I think you are alone but you may not be wrong.
The Bond Dream Room
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- buddtholomew
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
Re: The Bond Dream Room
I bought TLT when I bought into the HBPP in 2013. Later that year, I converted that ETF to new 30 year Treasuries (original 3.75% coupon) by direct purchase from Fidelity. At the time, the consensus was that “interest rates have nowhere to go but up!” Last I checked, new 30 year Treasury bonds have an interest rate to maturity of about 3.22%. Today, I can’t think of any good reason to sell such a solid performing asset sporting my favorite expense ratio: 0%.
Maybe interest rates will skyrocket tomorrow and my LTTs will crater. I dunno. Seems just as likely that long term deflation will grind away for another decade following a narrative that is invisible today and will only become apparent with the benefit of hindsight.
Maybe interest rates will skyrocket tomorrow and my LTTs will crater. I dunno. Seems just as likely that long term deflation will grind away for another decade following a narrative that is invisible today and will only become apparent with the benefit of hindsight.
“Groucho Marx wrote:
A stock trader asked him, "Groucho, where do you put all your money?" Groucho was said to have replied, "In Treasury bonds", and the trader said, "You can't make much money on those." Groucho said, "You can if you have enough of them!"
A stock trader asked him, "Groucho, where do you put all your money?" Groucho was said to have replied, "In Treasury bonds", and the trader said, "You can't make much money on those." Groucho said, "You can if you have enough of them!"
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
Is there a web page calculator for bond funds
You plug in:
Amount purchased
Fund duration
Rate purchased at
Average interest rate over your holding period of X years ?
And it tells you what you can sell for after X years
I started my PP with EDV in late 2016, yield was 2.33% so if it stays at 3.17% when do I get my money back
You plug in:
Amount purchased
Fund duration
Rate purchased at
Average interest rate over your holding period of X years ?
And it tells you what you can sell for after X years
I started my PP with EDV in late 2016, yield was 2.33% so if it stays at 3.17% when do I get my money back
Re: The Bond Dream Room
In my non-PP 401k's, bonds are almost all "cash" now (Prime Money Market in one / a Stable Value Fund in the other). Before making the change was mostly in Total Bond. Reasons for change: didn't like having corporate bonds, only recently have short-term options I like, and yeah, shorten duration to time the market.sophie wrote: ↑Thu May 17, 2018 7:03 am So besides dualstow, what are all of you doing about bonds?
I stopped auto-investing in long bonds but plan to keep what I have and let the percentage drift down while I keep collecting interest payments. Two things will have to happen before I jump back into buying long bonds: 1) the Fed needs to stop talking about raising rates, and 2) the international investors buying 30 year bonds need to wake up, notice the flat yield curve, and rush into shorter durations.
In my GB-ish IRA I have 13% target for LTT, ITT, and "cash" (historically short term bond) and basically on target.
* I recently moved VG Short Term Bond to Prime Money Market.
* Planning to increase LTT to 20% to compensate for shortened duration in 401k's / have 'formal' GB LTT allocation (from ITT)
(although hard to do, so we'll see when/if I pull the trigger)
I've been using VGLT since bought first gold in 2012, so my LTT are a little shorter than most as well....
GBish IRA down .8% for the year as of today.
Re: The Bond Dream Room
I’ve been sticking to the traditional PP allocations (4x25 with 15/35 rebalance bands) since 2010, and still am.
I’m boring, but I sleep easy at night.
I’m boring, but I sleep easy at night.
Re: The Bond Dream Room
You possibly don't get your principal back with most bond fund. Only with a bond or bond fund with a fixed maturity date.boglerdude wrote: ↑Thu May 17, 2018 10:53 pm Is there a web page calculator for bond funds
You plug in:
Amount purchased
Fund duration
Rate purchased at
Average interest rate over your holding period of X years ?
And it tells you what you can sell for after X years
I started my PP with EDV in late 2016, yield was 2.33% so if it stays at 3.17% when do I get my money back
Your EDV lost value exactly in the amount to compensate for rising interest rates, the opportunity cost of holding a bond with a lower interest rate. The same kind of actual bond lost exactly the same value, but the fund has no fixed maturity date, so the pain goes on and on.
Re: The Bond Dream Room
Yes. I'm at 21%. Bonds dropping to 15% means the yields will have gone up quite a bit - 4% maybe? And, I'm waiting on the opportunity to tax loss harvest.
Budd I'm still sticking with the program. Just ratcheting down the bond-buying during this rare instance of a free lunch: an asset being actively and transparently manipulated to go down in the next couple of years. But, despite what the Fed is trying to do the bond market isn't entirely under its control, so I am not going to reduce my holdings - I'm not quite as brave as dualstow! Also note I'm still auto-investing in gold, which is also in the doghouse at the moment, and in stocks, which are not but have those high valuations that are making everyone nervous. Fortunately the PP keeps grinding along anyway.
- dualstow
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
pug beat me to it.
I hold corporate bond funds in my vp, and although I feel the psychological comfort of individually held bonds, I could hear a thousand boglehead voices in my ear after that post, ocho.
not quite as brave chicken-hearted as dualstow!
Thank you for your kindness, anyway.
Yeah, I guess my bond share was close to 20% before I sold off some.
What's left is yielding 3.88%, I think, and I will keep that.
Now I just have to decide whether to leave the proceeds in Vanguard Prime MM or buy some 1- or 2-year treasurys.
I hold corporate bond funds in my vp, and although I feel the psychological comfort of individually held bonds, I could hear a thousand boglehead voices in my ear after that post, ocho.
--> my edit
not quite as brave chicken-hearted as dualstow!
Thank you for your kindness, anyway.
Yeah, I guess my bond share was close to 20% before I sold off some.
What's left is yielding 3.88%, I think, and I will keep that.
Now I just have to decide whether to leave the proceeds in Vanguard Prime MM or buy some 1- or 2-year treasurys.
Last edited by dualstow on Fri May 18, 2018 8:36 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: The Bond Dream Room
dualstow,
If you have a big slug of cash headed for STTs, don't forget to consider sophie's "tax trickery." Just recently, I saw some high coupon (8-9%) 30 year T-bonds maturing in 1-2 years that would be good candidates.
If you have a big slug of cash headed for STTs, don't forget to consider sophie's "tax trickery." Just recently, I saw some high coupon (8-9%) 30 year T-bonds maturing in 1-2 years that would be good candidates.
“Groucho Marx wrote:
A stock trader asked him, "Groucho, where do you put all your money?" Groucho was said to have replied, "In Treasury bonds", and the trader said, "You can't make much money on those." Groucho said, "You can if you have enough of them!"
A stock trader asked him, "Groucho, where do you put all your money?" Groucho was said to have replied, "In Treasury bonds", and the trader said, "You can't make much money on those." Groucho said, "You can if you have enough of them!"
- dualstow
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
Thank you. I'll definitely take a look!
Re: The Bond Dream Room
You guys are exactly correct, the financial loss from bonds and bond funds is the same when interest rates rise, but somehow the emotional experience is different. That's what I meant when I wrote "the pain goes on and on". With a bond the loss is easier to ignore.
Re: The Bond Dream Room
How so?ochotona wrote: ↑Fri May 18, 2018 12:39 pm You guys are exactly correct, the financial loss from bonds and bond funds is the same when interest rates rise, but somehow the emotional experience is different. That's what I meant when I wrote "the pain goes on and on". With a bond the loss is easier to ignore.
The capital gain/loss column still applies to individual bonds. The red color is fully visible. I try to remember that it is more than offset by the coupon payments I've been collecting.
The reason to hold bond funds (IMHO) is that you can use them to accumulate contributions, then at some point you switch them to an individual bond. And with a fund, you get that instant gratification of interest payments monthly instead of every 6 months.
jhogue thanks for the pointer to those high interest 30 years! I looked a while ago and didn't see anything, but I wasn't looking to go beyond one year.
Re: The Bond Dream Room
I think for some people there is the appeal that "I'm going to get all of my original money back", of course their brain is not tracking the opportunity cost. I hear this alot.
- dualstow
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
I bought some BIV ( a bond etf) for my wife, some years ago. She does not run a pp.
She’ll get her money back but it would feel strange to sell at a negative, even if non-reinvested dividends end up making her whole.
I’ll let her make the call, but I know that if I had bought, say, 3-year notes, she could just count down to the calendar date when her cash is “released.” Terrible “mental accounting.”
- buddtholomew
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
Classic...I thought my TLT purchased at 118 was dead money...
- dualstow
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
heh heh
Re: The Bond Dream Room
The purpose of markets is to confuse and embarrass.
- Cortopassi
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
I know that's why I got in the PP. Whenever I tried to guess, educated or not, the direction of anything, 90% of the time it went the other way.
Re: The Bond Dream Room
"This portfolio is terrible. Anyone believe me now?" (c) buddtholomewbuddtholomew wrote: ↑Tue May 29, 2018 11:29 am Classic...I thought my TLT purchased at 118 was dead money...
- buddtholomew
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
Every dog has his day in the sun.Ugly_Bird wrote: ↑Tue May 29, 2018 8:37 pm"This portfolio is terrible. Anyone believe me now?" (c) buddtholomewbuddtholomew wrote: ↑Tue May 29, 2018 11:29 am Classic...I thought my TLT purchased at 118 was dead money...
I think that was yesterday for the 4x25PP, today GB and risk parity (weighted to equity) a little better so far.
Point taken
- dualstow
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
That was just baddtholomew. This is gooddtholomew.
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
Intermediate-Term Corporate Bond ETF
4% and a risk level of 2
https://investor.vanguard.com/etf/profile/VCIT
hm
4% and a risk level of 2
https://investor.vanguard.com/etf/profile/VCIT
hm
Re: The Bond Dream Room
I'm a fan of VCST...
- dualstow
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Re: The Bond Dream Room
I've owned VCIT for a few years and had no idea what the recent yield was. Nice.
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By the way, Vanguard seems to be going in the same direction as bank websites: a big stupid screen that looks ok on a phone but not as good as it used to on a desktop monitor. And, some columns have been removed, like the Distribution yield (under the Distributions tab).
Well, there is more than one way to look at transactions, and at balances & holdings, perhaps because they are still in transition. But, the way I am looking at it now- big stupid screen and no distribution yield.
- - -
By the way, Vanguard seems to be going in the same direction as bank websites: a big stupid screen that looks ok on a phone but not as good as it used to on a desktop monitor. And, some columns have been removed, like the Distribution yield (under the Distributions tab).
Well, there is more than one way to look at transactions, and at balances & holdings, perhaps because they are still in transition. But, the way I am looking at it now- big stupid screen and no distribution yield.