Journal to portfolio afterlife

The 10-Year Treasury bond is down 1% this year, on pace for its 3rd consecutive annual decline. With data going back to 1928, that’s never happened before.
 
In 1972 you could purchase a constant maturity 10 year T-Note fund yielding 6.4%. Interest rates almost doubled over the coming 8 years, but this investor still averaged 2.6% returns per year because the high yield offset the interest rate risk. To be wonky – the duration, or interest rate sensitivity of the fund was about 7.5. Meanwhile, the fund was yielding 6.4% when it was purchased in 1972. This means that if interest rates go up by 1% the bond will lose 7.5% in principal. But it is also earning 6.4% per year so this bond earns a -1.1% total return in year one. In the case of the 1970s 10 year interest rates rose from 6.4% to 13% in 1980. Despite this, a constant maturity 10 year bond fund had an average yield of 8.4% over this period. So the average interest rate more than offset the duration and resulted in positive nominal returns during this period. This point where yields offset interest rate risk can be thought of as a sort of escape velocity where rising interest rates still hurt bond prices, but the starting or average yield has escaped from most of the potential negative impact of interest rate risk.
So, for instance, if you buy a 10 year T-Note yielding 4.2% today you have a duration of about 8. If interest rates rise to 5.2% you will lose 8% of principal as rates rise and earn 4.2% of interest every year. This means you’ll earn a total return of -3.8% after the first year. Not great, but not the end of the world either. More importantly, you’ll continue to earn 4.2% every year despite this one time negative hit of -8% from the interest rate change.
Fed Funds Futures say that the terminal rate for the Fed is 5.5% or roughly where we are today. This would mean that the asymmetric risk in bonds is starting to skew from the downside to the upside. This is especially true in shorter duration instruments like T-Bills where the inflation and risk adjusted returns now look fantastic. It’s less true in super long duration bonds, but anything in the intermediate duration range is approaching escape velocity.
 
Anche oggi un buon recupero, portafoglio +0,76%.

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Notizie dalla Russia, dopo il tentato golpe.
 
Come ho avuto modo di sottolineare molte volte, io sono contro il politically correct che va per la maggiore. Quanto alla stampa italiana mainstream secondo me pecca di intelligenza quando tratta gli italiani come degli idioti che si fermano ai titoli e ai virgolettati. No, scusate, forse l'ultima frase che ho scritto è una cazzata :jolly:

 

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