Navigating today's bond market is a treacherous business. Bonds, in my view, are in a bubble. Yields are too low and when they rise, as they surely will, prices of most bonds will fall. No one can tell you when the next bond bear market will begin, but it will pay to be prepared. This article offers my best picks for avoiding losses, and making small profits, when bond yields begin a sustained rise.
Contrary to all expectations, the bond market has stormed ahead so far this year--that is, yields have fallen and prices, which move in the opposite direction of yields, have climbed. The best performers have been high-quality, long-term bonds. Case in point: So far in 2014, Vanguard Long-Term Treasury (symbol VUSTX) has returned a sizzling 10.1%.
The Vanguard fund yields a meager 3.1%. That's just about what inflation has averaged annually over the long term. If consumer prices rise by that much over the next 20 or 30 years, you'll probably earn no more than the fund's yield over that period, allowing you to break even in real terms.
That's the optimistic case. What's the downside? Consumer prices could rise at a faster pace, which would almost certainly push up bond yields. Indeed, because yields are so low today, they're likely to rise without any appreciable increase in the inflation rate. Should yields on bonds of similar maturities rise by one percentage point, this fund's price will plunge a jaw-dropping 15.3%. That's, of course, without even considering the impact of inflation. So much for the safety of Treasury bonds.
Unfortunately, the odds of yields staying flat or falling are negligible. Thanks to the Federal Reserve's actions, bond yields are far below their historical averages.
With the economy continuing to grow and the Fed gradually taking its foot off the easy-money pedal, bond yields have nowhere to go but up. That means that bond prices will fall.
The risks aren't confined to Treasuries. Junk bonds, which are issued by companies that stand an above-average chance of defaulting on their obligations, are perilously pricey. On average, junk bonds yield only about 3.8 percentage points more than Treasuries.
Thanks to fears of deflation and the actions of central bankers almost everywhere, yields are low across the globe.
Below are my picks for the best funds for this dangerous market, listed from lowest risk to highest risk. To try to boost returns, these funds delve into odd corners of the bond world. None takes a conventional approach to bond investing.
Metropolitan West Unconstrained M (MWCRX) takes a proven strategy and removes the risk (and the opportunity) from falling yields. The fund's three managers have successfully piloted Metropolitan West Total Return M (MWTRX), a more conventional bond fund, since 1997. Unconstrained invests similarly--with one big difference: It sells some Treasuries short to minimize interest-rate risk. If interest rates rise one percentage point, the fund is positioned to lose only about 1% in price. Unconstrained owns a stew of low- and high-quality corporate bonds and mortgages. Average credit quality is double-B, putting the fund's holdings in junk bond territory. Since its inception in late 2011, the fund has returned an annualized 11.0%, compared with 2.4% for the Barclays Aggregate index. Expenses are 0.99% annually and the yield is 1.8%.
RiverNorth/Oaktree High Income (RNOTX) is one of the few ways for individuals to access the junk-bond expertise of
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Steven T. Goldberg is an investment adviser in the Washington, D.C. area and a contributing columnist for Kiplinger. .