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AAA - BetaShares Australian High Interest Cash ETF

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The BetaShares Australian High Interest Cash ETF (AAA) aims to provide attractive and regular income distributions and a high level of capital security. The ETF aims to generate a return that exceeds the 30 day Bank Bill Swap Rate (after fees and expenses). BetaShares Australian High Interest Cash ETF is part of the BetaShares Cash & Fixed Income Exchange Traded Fund product series.

http://www.betashares.com.au/products/name/australian-high-interest-cash-etf/#each-keyFacts
 
Now we have all the ASX listed ETFs in one place, (some of them, at least) , it's handy to follow through, up, on and out with some.

Or, in the case for AAA, sideways for the last year. Actively traded, though, and pays a coupon monthly. But, oh the chart! Clearly a function of interest rates. Though longterm, the capital hasn't been totally "secure".

Not really an ASF stock!?. Three year chart:

Screenshot_20211223-132128~2.png
 
not one for me , i take debt very seriously , and might spend a week checking each debt note ( and hybrid ) i buy , or move on

i had that attitude against 'sausage debt ' ( packaged debt liabilities ) before watching The Big Short , and after watching it i had tripled down on that attitude ( and now understand what made me nervous )

BTW i don't like to buy any debt in the current scenario my holding in CCP is as close as i want to be for a while

please research very carefully in you play in these type of products ( whether government or corporate debt )
 
Chart update, but really, it's all about those monthly payments, isn't it? It seems there's better results from tied up deposits...eek

View attachment 156683
in theory there should be a better return from longer maturity loans/deposits but in recent times several things have gone upside done ( like negative yielding bonds ( that were in the EU )
 
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