MYHD Market Structure

State Street My2030 High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (MYHD) operates in the Financial Services sector, specifically the Asset Management - Bonds industry, with a market capitalization near $5.0M, listed on NASDAQ, carrying a beta of 0.00 to the broader market. The State Street My2030 High Yield Corporate Bond ETF employs an actively managed target maturity strategy that provides exposure primarily to high yield corporate bonds maturing in 2030 and is designed to distribute any remaining principal and liquidate on or about December 15, 2030The fund seeks to maximize current income while seeking preservation of capital using a risk-aware approach focusing on bottom-up security selection to construct a portfolio that seeks to overweight the most attractive sectors and issuersThe fund is one of the State Street MyIncome ETFs, a suite of target maturity funds allowing investors to efficiently build custom bond ladder portfolios to manage interest rate risks, cash flows, and liquidity needs Led by Yie-Hsin Hung, public since 2026-02-26.

Market structure data reveals where a stock trades across exchanges, dark pools, and alternative trading systems. Understanding off-exchange activity helps identify institutional trading patterns and liquidity dynamics.

Latest Week Ending
2026-04-27
Weekly OTC Shares
10.9K
Weekly OTC Trades
13
10-Week Total Shares
55.7K
Avg Trade Size (10-Week)
489 shares

How ETF Market Structure Differs From Single-Name Equities

State Street My2030 High Yield Corporate Bond ETF is an exchange-traded fund, so the off-exchange share volume above mixes three distinct flow types: authorized-participant (AP) creation and redemption basket activity, institutional block trades cleared through alternative trading systems (ATS) for liquidity rather than information reasons, and dealer hedging against the ETF options chain. AP activity is the dominant component on actively-traded funds: when intraday demand pushes the ETF price above its indicative NAV, APs buy the constituent basket and deliver it to the sponsor in exchange for newly-created shares, then sell those shares to the market - a flow that lands as off-exchange volume on FINRA reporting. The opposite flow (selling baskets to the sponsor in exchange for shares to redeem) cleans up persistent discounts to NAV. Both flows are inherently liquidity-providing rather than directional.

For options traders, the FINRA OTC volume on an ETF is a noisy signal about directional sentiment but a clean signal about institutional creation/redemption activity. Spikes in OTC volume on persistent flows often correlate with constituent-level forced flow (rebalances on index reconstitution dates, dividend captures, factor-tilt rotations). Pair this view with the MYHD gamma exposure page to see whether dealer hedging on the ETF options chain interacts with AP-driven basket flow.

Showing 10 weeks of off-exchange trading data for State Street My2030 High Yield Corporate Bond ETF.

Learn how market structure is reported and how to read the data →

Frequently asked MYHD market structure questions

What is the current MYHD off-exchange volume?
For the week ending Apr 27, 2026, State Street My2030 High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (MYHD) recorded 10.9K shares across 13 trades (average trade size 840 shares). The 10-week cumulative total is 55.7K shares.
What does MYHD off-exchange volume mean for ETF traders?
For ETFs, off-exchange weekly volume on FINRA is dominated by authorized-participant (AP) creation and redemption baskets and institutional block trades. AP activity is the mechanism that keeps the ETF price in line with NAV: when ETF demand exceeds supply intraday, APs deliver constituent baskets to the sponsor in exchange for new ETF shares; the reverse cleans up persistent discounts. Spikes in OTC volume often coincide with constituent-level rebalances, index reconstitution dates, or factor-tilt rotation.
How is MYHD market-structure data sourced?
Weekly off-exchange volume figures come from FINRA's OTC Transparency reporting, which captures trades executed through FINRA-member off-exchange venues including ATSs and member firm internalization desks. FINRA publishes the data with a two-week lag (current-week-minus-two-weeks) for ATS-specific volume and weekly aggregate volume; the totals here aggregate all member firm reporting. Trades cleared via the listed-exchange auction are NOT included; the figure reflects only the off-exchange portion of total volume.