by winston » Mon Apr 03, 2017 10:52 am
Money-Making Trend #2: Interest Rates are a Hot Air Balloon That Can’t be Denied
Interest rates really ARE going to continue to rise, and it will be a game-changer for fixed-income investors of all stripes.
In fact, I’m anticipating that I’ll be issuing a major sell signal for many types of fixed income investments in the next 12 months, and you do not want to miss it.
I don’t issue such warnings lightly — only a handful in the last 30 years — so believe me when I tell you this will change everything for conservative investors.
With this flip of the switch your whole approach to bonds and bond-like investments must change to match the brave new world of rising interest rates.
Here’s why: The 30-year period of falling interest rates has run its course. It’s provided a tailwind to bond returns for three decades, but now that party is over.
That means there’s a real wealth-robber just around the corner for conservative investors: Capital losses on your bonds.
You see, when interest rates rise, old bonds that pay lower amounts of income are simply less attractive. Investors sell them to trade up to higher-paying issues.
That causes their prices to fall and if you own them, the hit you can take can be quite painful.
Forgive me for covering these basics, but I hear all the time from investors who are surprised that the value of their fixed income holdings can go down when interest rates go up.
Yes, they’re still getting interest payments, but years of interest can be wiped out in weeks by ugly capital losses.
3 big factors tell me that interest rates are going up and they won’t be stopped:
1. The Federal Reserve is determined to raise the level of inflation, and that means boosting interest rates. Whether it’s because they want to increase economic growth, lower unemployment, or deflate away our massive public debt…or all three…the rates are going up.
2. The U.S. government is facing a massive entitlements burden over the next 20-30 years. You can bet that before they make painful choices like cutting benefits or raising taxes, the Feds will print money and quietly pay off those obligations with cheaper dollars.
3. The economy is picking up enough steam to stimulate higher demand for borrowing. More housing loans, rising auto sales and higher business spending all are ramping up demand for credit, which in turn boosts the interest rates private lenders can require to lend the money out.
One big trap to avoid is buying bonds with lower credit ratings and longer maturities. Don’t do it!
In exchange for bigger yields today, you could be socked with painful capital gains losses tomorrow, or worse, even defaults on the riskiest issues.
How To Let Higher Rates Boost Your Bottom Line
My basic strategy for dealing with higher interest rates has 3 prongs.
First, we move our fixed-income holdings from long-term bonds to short-term bonds.
Short-term bonds are the safer end of the yield spectrum at all times, but are especially attractive when rates are likely to rise.
Our second strategy is to use leveraged ETFs to capture quick gains when an interest rate rise is imminent — my top pick is ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (NYSE: TBT)
This is an inverse fund — as bond values go down, this ETFs value goes up. It’s perfect for profiting from rising rates because it’s leveraged 2-to-1, so a 5% loss for bonds means a 10% gain for us.
So while other bond investors are howling with pain, we’ll be quietly counting our profits.
Now, there is risk with leveraged investments, but we’ll use this one only when the time is right and only hold onto it for a matter of weeks so our risk will be strictly limited. Just be sure to wait for my signal to buy.
Third, we’ll shift money out of bonds into vehicles like REITs and utilities that provide a high income but also have the ability to raise those dividends over time and keep pace with inflation.
Source: Profitable Investing
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"