BondsOnline NetworkBondsOnlineBondsOnline QuotesPreferredsOnlineYield and IncomeYield and Income

BondsOnline Fixed Income Investing              

Preferreds Online - Tools for Income Stock Investing: Preferred Stocks, Lists, Dividends, and Yield to Call Calculator

BondsOnline.com: instant access to and extensive coverage of over 3.5 million stocks, bonds, indexes and other securities covering major and emerging markets and exchanges across the globe.
Treasury Bonds Bond Yields Treasury Bonds Online Bond Search Research Bonds
 
Bond News
Bonds Online
Bonds Online
Bonds Online
Bonds Online
5/10/2013Market Performance

S&P Indices
Municipal Bonds
S&P National Bond Index 3.00% 0.02
S&P California Bond Index 2.96% 0.02
S&P New York Bond Index 3.13% 0.02
S&P National 0-5 Year Municipal Bond Index 0.70% 0.01
S&P/BGCantor US Treasury Bond 400.09 -0.87
More
Income Equities:
Preferred Stocks
S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index 848.03 -1.02
S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index (CAD) 636.26 5.15
S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index (TR) 1,701.05 -1.30
S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index (TR) (CAD) 1,276.26 10.89
REITs
S&P REIT Index 174.07 -0.65
S&P REIT Index (TR) 425.30 -1.56
MLPs
S&P MLP Index 2,469.58 14.93
S&P MLP Index (TR) 5,428.50 32.82
See Data

Income Security Dividends

Security Amount Ex-Div Date
AESYY $0.28 IAD increased from 0.0303 to 0.2771   May 16
AQN PRA $0.28   Jun 12
BAM PFA $0.28   Jun 12
BAM PFB $0.26   Jun 12
BAM PFC $0.30 IAD decreased from 0.4119 to 0.3031   Jun 12
BAM PRG $0.24   Jul 11
BAM PRJ $0.34   Jun 12
From PreferredsOnline
Click Here for More Information

Bonds Online
Print this Page Print Version   Email this Page to a Friend Forward to a Friend     Share  

Bonds Look Mighty Bubbly

Sy Harding is president of Asset Management Research Corp., editor of the free morning blog at www.streetsmartpost.com 

Have you ever seen so many bullish articles in the press regarding bonds, or such a dominance of buy recommendations for bonds and bond funds? Given the history of sentiment being at extremes of bullishness at tops in any market, from beanie babies and Barbie dolls to dotcom stocks and real estate, it has my attention.

In the early 1930’s, after the 1929 crash, Wall Street could not get nervous investors interested in stocks again. However, with interest rates dropped to extreme lows in the Great Depression, those who still had money were eager to invest in something that would provide more income than they could receive on savings accounts. As a result Wall Street had no trouble selling them bonds.

It was later said to have been a slower disaster than the stock market crash, but almost as devastating. Bonds decline in price when interest rates and yields rise. Over the next two decades interest rates began to rise from their extreme lows, and the price of bonds declined. Investors new to bonds discovered it was not a safe haven to be receiving 4% annual interest on bonds if the bonds were dropping 10% in price annually due to rising interest rates.

I bring that up because of reports this week that the major U.S. banks are on a tear to raise huge amounts of low cost capital by issuing bonds while rates are at record lows, and while investor demand for higher returns is on the rise as an alternative to stocks. Some of the low cost capital being raised is being used to pay off the higher cost bonds and debt on the banks’ balance sheets. Moody’s estimates that U.S. banks have already refinanced $200 billion of the $372 billion in debt that is coming due in 2010.

The Financial Times quotes an executive with one of the big banks as saying, “There’s a bit of a food fight among investors to get hold of paper from U.S. banks.” (It’s not the same situation in Europe where banks need to raise capital but are struggling to issue new debt in the midst of the euro zone debt crisis).

The large U.S. banks are not the only corporations having an easy time issuing new bonds, benefiting from the flight to safety. Investors have been piling into corporate and treasury bonds for quite some time, and it continues. The Investment Company Institute, which tracks money flows in retail mutual funds, estimates that individual investors pulled another $9 billion from U.S. stock funds in the first three weeks of July, even as the stock market was rallying again, and poured $20 billion more into corporate and government bond funds.

Tom Lee, chief U.S. equity strategist at JPMorgan Chase, speaking at the Reuters Investment Outlook meeting in New York last Wednesday said , “Retail investors buying bonds today, at a time when the supply of corporate bonds is shrinking . . . they’re chasing a bubble.”

Assuming the issuer does not default on its bonds, an investor will not lose money on individual bonds if they are held to maturity, when the issuer returns the borrowed money to the investor. However, holding to maturity may be difficult, as bond investors discovered in the late 1930s and 1940s, once stocks begin producing 10% to 25% in some years, while the 20-year corporate bond will continue to pay only 4.5% or whatever annually to maturity (and meanwhile may be significantly underwater until maturity due to rising interest rates).

As Tom Lee of JP Morgan also said Wednesday, “Have Americans ever been satisfied with earning a steady but low rate of return? What we have in American history is rolling from bubble to bubble, whether it’s stocks, real estate, commodities, emerging markets, time shares . . . when one bubble bursts they are moved to the next one.” Lee implies that the bubble currently forming is in bonds.

But it should be okay as long as the Fed holds interest rates at record low levels near zero for “an extended period of time” as they say they will, and particularly if the stock market has another leg to go on the downside (keeping the appeal of safe havens alive). But investors probably need to be aware of the potential that it is a bond bubble, and be prepared to bail out early when rates and yields begin rising, or if the stock market bottoms and begins a new leg up. With so much money in bonds and bond funds, the exit doors will be crowded when the time comes.


Bonds Online
Partner Market Place
Bond Maturity
Shop4Bonds * Interactive bond trading platform * Over 45,000 bonds * Buy and sell online * Live bond quotes * No sign-up fees * Trade Now - A service of J W Korth & Company - jwkorth.com | shop4bonds.com FINRA SIPC

Yield & Income Newsletter - If dividend income, low price volatility, and growth are important to you.... We don't just pick we survey the leading investment banks and brokerages for their best recommendations and strategies, and pass them along to you.
Bonds Online
Stuff to look at
Yield and Income Newsletter: A must have for income investors. subscribe NOW

S&P Commentary and Newsletters: S&P
Bonds Online
BondsOnline Advisor
Income Security Recommendation January 2013 Issue.

Keep up with monthly, in-depth coverage of fixed income market strategies, commentary, and insights as seen by our sources. Sign up for the free BondsOnline Advisor now!

Unsubscribe here [+]
Bonds Online
Bonds Online
Bonds Online