Economy
Related: About this forumCan someone help me decipher this Bloomberg view
The other morning on Bloomberg radio, guests and hosts were discussing the second Trump term. They generally agreed on the idea that, and I'm recalling it from memory and it may not be precise:
The first Trump term was defined by the performance of the stock market; the second Trump term will be defined by the bond market.
Is there a tip for investors hidden in this notion, or is it more a reflection of what the Federal Reserve is anticipated to do with interest rates?
Also: Does this makes sense to you? Do you agree, disagree, or have any other views about this you could share?
Thanks in advance for any opinions on this.
bucolic_frolic
(47,572 posts)T Bond yields are already rising as the Fed cuts interest rates. THAT's not going to continue.
Mike 03
(17,361 posts)I noticed that my investment advisor bought some bonds the week after the election.
Joinfortmill
(16,621 posts)'Trump's economic agenda faces a big potential foe: The bond vigilantes'
'Bond prices have dropped sharply since Trump's election as investors worry that his economic policies will reignite inflation and lead to surging fiscal deficits. And that matters...
The U.S. bond market is the biggest in the world, and all kinds of interest rates are tied to how the market performs. When bonds drop, it can hurt the U.S. by making it much more expensive for the government to borrow money. And it affects regular Americans, too, by jacking up the cost of loans, from mortgages to car payments. A lot of people also hold bonds in their investment or retirement portfolios so they could face potential losses...
That gives bond investors big influence and they can use to it to try to hold governments accountable and force them to reverse their economic policies. The market even has a term for investors who exert pressure in this manner: bond vigilantes....
Changes in bond prices affect the interest due on that bond. It's a simple rule: Bond prices and yields move opposite from each other. When bond prices rise, their yields fall, meaning investors are happy to accept lower interest payments..Changes in bond prices affect the interest due on that bond. It's a simple rule: Bond prices and yields move opposite from each other. When bond prices rise, their yields fall, meaning investors are happy to accept lower interest payments. But when bond prices fall, their yields rise, since investors demand more interest as compensation.'
Mike 03
(17,361 posts)I appreciate you posting this.
IbogaProject
(3,774 posts)We are in an "easing" of interest rates phase now. But if Mr Tmp pulls any amount of his team's harebrained plans the US Treasury Bond market may react badly. If those bond interest rates go up if the market perceives risk the bond prices would fall. If inflation goes down and government borrowing and debt service (interest payments) remain consistent than bond prices will improve. If any thing causes market unease or if actions cause inflation or debt default those will decrease bond prices.
Mike 03
(17,361 posts)Thank you, really appreciate it.
nmmi
(203 posts)The Fed cut rates on Sept 18 by 0.50 percentage points and on Nov 7 by 0.25 percentage points. These are very short term rates - overnight rates that banks lend to each other. That generally affects longer short-term rates, and even intermediate term rates.
But, surprisingly, since Sept 18, the 10 year Treasury yield has risen from 3.74% to 4.41% (and bonds have fallen in value accordingly.).
And, by the way, the yield was 4.43% at the 11/5 election day close, before the election night results Nakba began to unfold, so it's actually a drop (teeny one) since pre-election.
Even the 1 year yield has risen from 3.97% to 4.41%
Its only short term yields that have fallen (and their corresponding securities' prices risen), e.g. the 3 month Treaury yield has fallen from 4.73% to 4.54%.
The average rate on a 30-year mortgage in the US rises to highest level since July, AP, 11/21/24
https://apnews.com/article/mortgage-rates-housing-interest-financing-home-loan-99fa3ab40bf2ad2cad1e554683e70d54
Treasury rates (graphs):
10 Year: https://www.cnbc.com/quotes/US10Y
1 Year: https://www.cnbc.com/quotes/US1Y
3 month: https://www.cnbc.com/quotes/US3m
Kiplinger's explains this counterintuitive phenomenon by saying the economy is stronger than what was anticipated a couple months ago (which tends to push up yields), and there's been a bit of an upturn in inflation too, after months of falling.
People who own intermediate term bonds (like me) or longer term, or even as low as 1 year maturity have seen their bond values slaughtered. I was so hopeful that the bleeding would stop with the rate cuts, but no, the blood is gushing out even faster.
I don't know who the "bond vigilantes" are, but I feel like I've been "vigilanteed".
We'll have more of the same if the tariff fuckheads cause inflation to reheat. (Or the opposite if they screw the economy up enough to cause a real recession).
Edited to add: I just saw this in Latest Breaking News:
Dozens of retailers jacked up interest rates on store cards ahead of Fed cuts, NBC News/CNBC, 11/22/24
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143345033
It's about all the retailers raising store card interest rates BEFORE the Fed began rate cuts. Although there is this little bitty thing in the long article about after the first Fed rate cut:
Mike 03
(17,361 posts)exactly about this. I noticed our investment advisor purchased a couple of bonds with really decent yields. He's a fan of short and medium range bonds. I think I heard one of the guests on Bloomberg say something negative about 10 year bonds or beyond.
IbogaProject
(3,774 posts)The base rate is higher the longer the duration but the price shifts more when interest rates change. The price to purchase an ongoing bond has to change to give the same expected total yield. So if you have 25 years to go at 7% and the new bonds are yielding 6% for similar time your bond has to adjust in price to equalize the "effective yield" it will have to cost more.
MichMan
(13,551 posts)Their performance at best has been pretty lackluster that last few years.
Mike 03
(17,361 posts)I have no idea what the future will hold--this could be pretty crazy. But I hope maybe your bonds perform better, or maybe the advisors overseeing the account can find some better performers. Good luck (truly).
nmmi
(203 posts)MichMan: Their performance at best has been pretty lackluster that last few years.
Mike 03: But I hope maybe your bonds perform better, or maybe the advisors overseeing the account can find some better performers
On bond performance, for any bonds or bond funds bought during the pre-inflation era, they have *ALL* been pretty lackluster.
In the below, all the %/year numbers are total returns: price appreciation plus dividends earned (actually they've all depreciated in price in the past 5 or more years, so the dividends have been what's made their total returns overall positive)
Let's take the intermediate-term Vanguard Core Bond fund VCOBX
https://www.morningstar.com/funds/xnas/vcobx/chart and https://www.morningstar.com/funds/xnas/vcobx/performance
Over the past 5 years they've gained 0.47%/year on average, there's no 10 year, but the category has gained 1.38%/year in the past 10 years and 2.35%/year over the past 15 years.
Or VICSX, the Vanguard Interm-Term Corporate Bond Index fund ...
Over the past 5 years: 0.96%/year, Over the past 10 years: 2.80%/year, There's no 15 year record for VICSX, but for that category its been 3.73%/year
Looking at shorter maturity, VBIRX Vanguard Short-Term Bond Index Fund. It has an effective average maturity of 2.8 Years, Average duration: 2.6 Years.
Its performance: 5Y: 1.18%/year, 10Y: 1.54%/year, 15Y: 1.69%/year
Looking at even shorter maturity, VUBFX Vanguard Ultra-Short-Term Bond Fund -- with an average effective maturity of 1.2 years, and average duration of 1.0 years:
Its performance: 5Y: 2.37%/year, no 10Y. Since 2/24/15 inception (so 9 3/4 years): 2.01%/year.
Remember that inflation during these periods have been higher, so while they have gained a bit in nominal dollars, they have ALL lost in purchasing power over these periods.
As for what may happen going forward: yes bond fund yields are decent now. And as interest rates drop, their values will rise, for a two-fer: "good" yields plus price appreciation.
It has been my hope that my funds would perform quite well going forward. For example my intermediate bond funds gained about 13% in just a couple of months last fall when overall interest rates dropped for a time.
But instead, as I wrote in #4 above, interest rates have counter-intuitively RISEN since the Fed's first rate cut Sept 18, except on the shorter end like less than one year. Bad for bond fund values for existing bond holders, very bad.
But eventually, we had hoped preelection, that eventually intermediate and longer rates would come down. But with the coming lunacy of Felonious Maximus at the country's helm and his Mad Magazine gallery of cabinet and administration picks, and plans to raise tariffs bigly, all that is out the window.