I’ve been doing some research on long-term bonds (e.g., 30-year maturity), and I’m trying to better understand the real differences between buying a bond directly (“paper bond”) versus buying an ETF that holds long-duration bonds (like TLT, ZROZ, or IGLB).
Here’s what I’ve gathered so far — please correct or clarify where needed:
1. Buying a 30-year bond directly and holding it to maturity seems to provide a known return upfront, assuming no default. The coupon is fixed, and the yield to maturity (YTM) is predictable — I’ll get all the interest payments and principal at the end.
2. Buying a long-term bond ETF, on the other hand, does not offer a fixed return. Even if the bonds inside the ETF have fixed coupons, the ETF’s value fluctuates daily and it never “matures” — it just keeps rotating bonds to maintain a long-duration profile.
So here’s my main question:
If my goal is long-term income or exposure to long bonds, is there a real advantage to using ETFs instead of just holding individual bonds to maturity (especially in this high-rate environment)?
Also, I’m curious:
• Do ETF yields (like SEC yield) really reflect what I’ll earn over time?
Would love to hear how more experienced investors approach this choice.
Thanks in advance!
