28.02.2014 Views

The Michael Shearin Group Morgan Stanley - Five Myths of Bond Investing

Are bonds a portfolio's bulwark or its Achilles' heel? Investors can't seem to decide. Over the last seven months of 2013, amid rising interest rates and falling bond prices, skittish investors yanked $18 billion more out of bond funds than they put in. Then, as stocks faltered in the first six weeks of 2014, investors put in over $28 billion more to bond funds than they withdrew. Adding to the confusion: Wednesday's disclosure that Federal Reserve officials are debating whether to raise interest rates sooner than expected. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury hit 2.75% on the news, up from 1.62% in May. (Bond yields move in the opposite direction of prices.) After three decades of a mostly smooth and steady bond market, investors aren't used to the recent volatility. That could be leading some to abandon their portfolios' primary defenses right when they need them the most, experts say.

Are bonds a portfolio's bulwark or its Achilles' heel? Investors can't seem to decide.

Over the last seven months of 2013, amid rising interest rates and falling bond prices, skittish investors yanked $18 billion more out of bond funds than they put in.

Then, as stocks faltered in the first six weeks of 2014, investors put in over $28 billion more to bond funds than they withdrew.

Adding to the confusion: Wednesday's disclosure that Federal Reserve officials are debating whether to raise interest rates sooner than expected. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury hit 2.75% on the news, up from 1.62% in May. (Bond yields move in the opposite direction of prices.)

After three decades of a mostly smooth and steady bond market, investors aren't used to the recent volatility. That could be leading some to abandon their portfolios' primary defenses right when they need them the most, experts say.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Michael</strong> <strong>Shearin</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Morgan</strong><br />

<strong>Stanley</strong> - <strong>Five</strong> <strong>Myths</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Bond</strong> <strong>Investing</strong><br />

Are bonds a portfolio's bulwark or its Achilles' heel? Investors can't seem to<br />

decide.<br />

Over the last seven months <strong>of</strong> 2013, amid rising interest rates and falling<br />

bond prices, skittish investors yanked $18 billion more out <strong>of</strong> bond funds<br />

than they put in.<br />

<strong>The</strong>n, as stocks faltered in the first six weeks <strong>of</strong> 2014, investors put in over<br />

$28 billion more to bond funds than they withdrew.<br />

Adding to the confusion: Wednesday's disclosure that Federal Reserve<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficials are debating whether to raise interest rates sooner than expected.<br />

<strong>The</strong> yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury hit 2.75% on the news, up from<br />

1.62% in May. (<strong>Bond</strong> yields move in the opposite direction <strong>of</strong> prices.)<br />

After three decades <strong>of</strong> a mostly smooth and steady bond market, investors<br />

aren't used to the recent volatility. That could be leading some to abandon<br />

their portfolios' primary defenses right when they need them the most,<br />

experts say.<br />

"<strong>Bond</strong>s are thought <strong>of</strong> as a safe haven, but even the safest harbors have<br />

waves," says Martin Leibowitz, a managing director <strong>of</strong> research at <strong>Morgan</strong>


<strong>Stanley</strong> and co-author <strong>of</strong> "Inside the Yield Book," considered by investors to<br />

be one <strong>of</strong> the best books ever written on bonds.<br />

Like all areas <strong>of</strong> investing, the bond market is rife with popular beliefs that<br />

are only partly true at best and misleading at worst. If you want to stop<br />

lurching from one wrong-footed bond trade to another, it pays to separate<br />

myth from reality.<br />

Here is a guide to some <strong>of</strong> the most dangerous misinformation about<br />

investing in bonds and bond funds—along with practical steps you can take<br />

to invest wisely on the basis <strong>of</strong> more-accurate evidence.<br />

Myth No. 1: <strong>Bond</strong> investors will suffer huge losses when interest<br />

rates rise.<br />

Long-term U.S. Treasury bonds lost 12.7% last year as rates rose roughly<br />

one percentage point. And many Wall Street strategists expect rates to<br />

climb this year as the Fed changes course.<br />

Yet losses on that scale across a wide variety <strong>of</strong> bonds are unlikely. To see<br />

why, you need a basic understanding <strong>of</strong> what pros call "duration."<br />

That measure—available from your fund's website or, if you buy individual<br />

bonds, from your broker—shows the approximate percentage change in the<br />

price <strong>of</strong> a bond or bond fund for an immediate one-percentage-point move<br />

in interest rates.<br />

<strong>The</strong> duration <strong>of</strong> the Barclays U.S. Aggregate <strong>Bond</strong> Index, the broadest<br />

benchmark for the fixed-income market, was around 5.6 years this past<br />

week. Thus, if rates rise one percentage point, the Barclays Aggregate would<br />

immediately fall in price by approximately 5.6%; a half-point rise would<br />

knock the index down in price by 2.8%, and so on.<br />

"For big losses to occur, interest rates would have to rise enormously," says<br />

Frank Fabozzi, a bond expert who teaches finance at EDHEC Business<br />

School in Paris and Princeton University.


To incur a 20% loss on a bond fund with a duration <strong>of</strong> 5.6 years, for<br />

instance, interest rates would have to rise instantaneously by approximately<br />

four percentage points. Even a 10% loss would require an immediate—and<br />

historically unprecedented—jump in rates <strong>of</strong> roughly two points. (Longterm<br />

U.S. Treasurys have a duration <strong>of</strong> more than 16 years, which is why<br />

they are so sensitive to rising rates.)<br />

At today's low rates, "you should have lower expectations for total return<br />

and yield, but the extent <strong>of</strong> the potential negative returns has been<br />

exaggerated," says Matthew Tucker, head <strong>of</strong> fixed-income strategy at<br />

BlackRock's iShares unit, the largest manager <strong>of</strong> exchange-traded funds.<br />

That is because, as rates rise, you get to invest the income thrown <strong>of</strong>f by<br />

your old bonds at the new, higher yields. As a bond investor, your total<br />

return is the sum <strong>of</strong> any price changes and the income the bonds produce.<br />

Imagine that interest rates rise by a quarter <strong>of</strong> a percentage point. That<br />

would immediately knock about 1.4% <strong>of</strong>f the price <strong>of</strong> a bond fund with a<br />

duration <strong>of</strong> 5.6 years. But it also would add a quarter-point to the yield <strong>of</strong><br />

fresh bonds coming into the portfolio, making up over the longer term for<br />

the short-term decline in price.<br />

In recently published research, <strong>Morgan</strong> <strong>Stanley</strong>'s Mr. Leibowitz has shown<br />

that so long as a fund (or even a "ladder" <strong>of</strong> individual bonds assembled to<br />

mature at equally spaced intervals <strong>of</strong> time) maintains a moderate, five-tosix-year<br />

duration, the portfolio's annual total return should converge<br />

toward its original yield. That assumes that you hold the fund or ladder at<br />

least six years.<br />

Remarkably, he found that outcome will occur under almost all possible<br />

scenarios, regardless <strong>of</strong> how much interest rates change.<br />

As a result, Mr. Leibowitz says, "if you are determinedly a long-term<br />

investor, you can get through a period <strong>of</strong> intervening turbulence"<br />

comfortable in the knowledge that any losses in market value will be <strong>of</strong>fset<br />

over time by the extra income from higher rates.


All this points toward a simple strategy: Ignore the harum-scarum rhetoric<br />

about a bond-market bloodbath. For government and investment-grade<br />

corporate bonds and bond funds with a duration less than 10 years, that<br />

scenario is just a myth.<br />

So long as you keep your duration short—and stick with high-quality<br />

bonds—you should be in no danger <strong>of</strong> anything greater than a temporary,<br />

single-digit loss.<br />

Ask yourself what is the worst loss you are willing to withstand on your<br />

bond investments for each one-percentage-point rise in interest rates. If<br />

that maximum loss is 5%, then you want a bond or bond fund with a<br />

duration <strong>of</strong> five years, slightly shorter than that <strong>of</strong> the Barclays Aggregate.<br />

(<strong>The</strong> average intermediate-term bond fund, according to Chicago-based<br />

investment researcher Morningstar, has a duration <strong>of</strong> 4.9 years.)<br />

You can get higher yield than the current 2.3% <strong>of</strong>fered by the Barclays<br />

Aggregate Index—but only if you are comfortable with higher duration. <strong>The</strong><br />

Vanguard Long-Term Corporate <strong>Bond</strong> VCLT +0.39% ETF, for instance,<br />

yields 5%, but its duration is 13.4 years—meaning that a quarter-point rise<br />

in rates would trigger a 3.4% short-term decline in price.<br />

Myth No. 2: Investors who need income must own "bond<br />

alternatives."<br />

<strong>The</strong>se alternatives include real-estate investment trusts, master limited<br />

partnerships, preferred stock, dividend-paying common stock, businessdevelopment<br />

companies and bank loans.<br />

"None <strong>of</strong> these things are substitutes for the safest bonds," says Larry<br />

Swedroe, director <strong>of</strong> research at the BAM Alliance, a nationwide group <strong>of</strong><br />

investment advisers based in St. Louis. Some <strong>of</strong> these assets, like REITs and<br />

MLPs, "have good diversification characteristics and can play a role in a<br />

diversified portfolio," he says. <strong>The</strong> other popular bond alternatives, he<br />

warns, provide extra income in good times—but won't act like bonds during<br />

bad times.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!