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  

The dangers of the growing bond bubble

InvestmentNews - August 22, 2010


DESPITE A DECADE of bitter experience, we have learned little about the buildup and bursting of speculative bubbles. After the euphoric upward march of technolgy stocks and their subsequent collapse, we ignored signs of an emerging housing bubble. We are still paying the price for the implosion of that overheated market, and will do so for many years to come.

Meanwhile, many signs point to the ballooning of a bond bubble. And that speculative swelling, which has been building since 2008, may be ready to burst, too.

Such has been the demand for bonds of all kinds in the past two years that yields have plunged to levels recently thought unimaginable.

The average yield on five-year Treasuries, for example, was 4.43% in 2007. In 2008, the yield dropped to 2.80% and was down to 2.2% last year.

Last week, it stood at 1.38%.

Yields on 10-year and 30-year Treasuries have fallen by comparable amounts.

In 2007, the average yield on a 10-year T-bond was 4.63%. Last week, it had fallen to 2.56%.

Yields on 30-year bonds fell to 3.71%, from 4.84%, over the same period.

In their rush to safety, Treasury investors have been willing to tie their money up for long periods in exchange for very little return.

Some may be betting that the Federal Reserve will play its hand perfectly and prevent erosion of the dollar's purchasing power despite its huge injections of liquidity into the economy. Others apparently are more concerned about return of investment than return on investment.

Unfortunately, if inflation should rear its ugly head, interest rates will rise in response, and the bond bubble will burst. If that were to happen, investors would still receive their investment back if they held their bonds until maturity — but not in real terms, of course.

Worse, if they were to sell after rates rose, they would suffer a capital loss.

Those most exposed to the bond bubble are those who have been tempted by the higher yields of junk bonds and junk bond exchange-traded funds. Companies issued a record $14.3 billion of junk bonds during the week ended Aug. 13, and investors have snapped them up.

Although returns on junk also have been driven down as the demand for bonds has surged, the bonds still offer significantly higher yields than Treasuries or even investment-grade corporate bonds. While triple-A 10-year corporates were yielding 2.84% on Aug. 16, many junk bond issues could be found with yields greater than 7%.

For example, Toys R Us Inc. sold a seven-year bond yielding 7.5%. On average, 10-year junk bonds yield about 8.5%.

Like Treasury investors, junk bond owners could be hurt by inflation, which would drive down the price of their bonds as rates rose, as well as the value of their principal when — and if — it were returned.

For the complete article visit InvestmentNews.com


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