Bond yields can entice during market volatility |
| By Laura Bruce Bankrate.com |
| Yields on the five-year
and 10-year
Treasury bonds went on a tear in June and spiked to their highest levels since
mid-2006. After languishing below the 5 percent mark for 11 months, the yields
climbed to 5.18 percent and 5.26 percent, respectively.
Bond yields and bond prices move in opposite directions;
as bond prices fall on economic or market news, the yields rise. For
fixed-income fans that situation can be rather enticing. Paying less for a bond
and getting a higher yield makes it seem like the right time to jump in and buy.
Sometimes it turns out to be a smart move and sometimes you find a better option
was available. The bond market is huge and it can be confusing and risky. Stay
within some boundaries and you can build an asset that will cushion your portfolio
during times of stock market volatility.
"When we go out there we buy only really safe
stuff -- U.S. Treasuries, CDs, and agencies," says Herb Hopwood,
Certified Financial Planner and president of Hopwood Financial Services
in Great Falls, Va.
"In the investment-grade corporate arena you
don't get paid in most cases for the risk you're taking and the
risk would be default," he says. "Even though it's investment-grade,
if there's a private equity fund that comes along and takes them
private, it goes from investment grade to junk overnight. Most of
the time you're not getting even a quarter-percent more yield on
a corporate investment grade than you are on a broker-sold
CD."
 |
5-year Treasury bond yield |
 |
| |
|
Government-sponsored
enterprises
The agencies Hopwood refers to are debt obligations of various U.S.
government agencies or government-sponsored enterprises, or GSEs,
such as Federal Home Loan Bank. He says buying them can make sense
in today's environment.
"Callable
agencies can be bought from a broker, and I strongly recommend new
issues," Hopwood says. "That way you get the middleman
out of it and you get a much better yield after expenses. Today
there was a 10-year Federal Farm Credit that was at 6 percent and
was noncallable for five years. That's huge. We haven't seen 6 percent
paper until the last week and a half."
Unlike treasuries, which have an explicit government
guarantee, GSEs and agencies have an implicit guarantee; their safety
and soundness is highly regulated. They usually pay a slightly higher
yield than treasuries because of the additional risk. Fidelity's
Web site says it sells GSEs in minimum denominations of $5,000,
with subsequent investments in increments of $1,000. Other brokers
may have different minimums.
Just as with treasuries, the income from some GSEs
is exempt from state or local taxes. Federal Farm Credit, Federal
Home Loan Bank, Student Loan Marketing Association (Sallie Mae)
and Tennessee Valley Authority are the major governmental agencies
that are in the tax-exempt category. Federal Home Loan Mortgage
(Freddie Mac), Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae)
and Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae) are not.
|