Repeat After Me: “Bonds Don’t Necessarily Lose Value When Rates Rise”

If you take a basic finance course the first thing you learn about bonds is that bond prices are inversely correlated to interest rates. So, when rates rise bonds prices fall and vice versa. This idea is so ingrained into people’s heads that it seems to have become the only thing that anyone can remember about bonds. And in today’s low-interest rate environment this thinking is usually applied as follows:

  1. Bond prices will fall if interest rates rise.
  2. Interest rates are near 0% so they can’t go much lower which means they might go up a lot.
  3. If interest rates go up a lot I will get taken out back and beaten like a red-headed stepchild.¹

There’s only one problem with this thinking – it’s not necessarily right! The correct statement is if interest rates rise then bonds prices fall in the short term. Take, for instance, the case of a 5 year bond with a face value of $1,000 paying 2% per year. If interest rates rise by 1% every year that bond still pays you 2% every year plus you get your principal upon maturity.²  Here’s how the value of that bond looks over the course of your 5 years:

If you held on for 5 years you didn’t lose money despite the fact that interest rates rose. This is slightly more complex in the case of a bond fund which is essentially a constant maturity bond, but the same general principles apply. If you missed my recent discussion on that you can read it here.

Importantly though, had you sold the bond in any period prior to year 4 then you did take a capital loss. And this brings us to the primary problem with bond investing and asset allocation in general – most people don’t apply the right maturity and/or duration to their portfolios. Most of us suffer from a horrid case of short-termism.  As I like to say, asset allocation is all about asset and liability mismatch. We have short-term cash flow liabilities that we try to match to longer-term assets. Most people want high returns today from instruments that are not designed to provide us with immediate returns. This results in a misuse of the instrument as a bond (and even a stock to some degree) is designed to pay you a certain amount over certain periods of time.  If you’re not prepared to potentially hold the instrument for most or all of its maturity then your risk of permanent loss increases substantially.


¹ – I do not provide investment advice or child-rearing advice on this website. Though I do have a red-headed younger brother who, on occasion, deserves to be beaten.  

² – Investors these days are deathly afraid of a rising rate environment. I think this is overblown. Holding long-term bonds in a rising rate environment is only scary if you have no intention of holding them for a long time. The far scarier environment for most people is the one where rates stay very low because economic growth remains weak. In this case bonds won’t hedge stocks all that well and investors with a low risk tolerance will struggle to generate sufficient returns.  

Disclosure: None.

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