The World’s First Fixed Income ETFs Turn 25

This month, the global investment community is celebrating the 25th anniversary of the world’s first fixed income ETFs, the iShares Core Canadian Short Term Bond Index ETF (XSB) and the iShares Core Canadian Universe Bond Index ETF (XBB). On November 20, 2000, the funds XSB and XBB began trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

At the time, they were quiet experiments in a corner of the market many believed was too complex to be democratized. Today, their influence spans a global fixed income ETF ecosystem that has grown to thousands of products and trillions in assets.

The bond market that XSB and XBB covered was not built for transparency or accessibility. Pricing was opaque, trading was infrequent, and participation was dominated by institutions with the scale and dealer relationships required to navigate it. Bringing that world into an exchange-traded product required not only structural innovation but also a willingness to rethink how fixed income could function for everyday investors.

Those involved in the launch still remember the uncertainty. Many questioned whether the daily creation and redemption process could work in an asset class where some securities hardly traded. Others doubted whether an index could be priced accurately enough to support an ETF. There was no ready-made model to follow. Regulators, index providers, portfolio managers, and market makers had to build an entirely new framework, often collaborating across firms that typically competed with each other.

Despite the challenges, XSB and XBB proved the concept. Their success helped define the foundation on which the modern fixed income ETF market was built. What began with two listings on the TSX ultimately sparked a shift in how investors around the world access bonds.