American Freefall » Counterpunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names
In June the Federal Reserve announced that it was going to continue
its policy of driving nominal interest rates even lower, this time
focusing on long-term Treasury bonds. The Fed said it would be
purchasing $400 billion of the Treasury’s 30-year bonds. Driving
interest rates down means driving bond prices up. With 5-year Treasury
bonds paying only seven-tenths of one percent and 10-year Treasuries
paying only 1.6%, below even the official rate of inflation, Americans
desperate for yield move into 30-year bonds currently paying 2.7%.
However, the the high bond prices mean that the risk of capital loss is
very high.
The Fed’s debt monetization, or a drop in the exchange value of the
dollar as other countries move away from its use to settle their balance
of payments, could set off inflation that would take interest rates out
of the Fed’s control. As interest rates rise, bond prices fall.
In other words, bonds are now the bubble that real estate, stocks, and
derivatives were. When this bubble pops, Americans will take another big
hit to their remaining wealth.
It makes no sense to invest in long-term bonds at negative interest
rates when the federal government is piling up debt that the Federal
Reserve is monetizing and when other countries are moving away from the
flood of dollars. The potential for a rising rate of inflation is high
from debt monetization and from a drop in the dollar’s exchange value.
Yet, bond fund portfolio managers have to follow the herd into longer
term maturities or see their performance relative to their peers drop to
the bottom of the rankings.
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