The above button links to Coinbase. Yahoo Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser and does not offer securities or cryptocurrencies for sale or facilitate trading. Coinbase pays us for certain activity generated through this link. Prices displayed are informational.

Persistent inflation and surging energy prices have made Invesco Optimum Yield Diversified Commodity Strategy No K-1 ETF (PDBC) a powerful hedge: the fund is up roughly 41% over the past year and 30% year-to-date, with WTI crude oil climbing to the 99.6th percentile of its 12-month range as the CPI reached its highest level in March 2026. PDBC solves a structural problem that most commodity funds create—it wraps diversified commodity futures in a C-corporation to issue a standard 1099 instead of partnership K-1 forms, eliminating tax filing complexity for taxable accounts.

The fund delivers modest income with a 3% dividend yield from Treasury collateral backing its futures positions, but investors must accept heavy energy concentration risk and sustained commodity volatility—natural gas swung from $7.72 to $3.04 in just two months, and roll yield drag from contango markets persists despite PDBC’s optimum yield methodology. The 0.59% expense ratio and embedded corporate-level taxation make this a tactical 5-10% inflation hedge rather than a core holding, and the K-1 advantage disappears in tax-advantaged accounts like IRAs.

The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.

Invesco Optimum Yield Diversified Commodity Strategy No K-1 ETF (NYSEARCA:PDBC) was built to solve a specific problem: most commodity funds issue K-1 tax forms that create accounting complexity for taxable accounts. In the current inflation environment, PDBC has delivered far more than just paperwork avoidance.

Black oil barrels, stacks of gold coins, and floating hundred-dollar bills illustrate the concept of commodities and financial markets.

PDBC gives investors diversified exposure to commodity futures spanning energy, metals, and agriculture: crude oil, Brent crude, gasoline, natural gas, gold, silver, copper, corn, soybeans, sugar, wheat, and zinc. It holds roughly $6.5 billion in net assets, making it one of the largest commodity ETFs in the U.S.

READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks

The structural advantage is the C-corporation wrapper. Most commodity futures funds are structured as limited partnerships and issue K-1 forms, creating complexity for taxable accounts and delaying tax filing. PDBC uses a corporate structure that generates a standard 1099, eliminating that friction. For investors wanting commodity exposure in a taxable brokerage account or IRA without partnership tax rules, this matters.

The fund uses an "optimum yield" methodology: rather than rolling futures contracts on a fixed schedule, it selects expiration dates designed to minimize negative roll yield. Roll yield is the cost or benefit of moving from an expiring contract into the next one. In contango markets, where future prices exceed spot prices, rolling destroys value. The optimum yield approach reduces that drag by selecting favorable points on the futures curve, though it does not eliminate contango costs entirely.

The inflation environment of the past twelve months has validated PDBC's thesis. The fund is up roughly 41% over the past year, driven largely by energy price surges. WTI crude oil has climbed to around $114 per barrel, sitting at the 99.6th percentile of its 12-month range, after bottoming near $55 in December 2025. That move flows directly into PDBC's energy-weighted holdings.

Year-to-date, PDBC has gained roughly 30%, and the five-year return stands at nearly 89%. The Consumer Price Index reached 330.3 in March 2026, its highest level in the trailing 12-month period, while Core PCE, the Fed's preferred inflation measure, has risen consistently from 125.5 in April 2025 to 128.9 by February 2026. Commodities perform well when inflation is persistent and broad, precisely the environment investors have faced.

The fund also generates modest income. The current dividend yield is approximately 3%, which comes from interest earned on Treasury collateral backing the futures positions rather than commodity appreciation. This provides cash flow alongside the inflation hedge.

 

Energy concentration risk: PDBC's returns are heavily driven by the energy complex. When crude oil fell from $76 to $55 between June and December 2025, the fund felt it. When oil surged back to $114, the fund surged with it. Investors expecting balanced commodity exposure may be surprised by how much returns correlate with crude oil prices.

Commodity volatility is sustained: Natural gas swung from $7.72 in January 2026 down to $3.04 by March 2026, a sharp decline in two months. That volatility flows into PDBC's net asset value directly. The fund's one-week return recently dipped roughly 2% even while the one-year return remained strong. Investors who cannot tolerate short-term drawdowns will find this uncomfortable.

Roll yield drag persists: The optimum yield methodology reduces but does not eliminate the cost of rolling futures contracts. In sustained contango environments, even the best roll strategy creates a gap between spot commodity price performance and what the ETF delivers. Long-term holders should expect total return to diverge from raw commodity spot prices. The expense ratio of 0.59% adds a modest but compounding annual cost on top of roll drag.

The C-corp structure that eliminates the K-1 also means PDBC is taxed at the corporate level before distributions reach shareholders. This embedded taxation does not exist in partnership-structured commodity funds. For investors in tax-advantaged accounts like IRAs, K-1 avoidance matters less, and the embedded corporate tax may make PDBC slightly less efficient than partnership alternatives on an after-tax basis.

PDBC functions as a tactical inflation hedge, sized at 5-10% for investors wanting broad commodity exposure without K-1 complexity.

Wall Street is pouring billions into AI, but most investors are buying the wrong stocks. The analyst who first identified NVIDIA as a buy back in 2010 — before its 28,000% run — has just pinpointed 10 new AI companies he believes could deliver outsized returns from here. One dominates a $100 billion equipment market. Another is solving the single biggest bottleneck holding back AI data centers. A third is a pure-play on an optical networking market set to quadruple. Most investors haven't heard of half these names. Get the free list of all 10 stocks here.