Quick Read
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BKLN’s monthly payouts fell 40%, from $0.17 to $0.10 per share, as Fed rate cuts compressed the floating-rate loan coupons investors once counted on.
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Despite shrinking income, BKLN delivered roughly 5% total return over the past year and 29% over five years, with NAV essentially preserved.
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Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Invesco Senior Loan ETF didn’t make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.
The Invesco Senior Loan ETF (NYSEARCA:BKLN) sits at $20.51 with $7.1 billion in net assets, and income investors hold BKLN for one reason: a monthly distribution sourced from floating-rate loans to leveraged borrowers. Those payouts have shrunk meaningfully over the past 18 months, and the question for anyone living off this income is whether BKLN’s distribution has stabilized at a new floor or whether the slide continues as the Federal Reserve eases. The data points in opposite directions depending on which lever you weight more heavily.
How the income actually gets made
BKLN holds 187 positions, roughly 93% in senior secured loans tracking the leveraged loan market. These loans pay a floating coupon, typically SOFR plus a credit spread, so the yield resets as short rates move. When the upper bound of the federal funds target sat at 4.5% through most of 2025, coupons were rich. Three cuts later, the upper bound is 3.75%, and the income stream has compressed almost in lockstep.
The distribution math shows it clearly. Monthly payouts peaked at $0.17025 in September 2024 when SOFR was elevated. By May 2026 the distribution was $0.10111. That is roughly a 40% drop in monthly income per share, driven almost entirely by the 75 basis points of Fed easing that began in October 2025. Holders who bought BKLN as a rate hedge are now experiencing the other side of that trade.
Where the credit risk lives
The top names tell you what you actually own. The largest position is X Corp. at 1.94% of net assets, followed by Ultimate Software at 1.78%, athenahealth at 1.70%, Sedgwick Claims Management at 1.58%, and Peraton at 1.47%. These are private-equity-owned, highly leveraged borrowers. X Corp. in particular carries documented refinancing scars from its 2022 buyout. Senior loan investors sit at the top of the capital stack and benefit from collateral claims, but recovery only matters if losses occur, and concentration in any single distressed name still bites.
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