Should Retail Investors Invest In Treasury Bonds? - Real Time Insight
May 23 2012 - 9:35AM
Zacks
Treasury bond yields are now near their all-time lows as the
fears over a possible Greek exit continue to push
the investors towards “safe haven assets”. Current benchmark
10-year note yield is not very far from 1.67% level touched in
September last year, the lowest level reached in decades.
But the lower the yields go, the more risky these investments
become due to potential loss when the interest rates rise. For
example, when the Treasury note yield rose from 1.88% at the end of
December last year to 2.21% at the end of March this year, bond
investors lost substantially.
Barclays 20 Year Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) was down 6.74% during
Q1. This fund had returned 33.60% in 2011. PIMCO 25+ Year Zero
Coupon US Treasury Index Fund (ZROZ) lost 12.18% during the first
quarter, after a stellar one-year performance (as of March 31.
2012) of 46.98%.
Though bonds preserve nominal principal if they are held till
maturity, most retail investors do not hold the bonds till
maturity. The interest rates will start going up in a year or two
from now, if not earlier, leading to losses in bond portfolios.
Further, with the core CPI now at 2.3% and the 10-year
note yielding 1.71%, the loss of principal in real terms is
almost guaranteed. Fed’s target for inflation is 2% and with so
much liquidity in the system due to Fed’s ultra-low interest
policy, the inflation is bound to go up in coming years. Over the
past 100 years, the inflation has averaged about 3.5% per year in
the US.
The investors putting money in bond ETFs also need to remember
that unlike individual bonds which return principal on the maturity
date, the ETFs do not have a maturity date and principal value will
continue to fluctuate during the period of holding.
It is possible that the yields will touch a new low in the
short-term as the bond markets are not acting according to the
fundamentals but are driven by fear. Further, Fed is still a
major buyer in the bond market, mainly for the long-term bonds
through its Operation Twist program, which will expire in June. But
this trend will not continue over a longer-term.
Should the Treasury bonds be left for central banks, sovereign
wealth funds and institutional investors? I believe that Income
oriented retail investors should look for much better opportunities
in high quality stocks paying stable dividends, investment
grade corporate bonds or emerging markets sovereign bonds.
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