NukoudYour Home for ETF News in the GCC
Sign in
ETF Trends
ETF Education
Investing & Themes
Markets & Data
ReportsVideos
ETF Screener
Nukoud
ETF Trends
ETF Education
Investing & Themes
Markets & Data
ReportsVideos
ETF Screener
Sign in

Advertisement

KraneShares Abu Dhabi - Leaderboard

Footer

Stay informed

GCC ETF news & analysis, direct to your inbox.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Nukoud

Your home for ETF news in the GCC. Independent coverage of exchange-traded funds, investing themes, and market trends across the Gulf Cooperation Council.

Nukoud does not provide investment advice.

Sections

  • ETF Trends
  • ETF Education
  • Investing & Themes
  • Markets & Data
  • GCC
  • Reports

Tools

  • ETF Themes
  • ETF Screener
  • ETF Compare
  • Portfolio Builder
  • Lite Mode

Company

  • About
  • Contact
  • Careers

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclosures
  • Editorial Standards

All content on Nukoud is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any security. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified financial professionals before making investment decisions.

© 2026 Nukoud LLC. A Sharjah, UAE registered company. All rights reserved.v1.0.0 · f46913d

  1. Home
  2. ETF Trends
  3. Lower for Longer? Fed’s September Cut Sends Ripples Through Bonds and Sukuk
ETF Trends

Lower for Longer? Fed’s September Cut Sends Ripples Through Bonds and Sukuk

Quick Summary -Steeper Curve Opens Opportunities: Short-term yields fell more than long-term, aiding duration-sensitive ETFs.-GCC Bonds Stay Attractive: Gulf rate cuts mirror the Fed, but sukuk still offer higher yields.-Risks Loom Large: Inflation, jobs, and global shocks could blunt bond gains.  On September 17, 2025, the U.S. The Federal Reserve (Fed) lowered its target federal funds […]

Karim Al Moghraby
September 18, 20256 min read
Lower for Longer? Fed’s September Cut Sends Ripples Through Bonds and Sukuk

Quick Summary

-Steeper Curve Opens Opportunities: Short-term yields fell more than long-term, aiding duration-sensitive ETFs.

-GCC Bonds Stay Attractive: Gulf rate cuts mirror the Fed, but sukuk still offer higher yields.

-Risks Loom Large: Inflation, jobs, and global shocks could blunt bond gains.

On September 17, 2025, the U.S. The Federal Reserve (Fed) lowered its target federal funds rate by 25 basis points to a range of 4.00% to 4.25%, marking its first rate cut since December 2024.The Fed also signaled two more cuts later this year, while acknowledging the job market is weakening and inflation remains elevated.

For global and GCC fixed income (bonds, sukuk) investors as well as ETF holders, this shift has important implications:

(1) yields on U.S. Treasuries and related instruments are likely to adjust lower

(2) bond prices (especially existing ones with higher coupons) may benefit

(3) ETFs that are bond-oriented or sensitive to rates will see differentiated impact depending on duration, credit risk, and geographic exposure

(4) GCC economies largely pegged to the U.S. dollar are likely to follow suit in easing, with consequences for local borrowing, savings, and asset allocation.

Bond Market Impacts Globally

U.S. Treasuries and Rates

  • The 10-year Treasury yield was about 4.08% going into the Fed decision (ahead of it) and has hovered around similar levels, giving some indication that long-term yields haven’t collapsed; they have shown modest downward drift.
  • The 2-year yield fell by ~ 11 basis points in the days leading into and immediately after the Fed decision, reaching approx 3.47% ahead of the cut.
  • The 30-year Treasury yield dropped about 7 bps in that stretch (from just above ~4.85-4.90% down to ~4.78%) as markets anticipated easing.
  • Yield curve steepness (for example, between 5- and 30-years) widened: the 30-year vs 5-year spread was around 123 basis points.So: short-term yields (2-year, front end) fell more sharply; long-term yields eased but not as much, reflecting inflation / fiscal / growth uncertainties.

Bond ETFs & Fixed Income Flows

  • In the leadup to the cut, taxable bond ETFs saw record monthly inflows of about US$43 billion (in August, ahead of expectations of the cut).
  • After the cut, in the week ending September 10 (just before the cut), bond mutual funds + ETFs saw inflows of US$2.371 billion, with ETF flows alone about US$1.963 billion. This was a sharp increase from US$429 million the week prior to that.
  • Some bond ETFs whose long-duration exposure benefitted included:
    • The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) whose year-to-date return had moved up to ~ 4.1% by then.
    • The iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (IEF) had a YTD return of ~ 7.5%.
    • The iShares 1-3 Year Treasury ETF (SHY) had been about 3.9% YTD by those reports.

GCC Monetary Policy in Lockstep with the Fed

Because most Gulf currencies including the UAE dirham and the Saudi riyal are pegged to the U.S. dollar, local central banks typically mirror the Federal Reserve’s policy moves to maintain monetary stability.

In the wake of the September cut, Saudi Arabia reduced its repo and reverse repo rates to 4.75 percent and 4.25 percent, respectively. The UAE followed by lowering its overnight deposit facility rate to about 4.15 percent, while Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, and other Gulf states also eased their key benchmarks by 25 basis points.

The immediate effect of these moves is lower borrowing costs for governments and corporations across the region. As benchmark rates decline, the yields on newly issued Gulf bonds and sukuk also fall, reducing financing costs for issuers.

For global investors, however, sukuk and sovereign bonds from the region may become more appealing. Even after recent cuts, GCC debt still offers relatively higher yields than comparable U.S. instruments, and the potential for further yield compression creates opportunities for capital gains on existing holdings.

For savers within the Gulf, the picture looks different. Falling deposit and money-market rates will erode returns on cash, reducing the income available from short-term instruments. This shift is likely to push some investors toward longer-term fixed income or dividend-yielding exchange-traded funds (ETFs) as they seek to preserve income streams in a lower-rate environment.

What Could Go Wrong

A key risk for bond investors is inflation persistence. If consumer prices remain above target driven by energy costs, housing, or sticky services inflation the Fed may slow or halt its pace of rate cuts. In such a scenario, long-duration bonds, which are most sensitive to changes in yields, could suffer losses rather than enjoy the rally many investors are anticipating.

At the same time, the labor market presents another point of vulnerability. Weak job creation or a rise in unemployment would undermine growth expectations and pressure corporate earnings. That, in turn, could widen credit spreads, hurting corporate bondholders even as sovereign debt remains a safer haven.

Fed credibility is also in the spotlight. The September decision was not unanimous, with Fed Governor Stephen Miran dissenting in favor of a larger 50 basis-point cut. Such divisions, coupled with political pressure in a pre-election climate, raise concerns over the central bank’s independence and its ability to balance inflation and employment mandates consistently.

Global shocks add a further layer of uncertainty. Volatility in oil prices, renewed geopolitical risks, or unexpected weakness in China and other emerging markets could trigger sudden shifts in capital flows. Such events would likely boost safe-haven demand for U.S. Treasuries in the short term, but also complicate the outlook for GCC economies that remain closely tied to energy exports and international investor sentiment.

Takeaways for GCC / UAE & Global Fixed Income Investors

For investors in both global and regional markets, the first step is to re-evaluate cash holdings. With central banks in the U.S. and the GCC lowering deposit rates, the opportunity cost of sitting on cash has increased, tilting the balance toward riskier assets that can deliver income.

One beneficiary could be GCC sukuk and sovereign bond markets, where yields remain relatively attractive compared with U.S. Treasuries. Solid corporate issuers and government sukuk from the region offer spreads that may look increasingly compelling to global income seekers, particularly as rate cuts compress yields elsewhere.

That said, investors will need to manage duration exposure carefully. Longer-maturity bonds stand to gain the most if rates continue to fall, but they also carry greater downside risk if inflation proves stickier than expected or if growth surprises on the upside. Balancing short and long-duration exposure remains key in this environment.

Exchange-traded funds remain a useful tool for navigating these shifts. U.S. bond ETFs are highly liquid and will reflect market expectations around the Fed’s path, while regional bond or sukuk ETFs, though smaller in scale, may offer yield advantages tied to local dynamics. For GCC investors, these vehicles can provide diversified exposure without the hurdles of buying individual bonds.

Finally, the broader message is diversification across geographies and credit types. Investors who concentrate only on U.S. Treasuries or GCC debt risk missing opportunities or absorbing shocks from localized volatility. Adding global corporate bonds, emerging market debt, or inflation-protected securities can help balance the portfolio in what remains an uncertain rate environment.

Fixed IncomeGCCETF Trends

Get the Nukoud newsletter

ETF news and analysis for the GCC, delivered to your inbox. Free, no spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Related Articles

AI IPO Frenzy Continues as OpenAI IPO Filing Nears
News

AI IPO Frenzy Continues as OpenAI IPO Filing Nears

OpenAI is reportedly preparing to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as this week with Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, potentially setting up one of the largest tech listings in history. The AI company could be valued near $1 trillion, reshaping investor exposure to generative AI.

May 22, 2026
Space ETF and Stocks Reach the Stratosphere Ahead of Spacex IPO
Investing & Themes

Space ETF and Stocks Reach the Stratosphere Ahead of Spacex IPO

Space stocks are rallying again as investors increasingly position for what could become one of the largest and most important IPOs in market history: SpaceX.

May 22, 2026
Quantum Stocks Surge on Trump Backing. An Intel Deja-Vu?
Investing & Themes

Quantum Stocks Surge on Trump Backing. An Intel Deja-Vu?

The U.S. Commerce Department awarded $2 billion in grants to nine quantum technology companies, with IBM receiving $1 billion for America's first pure-play quantum foundry. The move reflects Washington's strategic equity-backed industrial policy pattern.

May 22, 2026
The SaaS Panic Is Fading. Markets Are Starting to Differentiate Again.
Markets & Data

The SaaS Panic Is Fading. Markets Are Starting to Differentiate Again.

After a severe selloff triggered by AI agent concerns in February, software and cybersecurity markets are recovering and beginning to differentiate between vulnerable point solutions and resilient enterprise platforms.

May 21, 2026

Fund Lookup

Popular ETFs

KWEB

—
EGX30ETF

—
ALBIGOLD

—
BILADETF

—
View All ETFs

Tools

ETF Screener

Filter & compare ETFs

ETF Compare

Side-by-side comparison

Portfolio Builder

Coming soon

Popular ETFs

KWEB

—
EGX30ETF

—
ALBIGOLD

—
BILADETF

—
View All ETFs

Tools

ETF Screener

Filter & compare ETFs

ETF Compare

Side-by-side comparison

Portfolio Builder

Coming soon

Advertisement

KraneShares Abu Dhabi - Leaderboard

Advertisement

KraneShares Abu Dhabi - Rectangle

Webinars

Invest in Private and Public AI Companies with AGIX, the KraneShares Artificial Intelligence and Technology Fund

Invest in Private and Public AI Companies with AGIX, the KraneShares Artificial Intelligence and Technology Fund

Replay on Demand
KWIN ETF: A New Way to Earn Shariah-Compliant Income — Webinar

KWIN ETF: A New Way to Earn Shariah-Compliant Income — Webinar

Replay on Demand
All webinars →