The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Anticipate­d interest rate hike offers good news, bad news

- By Tim Grant Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PITTSBURGH — To generate an annual income of $100,000 from a super safe 10-year U.S. Treasury bond in 1981 — when the interest rate hit an all-time high of 14.59 percent — you needed $680,000 in savings.

In 2000, you would have needed $1.5 million to generate the same $100,000 in riskfree income.

By last month, you needed $4.5 million.

One of the unintended consequenc­es of the Federal Reserve Bank keeping interest rates so low for so long is that conservati­ve investment­s such as savings accounts, bank certificat­es of deposit and Treasury bonds have fallen woefully short of rewarding savers with a decent income as the key federal funds interest rate hovers near an all-time low of between 0.25 and 0.50 percent.

That could be changing if interest rates begin marching higher. The Federal Reserve raised rates by 0.25 percent in December last year for the first time since 2006. Further rate hikes were put on hold due to concerns about the jobs picture. But the economy has shown signs of improvemen­t in recent months, and the case for higher rates has gained traction among its board of governors.

The nation’s central bank is widely expected to raise shortterm interest rates. The federal funds futures market, which signals potential price moves in interest rates, is predicting a betterthan-90-percent probabilit­y that the Fed will raise rates when it meets this week.

“Rising rates are good for savers, on the positive side. But rising rates will cause a rise in the monthly payments of variable rate consumer loans, including mortgages and credit cards,” said Robert Hapanowicz, president of Hapanowicz and Associates Financial Services in Pittsburgh.

“Fixed rate loans will remain the same, but if you have a variable or adjustable rate loan, you can expect your payments to rise.”

Higher interest rates also could spell trouble for workers with defined benefit pension plans, he said. These plans generally offer an annuity that is structured around the participan­t’s age, years of service and compensati­on.

“Some pension plans also offer a lump sum feature, which is essentiall­y the present value of all the future monthly payments discounted to reflect current interest rates,” Hapanowicz said. “As interest rates rise, pension lump sum payments offered to retiring employees get smaller.”

Hapanowicz said many of his clients are employees of companies that offer pensions and he has had to explain to them that when interest rates move higher, the present value of their pension moves lower. He said a 1 percent change in the interest rate could affect their cash out by 10 percent to 12 percent, which means a $1 million pension lump sum could get knocked down to roughly $880,000 to $900,000.

With rates near historic lows but heading higher, he said those near retirement should consider whether it would be smart to take a lump sum versus an annuity.

Many financial industry players are predicting the Fed’s rate hikes will come gradually, probably 0.25 basis points each time.

Bond fund investors also could be vulnerable to losses in a rising interest rate scenario. Interest rates and bond prices have an inverse relationsh­ip. When rates rise, bond prices fall — and vice versa. That means a portfolio of bonds or bond funds will likely decline in value when rates go up.

Bonds are a form of debt that is issued by government entities and corporatio­ns to raise money from the public. Investors who buy bonds are lending money to the issuer of the bond. The bond issuer promises to pay a specified rate of interest to the investor during the life of an individual bond and repay the bond’s full face value when it matures.

Bond mutual funds, on the other hand, don’t have a set maturity date because fund managers pool money from many investors, often buying bonds and selling bonds in the fund before the bonds mature. The value of a bond fund may vary from day to day due to fluctuatio­ns in interest rates

 ?? STEVE POPE / GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President-elect Donald Trump will likely see higher interest rates when he takes office in January.
STEVE POPE / GETTY IMAGES U.S. President-elect Donald Trump will likely see higher interest rates when he takes office in January.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States