cockatoo
19 Jan 20233 min read

Lehman Aggregate Bond Index Explained: What Aussies Need to Know

Want to know how global bond trends could impact your portfolio? Stay tuned to Cockatoo for the latest insights, or talk to your adviser about how international benchmarks fit your financial goals.

Published by

Cockatoo Editorial Team · In-house editorial team

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe · Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

The Lehman Aggregate Bond Index might sound like a relic from Wall Street’s past, but this cornerstone of the global fixed income market still casts a long shadow in 2026. While it’s now known under a different name, understanding its origins and influence can help Australians make smarter decisions about bonds, ETFs, and diversified portfolios—especially as interest rates and policy changes keep shaking things up.

Newsletter

Get new guides and updates in your inbox

Receive weekly Australian home, property, and service-planning insights from the Cockatoo editorial team.

Next step

Review cover options before you switch

Compare policy types, exclusions, and broker pathways with the guide still fresh in mind.

Review cover options

How the Lehman Aggregate Bond Index Became a Benchmark

Launched in 1986 by Lehman Brothers, the Lehman Aggregate Bond Index was designed to be the S&P 500 of the US bond market. It tracked investment-grade, US dollar-denominated, fixed-rate taxable bonds—including government, corporate, mortgage-backed, and asset-backed securities. For decades, it set the standard for measuring bond portfolio performance.

  • Comprehensive coverage: Included US Treasuries, agencies, corporates, mortgage-backed, and asset-backed securities.

  • Influence on fund management: Asset managers worldwide—Australia included—benchmarked their bond portfolios against it.

  • Transition to Bloomberg: After Lehman’s 2008 collapse, Barclays acquired the index, later passing it to Bloomberg. It’s now called the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index.

This index’s evolution mirrors the shifts in global finance, from Wall Street excess to the digital, data-driven era of index investing.

Why the Lehman Aggregate Index Still Matters in 2026

Even though the Lehman name is history, the index’s legacy is alive and well. Today, the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index serves as the primary benchmark for US fixed income, with trillions of dollars in funds and ETFs tracking its moves. But what about Australians?

  • Australian fixed income ETFs: Many local ETFs and managed funds use global or US bond benchmarks to diversify returns, including the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index.

  • Portfolio construction: Financial advisers and super funds often compare performance to this index when assessing global bond exposure.

  • Global market trends: The index’s yield, duration, and credit profile reflect trends that ripple through Australian bond markets, especially with rising rates and inflation in 2026.

For example, in the wake of 2026’s ongoing global inflation pressures and the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) cautious policy settings, the index’s yield and duration shifts have influenced the way local fixed income managers rebalance their portfolios.

What Australian Investors Should Watch Now

With the world’s bond markets in flux, here’s why the Lehman—now Bloomberg—Aggregate Bond Index still deserves a place on your radar:

  • Rising rates and volatility: As the RBA holds rates steady but the US Federal Reserve signals potential cuts in late 2026, the index’s performance can offer clues to global bond trends and potential spillover effects in Australia.

  • ETFs and managed funds: Products like the Vanguard Global Aggregate Bond Index Fund (hedged to AUD) and iShares Global Bond Index ETF use similar indices, shaping returns for Aussie investors seeking diversification beyond local government bonds.

  • Yield curve dynamics: In 2026, the US yield curve remains inverted, impacting the duration risk in portfolios benchmarked to the Aggregate Index. This is a key consideration for super funds and SMSF trustees balancing risk and return.

  • Credit quality trends: The index’s composition shifts as more corporates issue debt to refinance at current rates, which impacts the overall credit risk for funds tracking the benchmark.

For retail investors, understanding these factors is crucial when reviewing fund fact sheets or constructing a diversified portfolio.

Next step

Review cover options before you switch

Compare policy types, exclusions, and broker pathways with the guide still fresh in mind.

Review cover options

Looking Ahead: The Enduring Relevance of a Bond Market Icon

While the Lehman Aggregate Bond Index may have changed names, its role as the backbone of global fixed income allocation remains. For Australians navigating a rapidly changing bond landscape, understanding this benchmark—and the forces that shape it—will remain key to making informed, future-proof investment decisions.

Newsletter

Keep the latest guides coming

Stay close to new cost guides, explainers, and planning tools without checking back manually.

Editorial process

Published by

Cockatoo Editorial Team

In-house editorial team

Publishes and updates Cockatoo’s public explainers on finance, insurance, property, home services, and provider hiring for Australians.

Borrowing and lending in AustraliaInsurance and risk coverProperty decisions and homeowner planning
View publisher profile

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe

Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

Reviews Cockatoo’s public explainers for accuracy, topical alignment, and consistency before they are surfaced as public educational content.

Editorial review and fact checkingAustralian finance and borrowing topicsInsurance and cover explainers
View reviewer profile

Keep reading

Related articles