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RISE Aggregate Bond (A- and Above) Active (385540) 🔎 In-depth

KB Asset Management · Bonds · Korea · Bonds · Price 2026.07.13 · Updated 2026-07-14

This is a domestic bond ETF managed by KB Asset Management (brand RISE) that holds a broad basket of Korean bonds, from government and public bonds through corporate bonds rated A- and above. Rather than replicating a specific index exactly, it is an 'active' fund in which the manager adjusts holdings and duration in pursuit of returns better than the index. It listed on May 26, 2021.

Price as of 2026.07.13 close

Close₩102,870
Change-0.12%
NAV₩102,855
Premium / discount+0.01%
Market cap$1.4B
AUM (net assets)$1.4B
Volume4,177 shares
Turnover$284,712
Benchmark indexKIS Aggregate Bond Index (A- and above) (Total Return)
Benchmark close119.89

Understanding this ETF

🎯What it tracks

The comparison basis (benchmark index) is the 'KIS Aggregate Bond Index (A- and above) (Total Return),' calculated by KIS Pricing. This index holds about 5,000 domestic bonds with an outstanding issue size above a certain level (about ₩50 billion) and a credit rating of A- or above, making it an 'aggregate' bond index. It spans a broad range, from public bonds such as Korea Treasury Bonds, Monetary Stabilization Bonds, local-government bonds and special bonds, to bank and financial bonds, and on to high-quality corporate bonds rated A- and above, connecting government debt through to credit bonds. The term 'Total Return' means the index is calculated reflecting not only bond price changes but also the interest received and the reinvestment income from putting that interest back to work.

🌊How it moves

As a bond ETF, it does not rise and fall sharply within a day like an equity fund; it is mainly driven by which way market interest rates move. Bonds fall in value when rates rise and rise in value when rates fall, and with an average maturity of about 5.6 years this ETF is intermediate, so it is somewhat sensitive to rate changes (the longer the maturity, the bigger the reaction to rates). Added to this is the interest income the bonds it holds accrue each day, so when rates do not move much, it tends to rise gently by roughly the amount of that interest. Because these are domestic won-denominated bonds, it is not affected by the exchange rate.

🧭Profile & traits

This is a low-volatility bond ETF suited for asset allocation. It is diversified across thousands of bonds, carries a large weight of public bonds, and includes only corporate bonds rated A- and above, keeping credit risk on the lower side, so it is often used to cushion the swings of a portfolio with a large equity weight. Its management fee is also very low, around 0.012% per year. That said, it is not a principal-guaranteed product; if market rates rise quickly, bond values fall and short-term losses can occur, and because high-grade corporate bonds are mixed in, it carries a little more credit-related risk than a fund that holds only government bonds.

📈Recent trend

In the first half of 2026 the Bank of Korea's base rate was held unchanged in several consecutive decisions at 2.50% per year; over this period short-term (3-year) Korea Treasury Bond yields were almost flat, while long-term (10-year and over) Korea Treasury Bond yields rose slightly. As a result, this ETF, with an average maturity of about 5.6 years, saw accruing interest income and the price decline from rising long-term yields offset each other, and it was almost unchanged at -0.12% on July 13, 2026. Per the manager's disclosure, the yield to maturity (YTM, the approximate annual return level if the currently held bonds are held to maturity) is about 4.57%.

💡In plain terms

In short, it is a bond basket that broadly holds public bonds plus high-quality corporate bonds and steadily collects interest. It does not swing sharply like stocks and moves gently along with interest-rate trends; just keep in mind that its value can dip briefly if market rates rise abruptly.

Holdings & weights

The composition is not a few specific names but is finely spread across thousands of bonds, so the risk of any single issuer is not concentrated in one place. Public bonds form the backbone, with high-quality corporate and financial bonds rated A- and above added on top, giving it a character of seeking a little more interest (yield) than a fund holding only government bonds. Because it is 'active,' it does not follow the index exactly; the manager lengthens or shortens the maturity length (duration) somewhat in line with the rate outlook and selects which bonds to hold more of within the A- and above range, in pursuit of returns better than the index. Per the manager's disclosure, the average bond maturity (duration) is about 5.6 years, an 'intermediate' level.

Detailed holdings and weights are filled in over time from reliable disclosures (KRX / the asset manager). The classification and benchmark above already give a good sense of what this ETF holds.

Classification

Asset typeBonds
RegionKorea
CategoryBonds
Use caseStability · Allocation
ManagementActive
LeverageStandard
ReplicationPhysical
FX hedgeDomestic (N/A)
IssuerKB Asset Management
Listed2021/05/26
Aggregate bondsIntermediate-term

Notes & cautions

ETF terms explained
NAV (net asset value)The real per-share value of the assets the ETF holds. The market price generally trades near this figure.
Premium / discountHow much the market price trades above (+) or below (−) NAV. The closer to 0%, the more fairly it is priced.
Tracking errorHow far the ETF's return drifts from its benchmark index. Smaller is better — it means the ETF follows the index closely.
AUM (net assets)The total pool of assets in the ETF. Larger AUM generally means smoother trading and a lower delisting risk.
Benchmark indexThe index the ETF aims to follow. The ETF's price reflects this index's moves.
Leverage / inverseLeverage products move at a multiple (e.g. 2x) of the index's daily move; inverse products move opposite to the index — the index falls, they gain. Both are volatile and mainly for short holding periods.
FX hedge / FX exposureFor overseas-asset ETFs, hedging the currency fixes returns against exchange-rate swings ((H) in the name); leaving it unhedged is FX exposure.

Korea FSC securities market-price API (data.go.kr) · ETF classification & tagging: our own descriptive categorization

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