invests in global fixed-income securities with a short duration of one year or less. The funds portfolio includes US and foreign bonds, debt securities, commercial paper, mortgage-backed securities, floating-rate securities, and up to 30% in asset-backed securities, such as CLOs rated investment-grade. Junk bonds are limited to 15% of net assets. The fund may invest up to 50% in foreign-denominated securities, including 10% in emerging markets. Foreign currency exposure is capped at 10% using derivatives such as treasury and bond futures, swaps, and credit default swaps to hedge interest rate and currency risks. The fund may have a higher portfolio turnover rate due to active and frequent trading.
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Frequently Asked Questions
An exchange-traded fund (ETF) is a collection of assets (stocks, bonds, commodities, etc.) that track an underlying index and can be bought on an exchange like individual stocks.
WISD trades at 101.44 USD today, its price has fallen −0.01% in the past 24 hours. Track more dynamics on WISD price chart.
Since ETFs work like an individual stock, they can be bought and sold on exchanges (e.g. NASDAQ, NYSE, EURONEXT). As it happens with stocks, you need to select a brokerage to access trading. Explore our list of available brokers to find the one to help execute your strategies. Don't forget to do your research before getting to trading. Explore ETFs metrics in our ETF screener to find a reliable opportunity.
No, WISD doesn't pay dividends to its holders.
WISD trades at a premium (0.03%).
Premium/discount to NAV expresses the difference between the ETF’s price and its NAV value. A positive percentage indicates a premium, meaning the ETF trades at a higher price than the calculated NAV. Conversely, a negative percentage indicates a discount, suggesting the ETF trades at a lower price than NAV.
Premium/discount to NAV expresses the difference between the ETF’s price and its NAV value. A positive percentage indicates a premium, meaning the ETF trades at a higher price than the calculated NAV. Conversely, a negative percentage indicates a discount, suggesting the ETF trades at a lower price than NAV.