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Why Bond Investors Are in a Bind
By Katy Marquardt,
Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine, 01.06
An odd rate picture requires tough decisions.
The inverted yield curve is about to throw you a curve. For those of
you who aren't bond geeks, an inverted curve means
shorter-term bonds yield more than ones with longer maturities. This
situation defies common sense -- why be paid more to hold bonds for a shorter length
of time? Yet it happens when the Federal Reserve Board
pegs short-term rates high to forestall inflation at the same time that
market forces hold down long-term rates. With signs that the economy
is weakening, the Fed will most likely begin cutting short-term rates
by the middle of 2007. Meanwhile, the yield on ten-year Treasuries, at
an abnormally low 4.7% in mid November, should return to and probably
top 5%. Voilà!
No inversion.
But until short- and long-term rates resume their normal relationship,
you face a dilemma. With yields at 5% or so, do you grab Treasury bills,
money-market funds and the like, knowing the yield will fall as the Fed
cuts short-term rates? You won't lose principal, but your income will
decline. Or do you resign yourself to losing a little money in individual
bonds and bond funds when long-term rates rise (although probably not
enough to result in negative total returns for the year)?
Five-year solution
Certificates of deposit remain a good place to park your money early
in 2007, especially if you're willing to shop around
rather than settle for what the neighborhood bank is
paying. "If your
goal is to get the most return and you're indifferent
about the time horizon, five-year CDs are the place to be," says Greg
McBride, of Bankrate.com. The top-paying five-year CD recently yielded
5.5%, well above the national average of 4.1%.
Better yet, invest now in a high-yielding money-market fund. Later in
2007, when longer-term bond yields rise above 5% and short-term yields
fall below that level, switch horses and buy five-year CDs or bonds with
maturities of five to ten years. "Intermediate-term bonds may not give
you the yields you're looking for right now, but they'll lock you into
a more attractive rate for the future," says Marilyn Cohen, president
of Envision Capital Management, a Los Angeles bond advisory firm.
An excellent medium-maturity fund is Dodge & Cox Income (symbol
DODIX;
800-621-3979). The fund, which holds a mix of high-quality
corporates, Treasuries, and mortgage debt, returned an annualized 5%
over the past five years to November 1, and currently yields 4.9%.
For investors in a high tax bracket, it makes a lot of sense to put
the bulk of their bond money in a solid, tax-free municipal-bond fund.
Consider Fidelity Intermediate Municipal Income (FLTMX;
800-544-8544). It yields 3.8% -- the equivalent of a taxable 5.7% yield
for an investor in the 33% federal tax bracket -- and returned an annualized
4% over the past five years.
If you prefer individual munis, it's hard to go wrong with a general
obligation bond from a strong issuer. For example, a New York City GO
with a coupon of 5% and a maturity date of June 1, 2011, rated AA- by
Standard & Poor's, recently yielded 3.7% to maturity. That's a
taxable equivalent of 5.5% for a 33%-bracket taxpayer.
High-yield bonds led the way in '06, returning 8.8% on average in the
year's first ten months. But junk is now relatively expensive: The average
high-yield bond pays a little over 3% more than ten-year Treasuries --
and the category usually lags when the economy sags. "It's been a great
run, but I don't know what could lift high-yields any higher," says Kim
Daifotis, chief of fixed income for Charles Schwab Investment Management.
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