PlainIndex

ETF comparison

CORP vs CWB

Both US Corporate Bond.

PIMCO Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index Exchange-Traded Fund · State Street SPDR Bloomberg Convertible Securities ETF

Holdings overlap

0.0 %

0 positions appear in both funds. Buying equal dollars of CORP and CWB would leave roughly 0.0% of each dollar exposed to the same underlying securities.

CORP only 0.0% Shared 0.0% CWB only 0.0%
In CORP only
0 positions
Shared
0 positions
In CWB only
0 positions

Holdings data for CORP covers 0.0% of fund weight. The remainder lacks matchable identifiers in the N-PORT filing.

Holdings data for CWB covers 0.0% of fund weight. The remainder lacks matchable identifiers in the N-PORT filing.

Side by side

CORP

PIMCO Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index Exchange-Traded Fund

PIMCO · US Corporate Bond

57 composite / 100
Expense ratio
0.41%
Net assets
$1.62B
TTM yield
4.81%
Top-10 conc.
CWB

State Street SPDR Bloomberg Convertible Securities ETF

State Street · US Corporate Bond

67 composite / 100
Expense ratio
0.40%
Net assets
$5.70B
TTM yield
1.48%
Top-10 conc.

Sub-score comparison

59
Cost
60
42
Tax efficiency
55
66
Liquidity
89
N/A
Concentration
N/A
Tracking quality
CORP sub-score CWB

Tracking-quality sub-score is not yet computed for any fund — see methodology for which inputs are live.

Cost difference

CWB is 1 bps cheaper than CORP. On a $100,000 position that's about $10/yr more in fees for CORP.

Fee figure is the annual expense charged on $100,000. It compounds over time — we publish a fuller cost-projection calculator on the methodology page.

Top shared holdings

0 shared in total

No shared holdings between these funds.

Only in CORP

0 total

Every CORP position is also held by CWB.

Only in CWB

0 total

Every CWB position is also held by CORP.

Holdings overlap is the sum of min(weight_a, weight_b) over positions matched on ISIN (CUSIP fallback). Methodology: see /methodology/.

Comparing two funds doesn't endorse swapping one for the other. Tax-lot history, account type, and personal goals matter — PlainIndex publishes data and methodology, not investment advice.