Bond investors are clearly worried about rising rates in today’s environment. Many are protecting themselves by moving to very short-term investments, or even cash. But is their “safe” choice putting them at risk?
The View Gets Better Up High
We get it. It seems intuitive that if interest rates are rising, bond prices will fall, so you should put your money someplace else. At least for now. The problem is, what’s intuitive isn’t always correct. In fact, investors who put their money into cash or similar strategies at this point in the rate cycle will find themselves quickly underperforming those who stuck to their bond strategy.
That’s not finger crossing. We can say that with a high degree of accuracy. That’s because—the rare default aside—bonds are predictable! They’re predictable because they have cash flows. And the higher the income, the larger the cash flow.
Where to Position the Most Important Statistic in Your Bond Portfolio
Bond returns come from two places: changes in price and coupon income. When interest rates rise, prices fall, which causes a short-term loss.
But in the long run, rising rates are good for bond investors, and here’s why: the income they generate in the form of coupon payments gets reinvested at new and higher rates.
What’s more, as the overall income level (average yield) rises, the buffer against price loss increases too. For example, a year ago, the 10-year US Treasury yielded a slim 2.21%, making it more vulnerable to an initial negative return. On June 1, 2018, it yielded 2.89%, a full 0.68% higher. All else being equal, a given interest-rate increase will have less of an effect on its total return today.
Also, it’s worth keeping in mind that a bond’s price tends to drift back toward par as it moves closer to maturity. This, too, can cushion the impact of escalating rates and falling prices.
But let’s walk through an example to show what the actual impact of rising rates might be on a bond portfolio. We’ve modeled a simple portfolio of Treasury bonds and “shocked” it by assuming a sudden 125-basis-point rise in rates. What would its immediate performance look like? And then, how would the following years unfold (Display)?