Why does Buffett buy short-term bonds?
24.08.13【豐富│東南西北龍鳳配】Pt.2 巴菲特為什麼大買短期債券?
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=EvjjjOzsjZo
The advance over the last four months marked the longest winning streak since 2021.
The move has been driven by anticipation that the central bank will reduce its benchmark rate by more than two full percentage points over the next 12 months, which would be the steepest drop outside of an economic downturn since the 1980s.
If you missed the big rally, it’s going to be a little dangerous to chase it now.
“We are playing with the probability of the job market stabilizing here or deteriorating fast. That’s the debate for the rest of the year.”
As a result, some investors and strategists are inclined to fade the bond rally. Deutsche Bank’s strategists recommended their clients selling 10-year Treasuries on Aug 26, targeting a move higher in the yield to 4.1%.
“We think the market is pricing in too much, too soon”.
“We still view the soft landing as the likely outcome. We would add interest-rate risks here, but wait for better levels.”
A stock is worth only what someone is willing to pay for it at a given time.
A bond is worth $1,000 at maturity regardless of what anyone is willing to pay for it at any time.
When you can earn more than 5% risk-free in the short term in Treasurys, more than 6% in safe corporate bonds or even 9% in more speculative bonds and get your money back, you have to ask yourself whether it’s worth it to risk your cash in stocks, which historically average a return of 8% to 10% per year but involve much more volatility.
Notice that as TLT has fallen to slightly lower lows, all of the momentum indicators at the bottom of the chart have been making slightly higher lows.
This is the sort of positive divergence that was in place last April, just before TLT hit bottom and began to rally. And, it’s the sort of positive divergence that had us looking for a bounce two weeks ago.
The two-month decline in Treasury Bonds has been wicked. TLT is down 10% since mid-September. That’s a big drop for a supposedly “safe” asset like a T-Bond ETF. Now though, the chart is showing signs that the decline is nearing an end, and a rally could get started any day.
It looks to me like TLT is forming the same sort of bottoming pattern it formed in April.
If that plays out, then the Treasury bond ETF could be trading sharply higher in the days ahead.
Spread is the difference between what bondholders charge for risky bonds versus safe ones.
Today, that spread is the smallest it has been in more than a decade. That’s a serious “yellow light” for the market. And eventually, it will end badly. But as I’ll share today, that doesn’t mean it’ll end soon.
The “red light” for investors is when spreads rise quickly. When spreads begin to soar, something bad is happening in the economy. And that means pain is likely on the way for investors.
We’re not there yet. Spreads are low and still falling. That won’t last forever. But history says it could still be years before this low spread goes from a yellow light to a red light.
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