Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Staying above the interest-rate fray

- By Jeffrey R. Kosnett Jeffrey R. Kosnett is editor of Kiplinger’s Investing for Income newsletter.

Fixed-income veterans remember the 2013 “taper tantrum,” when bond prices plunged after the Federal Reserve said it would scale back a massive bond-buying program. This year, the tantrum is in reverse, a bond-buying binge that means bull market investors can claim victory.

The surprising­ly sharp downturn in medium-term and long-term interest rates since April is a fresh challenge for devotees of the dogma that the escalating inflation readings and strong (although temporary) economic growth will soon translate to higher rates on savings accounts and bigger cash distributi­ons from bond funds.

The original tantrum refers to the stretch from May through early September of 2013, when 10-year Treasury yields soared from 1.6% to 3% (and T-bond prices fell by 10% or so). There was no inflation to speak of in 2013, oil prices were already high, and the 2008 economic bust was done. The surprise was the speed and the ferocity of the bond-price breakdown, not that interest rates could move up.

This year, by contrast, housing and oil prices are soaring, wages are climbing and economic growth is robust. Those seem like reasons for the Fed to stand back and let the markets push interest rates higher, and the current Fed leadership is under pressure to tighten credit or at least stay neutral — a scenario right out of any 1970s first-year economics textbook.

Instead, on Aug. 6, the 10-year bond settled at 1.30%, down from a top of 1.75% in the spring. Bond funds that started 2021 dripping red ink are now up slightly, while presumptiv­e beneficiar­ies of higher rates are backtracki­ng.

This is not a fluke. Consider this comment from Deutsche Bank Economics: “We see a more muted response of government bond yields to stronger growth and higher inflation than in the past, as central banks lean against any sharp yield rises.”

Some of the best-performing income investment­s in recent years have been those that depend on profits from the spread between the rock-bottom shortterm rates they pay to borrow and the ransoms they charge customers for credit cards, riskier mortgages, small business loans and so forth.

When this margin began widening as long-term rates were rising, share prices of these outfits went crazy. Capital One Financial delivered a 165% total return for the past year and just granted a 50% dividend boost. New York Mortgage Trust, which might have failed in the early stages of COVID, is up 76% for the past year and pays nearly 10% in dividends.

Interest rates aren’t expected to take off much again, what with the delta variant making COVID a headwind to growth and the Fed likely to hold rates as low as possible to save the Treasury interest on its bills. So, profit-taking will intensify. Your best bets now: venerable, managed diversifie­d bond funds, such as Dodge & Cox Income (symbol DODIX), Metropolit­an West Total Return Bond (MWTRX), PGIM Total Return Bond (PDBAX) and Vanguard Long-Term Investment Grade (VWESX).

As for your individual bonds, hold them to maturity and be glad that defaults are all but nonexisten­t. You can stay comfortabl­y above the interest-rate fray.

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