1 BTC
=
- USD

State Street SPDR Portfolio Long Term Corporate Bond ETF
As of May 30, 2026 at 08:47 UTC
Chart
About State Street SPDR Portfolio Long Term Corporate Bond ETF
No description available.
Market Statistics
Trading Metrics
How to Buy SPLB
Create Your Account
Sign up, deposit BTC, and transfer it to your Unified Trading Account. It only takes a moment.
Start Your Trade
From Terminal, click Trade Now on the asset you want to buy. You'll be purchasing its tokenized asset.
Buy SPLB
Enter the amount and confirm your purchase. That's it! You'll see the impact of the trade in your Unified Trading Account.
New to Tokenized Assets? Learn more in our Help Center.
Latest News
5 articlesThe article compares two long-term bond ETFs: iShares TLT (20+ Year Treasury Bonds) and State Street SPLB (Long-Term Corporate Bonds). SPLB offers lower fees (0.04% vs 0.15%), higher yield (5.4% vs 4.5%), and better recent performance (8.8% vs 4.0% one-year return), making it ideal for income-focused investors. TLT prioritizes safety with U.S. government bonds but offers lower returns. The article suggests both can complement each other in a diversified portfolio.
SPLB and SCHQ are two ultra-low-cost bond ETFs with different strategies. SPLB offers higher dividend yield (5.38%), stronger one-year returns (7.56%), and broader diversification across 3,000+ investment-grade corporate bonds, while SCHQ focuses exclusively on U.S. Treasuries with lower fees (0.03%) and maximum safety. SPLB has outperformed SCHQ over five years ($926 vs. $774 on $1,000 invested), though it carries higher credit risk. The choice depends on investor priorities: SCHQ for capital preservation, SPLB for income generation.
The Schwab Long-Term U.S. Treasury ETF (SCHQ) and State Street SPDR Portfolio Long Term Corporate Bond ETF (SPLB) offer different approaches to long-duration bond investing. SCHQ focuses exclusively on U.S. Treasuries with a lower expense ratio (0.03%), while SPLB invests in investment-grade corporate bonds with higher yields (5.2% vs 4.5%) and broader diversification across nearly 3,000 holdings. SPLB has outperformed SCHQ over the past year and showed better resilience during market downturns, making it potentially more attractive for 2026 if interest rates decline.