iShares 10+ Year Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF (IGLB) Dividend History

Dividend History

Pay Date Amount Ex Dividend Date Record Date
June 05, 2025 $0.22 06/02/2025 06/02/2025
May 06, 2025 $0.22 05/01/2025 05/01/2025
April 04, 2025 $0.22 04/01/2025 04/01/2025
March 06, 2025 $0.22 03/03/2025 03/03/2025
February 06, 2025 $0.22 02/03/2025 02/03/2025
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Dividends Summary

  • iShares 10+ Year Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF has issued 188 dividend payments over the past 15 years
  • The most recent dividend was paid 2 days ago, on June 5, 2025
  • The first recorded dividend was paid on January 5, 2010
  • The highest dividend payout was $0.27 per share
  • The average dividend over this 15 year span is $0.21 per share
  • iShares 10+ Year Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF has increased its dividend payments by 40.14% since 2010

Company News

  • With interest rates falling, bond ETFs are an attractive option for diversifying a portfolio and generating returns that beat many stocks. The article highlights three bond ETFs - PIMCO Active Bond ETF, Vanguard Long-Term Bond Fund, and iShares 10+ Year Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF - that are well-positioned to benefit from the falling rate environment.

    Investing.com
    Featured Companies: BOND
  • A record amount of money has flooded into the U.S. corporate bond markets this year, as investors rush to lock in the highest yields years ahead of the Fed rate cuts.

    Zacks Investment Research
    Featured Companies: LQD SCHI USIG VCLT
  • Almost 1,500 high-grade corporate bonds issued by some household names are currently trading between 50 and 80 cents on the dollar.

    MarketWatch
    Featured Companies: AAPL CMCSA DIS GOOGL JNJ MS MSFT SCHW
  • With escalating interest rates and inflationary pressures, the resiliency of bond investments is being put to the test. Investors find themselves watching helplessly as bond prices undergoe a relentless downward spiral, battered by the unrelenting blows of surging borrowing costs. The tumultuous events of 2022 bear witness to this challenge, as the global bond market endured one of its most turbulent years on record. Hopes were high for a turnaround at the onset of 2023, yet reality proved otherwise. The bond market’s sell-off persisted with Treasury yields soaring to multi-decade highs. The 10-year Treasury yield briefly hit 4.33% yield this week, surging to levels last seen in October 2022, and in 2007, while the duration-sensitive 30-year yield hit 4.42%, the highest since the summer of 2011. Chart: US Treasury Yields Soared In August These yields acted as a gravitational force, exerting influence over the broader bond market. As the world’s preeminent risk-free rate witnesses a surge, a chain reaction is set in motion, resulting in a universal uptick in bond yields that spares no issuer. However, as with every trade-off, there’s a catch. Witnessing bond markets yielding close to or surpassing the 6% annual mark – not far from the Dow Jones Index‘s 6.6% annualized return over the past three decades – is sparking the interest of even those who once regarded bonds as a sacrificial lamb to the inflationary onslaught. Indeed, while the Federal Reserve remains steadfast in its stance against ...Full story available on Benzinga.com

    Benzinga
    Featured Companies: EMB HYG LQDB XCCC
  • As the Fed continues to hike interest rates to curb inflation, the corporate bond market is experiencing an increase in default rates.

    Zacks Investment Research
    Featured Companies: IGBH LKOR LQD SPLB
Dividend data last updated 06/07/2025 20:30:44 UTC