Bonds Investment TV

Merkel Rejects Euro Bonds Again After Auction


By Tony Czuczka and Brian Parkin - Nov 24, 2011 11:12 PM GMT+0800
Article from Bloomberg

German Chancellor Angela Merkel again ruled out joint euro-area borrowing and an expanded role for the European Central Bank in fighting the debt crisis.

Euro bonds are “not needed and not appropriate,” Merkel said today at a press conference with Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti and French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Strasbourg, France. She said euro bonds would “level the difference” in euro-region interest rates. “It would be a completely wrong signal to ignore those diverging interest rates because they’re an indicator of where work still needs to be done.”

Merkel, the leader of Europe’s biggest economy, has so far backed a focus on debt reduction and closer economic coordination, calling for a revision of European Union treaties, a move that threatens to bog down in a multiyear negotiation, as core euro economies risk succumbing to the contagion that began in Greece in 2009.

German analysts, newspaper editorials and opposition politicians stepped up calls for Merkel to shift from an incremental approach after the government sold a fraction of the bonds it auctioned yesterday.

“As the crisis deepens with yesterday’s bond auction, the veil has been torn off Merkel’s policy of muddling through,” Sebastian Dullien, a senior fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations in Berlin, said in a telephone interview. “It’s only got us closer to the end-game, either the breakup of the euro or euro bonds. The strategy has failed.”

Losing ‘Sex-Appeal’

“The flop shows that bunds are losing their sex-appeal as an extremely secure investment,” Germany’s Handelsblatt business newspaper said in a commentary today. “This shows the crisis has reached the entire euro-zone core. France, Finland, the Netherlands and Austria have to pay more interest for their bonds than just a few months ago.”

German bunds fell a second day. The 10-year bund yield rose as much as 12 basis points, or 0.12 percentage point, to 2.26 percent, the highest since Oct. 28, and was at 2.19 percent at 12:55 p.m. London time. Bids at yesterday’s auction of 10-year securities amounted to 3.889 billion euros ($5.2 billion), out of a maximum target for the sale of 6 billion euros.

Handelsblatt said the shortfall was a “wake-up call” for Merkel’s government, which opposes both issuing bonds for the entire 17-member euro region and allowing the ECB to buy unlimited amounts of euro-nation bonds.

Germany Rejects

The German government stood by its rejection of any common bonds for the euro bloc following a report in Bild newspaper that Merkel’s coalition is concerned it may have to agree to euro bonds under certain conditions. The newspaper didn’t say where it got the information.

“We say ‘no’ to euro bonds,” Economy Minister Philipp Roesler, who is also vice chancellor, said today in parliament in Berlin. “A transfer union would be wrong because it would mean German taxpayers pick up the costs. Euro bonds are wrong because they would mean a rise in interest rates for Germany.”

That contrasted with Handelsblatt’s view. “The ECB remains the only investor that can keep down the interest rates of bonds from euro states in the short-term,” Handelsblatt said. “In the long-term, there’s no getting around the necessity of creating fiscal union with at least partial euro bonds.”

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper said that while the low demand for German bunds was “no reason to panic” it shows that “around 2 percent interest for investors in these uncertain times is simply not enough.”

‘Moment of Truth’

“Pressure is growing on Merkel,” said Die Welt newspaper. “Up until now she managed to steer the nation through the crisis so that the people didn’t really notice the turbulence.”
Merkel now faces a “moment of truth” in the crisis as her opposition to ECB bond purchases and euro bonds “is being challenged,” Die Welt said.

German opposition parties ratcheted up calls for euro bonds. Frank-Walter Steinmeier, parliamentary leader of the Social Democratic Party in parliament, said on Nov. 21 that his party wants euro bonds as part of a solution to the crisis.

“A model using euro bonds that links European bonds to a reform program is the better alternative,” Juergen Trittin, a co-leader of the opposition Greens party, said in an N24 television interview today.

In Paris, the French government underlined calls for giving the ECB a bigger role in fighting the crisis.

“What’s not working is confidence and that’s what we must restore,” French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said today in an interview on France Inter radio. “I hope that reflection will move forward that the ECB should have an essential role to restore confidence.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Tony Czuczka in Strasbourg, France at aczuczka@bloomberg.net Brian Parkin in Berlin at bparkin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net

Article from Bloomberg

Risks, rewards of bond investing


BY MARK JEWELL
Associated Press
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Article from The Post and Courier

BOSTON -- Baby boomers fully embraced the stock market by riding its ups and downs throughout their peak income years.

But now that the oldest boomers are turning 65, their focus has turned toward ensuring a steady income from their investments. And they're likely to find the answer is to put money in bonds rather than stocks, as recent market volatility shows.

Consider that bonds have made stock returns look puny in recent years. Broadly diversified bond mutual funds have provided investors an average annualized return of nearly 5.6 percent over the past five years. That's better than all of the domestic stock fund categories that Morningstar tracks.

With retirement just around the corner for such a sizeable population, it's understandable that investors have deposited a net $670 billion into bond mutual funds since January 2009, while consistently pulling their money out of stock funds. Fidelity Investments says its clients alone have added $100 billion in new cash to bond investments over the past three years.

But do the stock-savvy boomers and others who have flocked to fixed-income investments really understand bond investing, and the potential risks and rewards?

Many fund companies believe there's a pressing need for investors to bone up on their bond basics, so the companies are putting more resources into the investment products that have been drawing the most new cash. Fidelity upgraded its online resources for bond investors in September, and Nuveen Investments made a similar move this month.

It's a recognition that bonds are more complex than stocks, with more moving parts that influence investment returns: yield, price and interest rates, for starters.

Interest rates are perhaps the most critical risk for bond investors now. Short-term rates are near zero, and have nowhere to go but up. When they eventually rise, if the economic recovery really gets going, expect to see lower bond returns and possibly losses.

The economy is growing so slowly that interest rates aren't likely to spike in the short run. Any increase would be unwelcome for investors.

"It's a phenomenon that bond fund investors haven't faced in a very long time," says analyst Loren Fox of the fund industry consultancy Strategic Insight. "Some will be surprised and disappointed when it happens." Indeed, investors have become accustomed to declining rates for the better part of 30 years.

Below are key points investors should know about bonds, and a snapshot of the potential risks that investors face:

Definition

At the most basic level, bond investors are lending their cash to a company, in the case of corporate bonds, or to government in the case of U.S. Treasurys or municipal bonds.

In contrast, stock investors hold an ownership stake in a company, however small.

Bonds are considered safer than stocks because there's typically a low risk that the borrower won't repay the loan when it's due, or default by failing to make scheduled interest payments.

In contrast, the markets view of a company's profit prospects will vary widely over time, which makes stock prices volatile.

Yield

Bonds pay fixed returns. The yield is the amount an investor receives for holding a bond until the date when it matures, or principal is repaid, expressed as a percentage.

Interest is paid regularly to investors through coupon payments. The coupon is the annual rate of interest divided by the purchase price, meaning a bond selling for $1,000 with a 5 percent coupon rate offers a 5 percent current yield.

Price

Unless a bond is held to maturity, the return investors receive is also a function of price changes. For example, that bond that yielded 5 percent at a price of $1,000 would yield 10 percent at a price of just $500. As a bond's price falls, its yield rises, and vice versa.

Prices change because investors continually process new information about the risks they face from factors such as interest rates, inflation and credit risks -- the potential for a default.

If investors can buy newly issued bonds paying higher interest than previously issued bonds, the value of the older bonds declines. On the flip side, an older bond will rise in price if yields for newly issued bonds are lower.

Individual bonds vs. funds

Investing in individual bonds offers some certainty if the investor holds them until maturity. Investors receive pre-determined interest payments along with repayment of principal, provided the company or government issuing the bond makes good on its obligations.

But it's not easy for an individual investor to research whether a bond is attractively priced relative to its credit risks and other potential pitfalls.

Investing in a bond mutual fund, rather than an individual bond, means an investor faces less risk from the possibility of a default. Bond funds typically hold diversified portfolios of hundreds of bonds. If just a single bond defaults, the impact on the overall portfolio is likely to be modest. However, a fund's returns will vary because the fund manager must continually reinvest as bonds mature.

Because bond prices fluctuate, it's possible for mutual funds to lose money. That can happen when the fund generates less interest income than going market rates for newly issued bonds. And investing in a bond fund means paying fees for professional expertise.

What's more, there's no certainty that expertise will generate returns superior to those investors could get on their own, or by investing in a low-cost bond index fund.

Risks

Bond investors now face substantial long-term risk from rising interest rates. When the Federal Reserve raises rates, returns for different types of bonds will be affected differently depending on factors such as their maturity dates.

For example, one reason that 30-year Treasurys offer a higher return than T-bills maturing in a few months is that there's a greater chance that rates will rise over the long haul, hurting returns. Longer-duration bonds pay investors more to offset that risk.

Inflation is also low, and the eventual likelihood of rising prices poses risks for bond investors, similar to interest rate risks. However, certain types of bonds offer protection. The best known are Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, or TIPS, a type of Treasury bond whose payout is adjusted every six months for inflation.

Article from The Post and Courier

How to use bonds to cut investment risk


Article from MSN Money

When paired with stocks, bonds diminish risk without crimping long-run returns. Forget fancy formulas -- 60/40 or 70/30 works for just about everybody. Here’s how to get started.

For the vast majority of investors, bonds serve a single, overriding role -- as ballast. True, bonds function well for income seekers, and, in the hands of an adept speculator, they can beat the stock market for long stretches. But most importantly, bonds help keep a stock-focused portfolio sturdy -- steadily, predictably sailing toward long-run returns.

Bonds suffered neglect during the 1990s bull market in stocks. Investors parked ever more of their assets in equities, afraid to miss out on the rocket ride. But when the rocket crashed in 2000, stocks-only portfolios shattered. Better-diversified accounts, however, enjoyed much of the moon shot without the crash landing.

Find the right mix

The first fixed-income question for most investors is, what's the right ratio of bonds to stocks?

Michael Holland, who manages the Holland Balanced fund (HOLBX), strongly advocates a 60/40 ratio of stocks to bond for most investors. With this mix, investors can expect 80% of the stock market's long-run return but with a truly moderate level of volatility.

Holland's fund offers something of a test lab -- and wouldn't be hard to emulate. It's split almost exactly 60/40, with the stock component spread over about 20 blue chips and the bond portion almost exclusively in Treasurys, the rock-solid bonds issued by the U.S. government. (Holland's tiny fund had only $50 million under management in early 2003. His marketing consists of one Wall Street Journal ad once a year, plus annual ads in the magazines Harvard and Nantucket. He says his 2,500 or so holders never sell.)
A $10,000 deposit in Holland's fund in April 1997 (its inception) was worth $11,711 in January 2003. An identical deployment in the Vanguard 500 Index fund (VFINX) amounted to $12,162. In 2001, when the S&P 500 ($INX) index skidded 11.1%, Holland's balanced fund edged down just 0.2%.

Interested in even more security than the Holland formula offers? The minimum-risk allocation mix probably is 80% fixed-income, 20% stock, according to Alan Gayle, senior investment strategist for Trusco Capital Management. Gayle oversees investment policy for a broad array of mutual funds, and he helps manage the $575 million STI Classic Growth and Income fund (CRVAX). In his view, a 100% bond allocation would be ill-advised, even for the most risk-averse investor, as bonds can suffer lengthy bear markets of their own.

Bond allocation guidelines

Whatever your asset-allocation goal, Gayle offers some guidelines for splitting up the bond portion:

Start with 25% or more in bonds with as little default risk as possible: Treasurys, inflation-indexed Treasurys or municipal bonds.

Then add bond funds with "economic exposure," such as those focused on highly rated corporate bonds. These usually outperform Treasurys when the economy heats up. (A fund offers the diversification few investors achieve with individual corporate bonds.)
Don't neglect junk bonds. They deserve at least 10% of your bond investment. They correlate more closely with equities than with fixed income, and their higher yields can compensate when Treasury yields are low. Funds are the only way to play the high-yield market.

The safest bond

The safest choice of ballast material for your portfolio is Treasurys (and inflation-protected Treasurys). Only rarely do Treasurys offer the fixed-income world's biggest returns. But their issuer -- Uncle Sam -- won't be going bankrupt. Here are the best ways to buy them:

Directly from the government. The U.S. Department of the Treasury has Web site called TreasuryDirect that allows for the purchase of Treasurys. It's easily accessible to individual investors, and Treasurys can be bought at auction at no fee.

Mutual funds. There are relatively few Treasurys-only mutual funds. But some exchange-traded funds have emerged that are modeled on Treasury indexes. (Exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, are essentially baskets of actual securities that are broken into pieces for individual investors to buy. ETFs offer low fees and have certain tax advantages.) In summer 2002, Barclays Global Advisors launched three ETFs pegged to four Lehman Brothers Treasury indexes: the Lehman 1-3 year Treasury (SHY, news, msgs), Lehman 7-10 year Treasury (IEF, news, msgs) and Lehman 20+ year Treasury (TLT, news, msgs).

Government bond funds. The most common Treasury proxy is the ubiquitous "government bond fund," which usually amalgamates Treasurys, highly rated agency debt (from the Federal Home Loan Bank, Ginnie Mae and other entities) and even short-term corporate bonds. Vanguard, T. Rowe Price and PIMCO offer government funds of various durations with excellent track records. (Just be careful which class of fund shares you buy -- sales loads can be high, particularly from PIMCO.)

Simplicity is the primary advantage of these funds. Writing a check to a fund company takes less effort than buying individual bonds and can, for some investors, be worth a small annual fee. Many financial planners scorn government-bond funds, though. The problem? Few bond funds feature a single maturity date. Most managers buy and sell to take profits or pounce on perceived bargains. The only way to guarantee stability of principal is to buy individual bonds and hold them to maturity. (An exception: American Century offers a series of "target maturity" funds that hold only bonds that mature in a single year. When held until maturity, these funds closely mirror the experience of buying individual securities.)

The municipal alternative

While Treasurys tend to be the first bond category beginning investors consider, they aren't always the best option. Treasurys perform best in tax-deferred accounts, since Uncle Sam treats interest payments as regular income. And they can melt in value during periods of inflation.

One alternative: high-rated municipal bonds. These promise Treasury-like safety from default as well as important tax breaks. Buy bonds issued by municipalities in your home state, and you usually dodge federal, state and local taxes -- the "triple tax free" promise that makes munis favored income vehicles for the well heeled.

Even for the rest of us, munis make good sense. Assume you're in a hypothetical 30% federal tax bracket. A muni yielding 5% earns just as much -- after federal taxes -- as a Treasury yielding more than 7%. In early 2003, 7% Treasurys existed only in the recollections of old-timers.

"If someone were to get a fixed-income portfolio and their money were sufficient, I would think that they should own outright some high-quality municipal bonds," says Trusco's Gayle. He recommends insured or triple-A-rated general-obligation bonds.
The main problem with munis is getting your hands on them. A round lot of any particular bond goes for as much as $250,000. Buy less and you pay a higher markup. Financial planners see $100,000 as just about the smallest allocation that can go into individual munis.

Yes, you can go the mutual fund route, as muni funds accept smaller amounts. But be careful to know exactly what you're buying. "If they're going to own mutual funds, then they need to be examining the prospectus to see what the quality parameters are," Gayle says.

MSN Money offers tools for just such an examination. Start with our Top Performers screens to find consistently performing muni funds focused on your home state. Seek a low expense ratio -- it can be as little as a quarter percentage point -- and a long-tenured manager.

Tips on TIPS

While munis guard your interest from the tax man, TIPS fend off income investors' other bugaboo: inflation. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities pay a small coupon yearly, plus their principal value is adjusted once a year to match changes in the Consumer Price Index. TIPS are cheapest when the economy is heading south and no one fears inflation. Traders hate them, but buy-and-hold investors find their inflation insurance comforting.

"It's possible sometime in our lifetime we'll have inflation again bite us in the butt," says Holland.

The downside: TIPS present tax problems. The inflation adjustment counts as income in the year it is made, even though investors don't pocket the principal until maturity. Also, TIPS are auctioned less frequently than other Treasurys. The government promises a new 10-year TIPS each July, and it reopens them for new investment in October and January.

In general, TIPS and munis move in sway with Treasurys. They make equally good ballast to counteract stock gyrations.

Reaching for yield

Money managers and investment planners debate the wisdom of sinking your entire bond allocation in low-yielding (but rock-solid) Treasurys and munis. Holland wouldn't have it any other way. But Richard Lehmann, publisher of the Forbes/Lehmann Income Securities Investor newsletter, recommends mixing it up.

Corporate bonds, junk, mortgage-backeds, mid-tier municipals and a host of other higher-yielding options abound. But it's hard or impossible for individuals to buy many of them. Minimum investments are large, and individual bonds carry exponentially more risk than a diversified bunch. Moreover, expensive research tools give professional traders huge advantages in valuing each bond's unique features -- maturity, coupon, call dates, credit rating and more. And unlike stocks, few bonds aside from Treasurys have easily accessible price histories. Fewer than 100 corporate bonds are listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

"In fixed-income investing, it is much more complicated to select the instrument you want to invest in," Lehmann says. "With common stock, everything is the same."

A typical investor seeking diversification and total return has two realistic options: Buy mutual funds or make fixed income a hobby and find a guru like Lehmann to follow. Funds encapsulate every segment of the bond market into bite-size portions, though at the price of a management fee and without a guarantee of principal. Bond newsletter writers, among whom Lehmann is the dean, make specific recommendations but leave the portfolio in your hands.

For simplicity, Trusco's Gayle suggests sticking with highly rated corporate-bond funds. He guides individual investors away from mortgage-backeds because their boom and bust cycles are less predictable. He and Holland offer a few basic rules to guide bond-fund purchases:

Pick a sensible credit-rating range. Moody's and Standard & Poor's use slightly different scales that appraise corporate bonds from D (in default) to triple-A (zero perceived default risk). Enter a fund's five-letter symbol in the MSN Money quote box, then click Fund Portfolio in the left-hand navigation -- the fund's average credit rating is the first data point you'll see. The PIMCO Total Return Fund (PTTAX), managed with great success by the legendary Bill Gross, has an average rating of double-A.

Pick a duration that doesn't make you sweat. Each bond fund has an average duration, related to (but different than) the average maturity of the fund's holdings. Duration essentially measures a bond's sensitivity to interest rates. It's given in years. PIMCO Total Return in early 2003 had an average duration of 4.4 years -- a middling number. A smaller figure offers greater defense against rising interest rates; a larger number offers more market sensitivity to declining interest rates.

Follow the other usual guidelines for buying funds. That means low fees, a reputable manager and a solid track record.

Regular maintenance pays off

Stocks have no ceiling. Theoretically, share prices can rise unceasingly so long as earnings expectations keep growing. But bonds run in cycles. They have ceilings -- and floors. Yields don't fall to zero or rise to infinity.

For that reason, they need to be treated differently than stocks. Watch a few different bond categories over time and you'll quickly learn to capitalize on their individual peaks and troughs. In early 2003, for instance, Treasurys looked very pricey, high-grade corporates were mending and junk bonds had come back from their 2002 collapse. Munis weren't sure what to make of a proposed cut in dividend taxes, which might lower their status among income investors.

But even before you harmonize with the bond universe, you can employ a mechanistic approach. Strike that stocks/bonds mix and rebalance to it once a year. Employ a similar approach with your bond holdings. Pare back winners and reallocate more to losers.

"It's very important not to take your eye off of the goal line," Gayle says.

You'll also have to decide what to do with the interest checks. In tax-deferred portfolios, they're best reinvested to avoid steep penalties.

In non-retirement holdings, income reinvestment helps build up bond allocations more quickly -- though you must weigh the costs and benefits. Interest is taxable in the year it's earned, regardless of whether it's reinvested. And taking income from bonds actually helps cut investment risk even further. If they get ploughed back in to principal, those interest checks are in play. Alternatively, they are beyond the market's reach once they go into cash or get used for everyday expenses.

At the time of original publication, Scott Gerlach owned or controlled shares in the following securities mentioned in this article: PIMCO Total Return.

Article from MSN Money