TLT cracks $90
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TLT cracks $90
Thoughts?
Re: TLT cracks $90
Still have room for improvement. EUR 25+years bonds cracked 50% drawdown, TLT is still only -45% ...
- mathjak107
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Re: TLT cracks $90
many people here were fearing equities falling 50% .
it turns out bonds were the riskiest bet of all.
but i have said that for a long time now , that rising rates were kryptonite to the pp.
equities can do well in rising rates if the economy stays healthy , but bond rates can’t hold up very long , even long term rates which tend to hold up better over the shorter term when short term rates rise.
this was just killer to anything with interest rate sensitivity like gold and bonds of all types
it turns out bonds were the riskiest bet of all.
but i have said that for a long time now , that rising rates were kryptonite to the pp.
equities can do well in rising rates if the economy stays healthy , but bond rates can’t hold up very long , even long term rates which tend to hold up better over the shorter term when short term rates rise.
this was just killer to anything with interest rate sensitivity like gold and bonds of all types
Re: TLT cracks $90
I had to Google whether "cracks $90" meant on the upside or downside. Looks like some pretty violent losses.
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Re: TLT cracks $90
Same. I didn’t know if it was going up or down because I haven’t looked in so long. I have some bonds due in 2050. I’ll try not to look until 2030 unless the news gets crazy.
belated, but RIP QUINCY JONES. another Jones
Apple really did add (rudimentary) support for RCS. This is awesome
Apple really did add (rudimentary) support for RCS. This is awesome
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Re: TLT cracks $90
The Fed could increase the money supply (eg) 20% every year and buy all the treasuries to keep them at zero rate(?) Rates for other bonds would rise to over 20% (private lenders wont lend below inflation) but Fed could buy them too. Could they keep all rates near zero forever? (No I suppose new companies would spring up just to take out 0% loans...and maybe that happened)
Why do high inflation countries have high inflation and high rates, what does that accomplish vs low inflation and low rates. Are those high rates for loans the central banks cant influence, eg US inflation is 20% auto loans might be 25% because Fed doesnt buy them.
Trying to understand how high long rates could go
Why do high inflation countries have high inflation and high rates, what does that accomplish vs low inflation and low rates. Are those high rates for loans the central banks cant influence, eg US inflation is 20% auto loans might be 25% because Fed doesnt buy them.
Trying to understand how high long rates could go
Re: TLT cracks $90
You have no lots of long Treasuries--or LTT ETF/mutual fund shares--you can sell at a loss (not even a single one.....especially after the past two years)? What I mean is this:
Say one needed to buy, oh, $25,000 of TLT (or whatever your choice of LTT instrument is) in order to be at 25x4 again.
1. Sell enough of appreciated assets (hopefully from tax lots that have been held at least 1 year and a day in order to get LTCG treatment) such as VTI/VOO/VFIAX etc in order to get the money needed to rebalance into LTTs.
2. Then, sell an amount of TLT (from tax lots with a loss, obviously) such that the capital losses equal the $ amount of capital gain in step 1 above.
3. Now, immediately take the proceeds from step 1 and 2 and plow them into a different LTT ETF (like VGLT, VUSTX, FNBGX, etc.....anything besides TLT itself); so long as the CUSIPs are different then it technically shouldn't create a wash sale by the letter of the tax law.
4. Voila! Taxable gains equal taxable losses so no additional income to increase your income and put you over the limit on the FAFSA...and you have done this while still avoiding a wash sale.
Failing this, just wait until 1/1 or 1/2 of 2024 to rebalance.....HB said annual rebalancing was fine anyway if one didn't want to do bands-based rebalancing.
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Re: TLT cracks $90
Regarding FAFSA, make sure your ordinary income qualifies you for financial aid before spending too much time strategizing about investments. If your income is above a certain level you won’t be getting any financial aid anyway, making much of this a waste of time (for that purpose at least).
Re: TLT cracks $90
Yeah, you are right, I think it might be pointless in my case anyway.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Wed Sep 27, 2023 4:36 amRegarding FAFSA, make sure your ordinary income qualifies you for financial aid before spending too much time strategizing about investments. If your income is above a certain level you won’t be getting any financial aid anyway, making much of this a waste of time (for that purpose at least).
Re: TLT cracks $90
Ugly_Bird wrote: ↑Wed Sep 27, 2023 6:50 amYeah, you are right, I think it might be pointless in my case anyway.flyingpylon wrote: ↑Wed Sep 27, 2023 4:36 amRegarding FAFSA, make sure your ordinary income qualifies you for financial aid before spending too much time strategizing about investments. If your income is above a certain level you won’t be getting any financial aid anyway, making much of this a waste of time (for that purpose at least).
Here's the scenario:
You: how much money do you charge for your service?
Vendor: how much have you got?
In any situation other than education and healthcare the vendor would go to jail. For some reason this is par for the course in those two other areas. What a joke.
Re: TLT cracks $90
Increasingly leaning towards not lending ... no bonds nor cash deposits, the interest paid is often too low, more so after the taxman takes a slice. Swap the bond risk (25% in each of STT/LTT) over to the stock side (25/25 stock/hard-cash).
Comparing historic 50/25/25 stock/PM/hard-cash to that of the PP, 30 year maximum withdrawal rates ...
and that's with 50% of the total portfolio stuffed under your mattress (25% gold, 25% hard cash).
Maybe deposit (lend) the cash when interest rates are relatively high, but with it in mind that cash deposits into banks and that capital becomes the banks money, that may or may not be repaid depending upon how well or not the bank does in the casino (and where it in turn has it in mind that heads they win, tails and the taxpayers bail them out).
Increasingly, at least both in the UK and Australia, money you deposit into banks involves interrogation of where that money came from, and similarly withdrawals have to satisfy the bank where you're intending to spend that money, and with any suspicions they're supposed to flag you for investigation (without alerting you of that intent). With banks having their licence threatened if they fail to report suspicious activities the natural reaction by banks is to report all transactions - which is the underline real intent anyway, as that way the state gets to record all your financial transactions, along with your movements, internet searching activities ...etc. After all your wealth isn't really yours, its just a loan by the state, open to being partially or fully called in if/when the state so desires. Even less freedom in a unfree world. Half in-hand, half that can be liquidated in T+2 is about the limits of freedom nowadays
Comparing historic 50/25/25 stock/PM/hard-cash to that of the PP, 30 year maximum withdrawal rates ...
and that's with 50% of the total portfolio stuffed under your mattress (25% gold, 25% hard cash).
Maybe deposit (lend) the cash when interest rates are relatively high, but with it in mind that cash deposits into banks and that capital becomes the banks money, that may or may not be repaid depending upon how well or not the bank does in the casino (and where it in turn has it in mind that heads they win, tails and the taxpayers bail them out).
Increasingly, at least both in the UK and Australia, money you deposit into banks involves interrogation of where that money came from, and similarly withdrawals have to satisfy the bank where you're intending to spend that money, and with any suspicions they're supposed to flag you for investigation (without alerting you of that intent). With banks having their licence threatened if they fail to report suspicious activities the natural reaction by banks is to report all transactions - which is the underline real intent anyway, as that way the state gets to record all your financial transactions, along with your movements, internet searching activities ...etc. After all your wealth isn't really yours, its just a loan by the state, open to being partially or fully called in if/when the state so desires. Even less freedom in a unfree world. Half in-hand, half that can be liquidated in T+2 is about the limits of freedom nowadays
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Re: TLT cracks $90
In short,
I am happy I moved to GOVT instead of TLT.
Other than that, I am trying to process what is causing higher interest rates. The only thing I can come up with is less liquidity to purchase the bonds but I don't know how or why. Somehow money is getting destroyed and lowering liquidity?
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Re: TLT cracks $90
On the short end, Fed's paying banks 5.4% on the billions they printed and handed them after GFC. How long can we afford that? On the long end, Fed's stopped buying
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/WALCL
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/WALCL
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Re: TLT cracks $90
Luke Gromen getting into TLT and rising interest rates.
https://youtu.be/jJ3ajrsz-IY?feature=shared
I need to listen to it again to wrap my head around it some more.
I will just stick with 25% GOVT for now to be more cautious.
https://youtu.be/jJ3ajrsz-IY?feature=shared
I need to listen to it again to wrap my head around it some more.
I will just stick with 25% GOVT for now to be more cautious.
Re: TLT cracks $90
Sure feels like we are sliding all the way down! So frustrating. Can’t sell as losses will be locked in. Newly retired and this s*cks!
Re: TLT cracks $90
Great tip! But, I think it will not work in my case. All my LTTs are in the tax deferred accounts. No loss harvesting for me, I guess...D1984 wrote: ↑Tue Sep 26, 2023 3:30 pmYou have no lots of long Treasuries--or LTT ETF/mutual fund shares--you can sell at a loss (not even a single one.....especially after the past two years)? What I mean is this:
Say one needed to buy, oh, $25,000 of TLT (or whatever your choice of LTT instrument is) in order to be at 25x4 again.
1. Sell enough of appreciated assets (hopefully from tax lots that have been held at least 1 year and a day in order to get LTCG treatment) such as VTI/VOO/VFIAX etc in order to get the money needed to rebalance into LTTs.
2. Then, sell an amount of TLT (from tax lots with a loss, obviously) such that the capital losses equal the $ amount of capital gain in step 1 above.
3. Now, immediately take the proceeds from step 1 and 2 and plow them into a different LTT ETF (like VGLT, VUSTX, FNBGX, etc.....anything besides TLT itself); so long as the CUSIPs are different then it technically shouldn't create a wash sale by the letter of the tax law.
4. Voila! Taxable gains equal taxable losses so no additional income to increase your income and put you over the limit on the FAFSA...and you have done this while still avoiding a wash sale.
Failing this, just wait until 1/1 or 1/2 of 2024 to rebalance.....HB said annual rebalancing was fine anyway if one didn't want to do bands-based rebalancing.
Re: TLT cracks $90
Ugly_Bird
Your appearances here are so infrequent (this was your 7th in 2023) .... but each time you do I get amused by the picture of your bird! Love it!
Above provided by: Vinny, who always says: "I only regret that I have but one lap to give to my cats." AND "I'm a more-is-more person."
Re: TLT cracks $90
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Re: TLT cracks $90
Well I think she's pretty. Those lashes. Also, Matt's newsletter has been good over the last few days. https://www.reddit.com/r/MoneyStuff/
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Re: TLT cracks $90
I had the very great honor of meeting and corresponding with Harry Browne, and I've read "Fail-Safe Investing" multiple times. So I know Harry would chuckle at my feeble attempts to time the market but... at what point should I rebalance my TLT (now dipping below the 15% band) with the largesse from my IWV (over 30%)? I keep hearing contrarian investors are heading back into LTT, but it took yet another hit today, and it looks to be heading lower at least in the short run. What "tells" can I look for when the bloodletting has stopped? Board, help me out with your wisdom!
BONUS: more of a Cash question, but I'm seriously underwater on my STT (SHY + SCHO) as well. Lumping my I-Bonds in (as "Deep Cash") gets me over 30% on that segment, but I'd love to at least break even on these 2 ETFs before I bail on them for good. Plenty of talk on 10-year and LTTs, but what's the prognosis for STTs?
BONUS: more of a Cash question, but I'm seriously underwater on my STT (SHY + SCHO) as well. Lumping my I-Bonds in (as "Deep Cash") gets me over 30% on that segment, but I'd love to at least break even on these 2 ETFs before I bail on them for good. Plenty of talk on 10-year and LTTs, but what's the prognosis for STTs?
Re: TLT cracks $90
If it is time to rebalance... just rebalance. It is simple.Hal French wrote: ↑Tue Oct 17, 2023 11:55 pm I had the very great honor of meeting and corresponding with Harry Browne, and I've read "Fail-Safe Investing" multiple times. So I know Harry would chuckle at my feeble attempts to time the market but... at what point should I rebalance my TLT (now dipping below the 15% band) with the largesse from my IWV (over 30%)? I keep hearing contrarian investors are heading back into LTT, but it took yet another hit today, and it looks to be heading lower at least in the short run. What "tells" can I look for when the bloodletting has stopped? Board, help me out with your wisdom!
BONUS: more of a Cash question, but I'm seriously underwater on my STT (SHY + SCHO) as well. Lumping my I-Bonds in (as "Deep Cash") gets me over 30% on that segment, but I'd love to at least break even on these 2 ETFs before I bail on them for good. Plenty of talk on 10-year and LTTs, but what's the prognosis for STTs?
Re: TLT cracks $90
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... n-etf-loss
MarketsETFs & Mutual Funds
Dreams of Big Bond Gains Backfire With $10 Billion ETF Loss
Record sums of cash flowing to TLT despite an epic drawdown
Rare chance for double-digit returns at long end: McDonough
MarketsETFs & Mutual Funds
Dreams of Big Bond Gains Backfire With $10 Billion ETF Loss
Record sums of cash flowing to TLT despite an epic drawdown
Rare chance for double-digit returns at long end: McDonough
Above provided by: Vinny, who always says: "I only regret that I have but one lap to give to my cats." AND "I'm a more-is-more person."
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Re: TLT cracks $90
Are we going to be Argentina or Japan? Failing states get very high inflation and rates. Japan has a closed border and stable deflationary culture.
In any event, PP theory holds until long bonds are at 0.
In any event, PP theory holds until long bonds are at 0.
Re: TLT cracks $90
https://www.morningstar.com/markets/des ... tent=48882
MARKETS
Despite Big Losses, Investors Flock to Long-Term Bond ETFs
Locking in higher yields may be a draw for funds like the iShares 20+ Year Treasury ETF.
Katherine Lynch
Oct 11, 2023
MARKETS
Despite Big Losses, Investors Flock to Long-Term Bond ETFs
Locking in higher yields may be a draw for funds like the iShares 20+ Year Treasury ETF.
Katherine Lynch
Oct 11, 2023
Above provided by: Vinny, who always says: "I only regret that I have but one lap to give to my cats." AND "I'm a more-is-more person."