In rising interest rate environment buy only short term bond funds (1m-2y maturity).azb1 said:
As Interest rates are rising, Is it good idea to buy some BOnd ???
Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund (BND)
has Yield 3.06%..
Is it Good Idea???
Or wait for some time ??
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It's funnier to see the Crypto people lose -90% of their net worth and still come back to make fun of the "portfolio people"JohnnyDoe said:
Funny to see how the advocates of the modern portfolio theory try to handle fixed income allocation now
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You didn't get my point.Silvio said:
It's funnier to see the Crypto people lose -90% of their net worth and still come back to make fun of the "portfolio people"
Most crypto people will sell their left testicle right now to be down only -15% from the top.
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Only if you will be able to time bond bottom in rising interest rates environment once FED kills inflation then is good buy bonds beacouse rates will be lower in future. Inflation will eat your "bond" and buying power. Is hard to tame inflation when inflation is 9% in US while rates 2%.
It's great that you're "cool" with being down -90%, I thought we're comparing portfolios though and not the ability to withstand pain.JohnnyDoe said:
You didn't get my point.
Crypto people are cool with whatever retracement from ATH, as usual. Otherwise they would already be extinct, given the lack of sufficient amounts of testicles available.
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that's not what they are supposed to do according to the modern portfolio theory. Firstly, the sigma adjusted performance is equal to those of stocks. Secondly, the fixed income that they are supposed to generate is effectively a fixed loss being lower than inflation. QE has fucked all up, we probably need a new portfolio theory.Silvio said:
So even in these incredibly bad times for bonds, global bonds still did what they supposed to do - be the defensive part of the portfolio.
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For once, I agree with you. The 60/40 stock and bond portfolio is dead, at least until capitalism returns and the governments of the world end their mad experiment with the financial repression of artificially low interest rates that skew market forces. Unfortunately, that will occur only after great pain, when those governments have no other choice but to capitulate to free market forces -- as they eventually must.