I don’t like this new I Bond interest rate, should I sell and invest elsewhere?

Savings-Bond-I

The Treasury announced this week that it is dropping the fixed rate on Series I Savings Bonds to 0.0% for new bonds sold through April 30, 2015, and lowering the inflation-adjusted rate for all I Bonds to 1.48% for six months. Some investors might be wondering: Should I sell out and put my money elsewhere?

NO!

This is not the time to be selling your I Bonds. If you already own I Bonds, the new fixed rate of 0.0% doesn’t matter, because that applies only to new I Bonds purchased through April 30. I Bonds are unusual investments, with two interest rates combining into a ‘composite’ rate. So the composite rate varies from I Bond to I Bond, depending on when you purchased it.

  • The fixed rate will never change. So if you bought an I Bond in 2014 with a fixed rate of 0.2%, it will continue to have a 0.2% fixed rate for the life of the bond. Purchases through April 30, 2015, will have a fixed rate of 0.0%. I Bonds I bought back in 2000 still carry a fixed rate of 3.4% and will continue to do so through 2030.
  • The inflation-adjusted rate changes each six months to reflect the running rate of inflation. That rate is currently set at 1.48% annualized. It will adjust again on May 1, 2015, for all I Bonds, no matter when they were purchased. (Although the effective start date of the new interest rate can vary depending on the month you bought the I Bond, a Treasury oddity.)

So you need to consider:

  • What is the fixed rate on your current holdings? If you have been buying I Bonds for many years, your fixed rates might range from 3.60% (May 2000) to 0.0% (November 2010, and often since). See a chart of the fixed-rate history.  If you have I Bonds with a fixed rate of 1% or above, these are valuable assets and you want to hold them as long as possible, right up to maturity if you can. I Bonds with a 0.0% fixed rate might be tempting targets to sell, but not just yet.
  • Why keep an I Bond with a 0.0% fixed rate? I am holding several of these, and I don’t plan to sell. The reason: The Treasury limits your purchases to $10,000 per person per year in TreasuryDirect, plus $5,000 in paper I Bonds in lieu of a tax refund. The goal in I Bond investing is to build a cache of inflation-protected money for use in the future. You can’t build your total when you are also selling.
  • Why did you buy I Bonds in the first place? I Bonds are possibly the most conservative investment on Earth, because they hedge against inflation with 100% safety. Plus your holdings grow tax-deferred and aren’t taxed at the state level. They carry easy terms — you can sell after one year with a minor penalty and after five years with no penalty. For example, they could be used for 1) college savings, 2) a future down payment on a home, or 3) future retirement income. If you were saving for college or a home, and the time comes to sell, then you should sell. But if you were saving for future retirement income, now is not the time to sell, unless you need the money to meet current expenses.
  • But I can get a 5-year bank CD paying 2.3%! Good point, and I think that’s a sensible investment. But I wouldn’t sell my tax-deferred  I Bonds, which are growing at the rate of inflation (at least) to invest in bank CD, which is immediately taxable and carries no inflation protection. These are compatible investments, use them both.

I often point out that a lot of very wealthy people buy I Bonds up to the limit every year and scheme to get that $5,000 tax refund to bolster their holdings. Why do that do that? They are already rich, right? And that is the point. I Bonds are excellent investment for capital preservation, pushing money safely into the future.

When should you sell I Bonds? When you need the money — for college, a home, expenses in retirement, even for a trip around the world. But not to invest that money elsewhere.

In the future, if the I Bond fixed rate rises to something like 1%, I could see the point in selling bonds with a 0.0% fixed rate for the new issues. You’d trigger income taxes, but the investment would still make sense. Your holdings would remain stable that calendar year, but you could invest other money in TIPS to bolster you inflation-protected assets.

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Treasury drops Series I Savings Bond fixed rate to 0.0%

Savings-Bond-IThe US Treasury just announced that is it lowering the fixed rate paid on Series I Savings Bonds to 0.0% for bonds purchased from Nov. 1, 2014, to April 30, 2015. It also announced that the new variable (inflation-adjusted) rate for I Bonds will be 1.48%, as I predicted back on Oct. 22.

This means I Bonds purchased through April 30, 2015 will carry a composite, annualized rate of 1.48% for six months.

The move to drop the fixed rate to 0.0% is a disappointment, because the fixed rate carries with an I Bond for its entire life, up to 30 years. The variable rate changes every six months for all I Bonds. But the Treasury did follow its typical pattern. With a 10-year TIPS yielding only 0.40% today (plus inflation), there wasn’t much justification in keeping the fixed rate above zero.

The fixed rate dropped to 0.0% in November 2010 and stayed there for three years, until November 2013, when the Treasury surprised everyone by raising the fixed rate to 0.2%. At the time, a 10-year TIPS was yielding 0.52%. That lasted six months, and the rate dipped to 0.1% in April 2014, and now to zero in November 2014.

Prediction. I bought my full allocation of I Bonds ($10,000 per person through TreasuryDirect) back in February, so I locked in that 0.2% fixed rate. I suspect most potential buyers have already purchased their 2014 allocation, so the Treasury won’t be selling a lot of I Bonds through Dec. 31, 2014.

In January, when the 2015 allocation limit reopens purchases, there won’t be any reason to buy, and smart investors will wait until later in 2015 to see if the fixed rate rises again. It will be reset on May 1 and Nov. 2, 2105. So the Treasury won’t be selling a lot of I Bonds in the first quarter of 2015, either.

EE Bonds. The Treasury also gave a little slap to holders of Series EE Savings Bonds purchased after May 2005, which were paying 0.5% interest annually with a guarantee to double the principal balance in 20 years. So if you hold these for 20 years, you get 3.5%. The Treasury today dropped the annual interest rate for all EE Bonds to 0.1%, but the 20-year guarantee still holds.

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Checking in on TIPS as quantitative easing ends (we hope)

A brief history. The Federal Reserve started its latest round of quantitative easing (QE3, in this case) on Sept. 13, 2012, when it launched a $40 billion per month program to buy mortgage-backed securities. This eventually morphed into ‘Operation Twist’ in December 2012 when the bond buying expanded to long-term Treasurys and bumped up to $85 million a month.

Fed balance sheet

SOURCE: Wall Street Journal

This launched a period of severely low interest rates, especially for Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities. On Sept. 17, 2012, I posted ‘Are TIPS a good investment in 2012?‘ which I answered with one word: No. (But then I rambled on, of course.)

On June 12, 2013, then-Fed-Chairman Ben Bernanke announced a ‘tapering’ of the bond-buying program, which finally ended this month. So for now, there technically is no active QE program, but the Fed continues to hold a massive portfolio of Treasurys and mortgage-backed securities, which at this point it can’t unload. This is from an excellent analysis in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal:

The central bank’s holdings of securities, loans and other assets have increased from $2.825 trillion when the program started to $4.482 trillion. The Fed has said it plans to maintain this level of holdings until after it starts raising short-term interest rates. Eventually, officials expect to reduce the holdings gradually by letting securities mature without reinvesting the proceeds.

What QE has meant for TIPS. My belief is that the September announcement of QE3 and the December 2012 expansion set up TIPS for a mighty fall in 2013. TIPS yields were already extremely low in mid-2013, and a new round of QE set off fears of future inflation, which bolstered the appeal of TIPS. Prices rose and yields fell.

Inflation, however, never became a factor, rising to just over 2% a year in early 2014 before slipping back down to 1.7%. So as the economy improved, and overall interest rates began rising in mid-2013, the appeal of TIPS was declining. A double whammy, resulting in a -8.65% drop in the TIP ETF in 2013.

This chart summarizes what has happened since QE3 was launched in September 2012:

QE ChangeThere are several striking statistics to consider in this chart:

  1. TIPS inflation breakeven rates have plummeted in the two years since QE3 was launched, dropping 50 basis points for a 5-year TIPS, 47 basis points for a 10-year TIPS and 43 basis points for a 30-year TIPS. Despite two years of Fed stimulus, inflation expectations are very low.
  2. The stock market, represented by the S&P 500, has had a great run, rising 36.6%.
  3. Despite that surge in wealth, inflation has been muted – rising just 2.9% overall in the 25 months of QE3.
  4. The yield on a 30-year Treasury has barely budged, rising just 9 basis points. Compare that with the yield of a 5-year TIPS, rising a whopping 167 basis points.

Conclusion. QE3 was expected to bolster TIPS, but that was a false premise back in 2012. Inflation didn’t rise, yet interest rates did eventually rise, and that caught TIPS investors in a bind: yields rising faster than the overall bond market.

On the other hand, today’s very low breakevens for TIPS across the maturity scale make them a much more attractive investment than they were in 2012. And those low breakevens give TIPS investors a ‘margin of safety’ …. because TIPS yields may now rise at a slower pace than the overall bond market, just the opposite of what happened in 2013.

I wouldn’t call TIPS a ‘buy’ in October 2014, but their appeal is rising.

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30-year TIPS reopening auctions with a yield of 0.985%

The Treasury just announced that the reopening of  CUSIP 912810RF7 – a 29-year 4-month Treasury Inflation-Protected Security – auctioned with a yield to maturity of 0.985%, a bit higher than looked likely this morning.

This TIPS – which first auctioned on Feb. 20 with a yield of 1.495% – carries a coupon rate of 1.375%, so today’s buyers are paying a premium. The adjusted cost is $112.17 per $100 of value, but this includes about 2% of accrued inflation since the original issue.

This is the first 29- to 30-year TIPS auction since February 2013 to come in with a yield under 1%.

Inflation breakeven rate. With a 30-year nominal Treasury currently yielding 3.05%, this TIPS has an inflation breakeven rate of 2.065%, making it very attractive against a traditional Treasury. It means that if inflation averages more than 2.065% over the next 30 years, this TIPS will outperform the nominal Treasury.

TIPS yields had been rising heading into the auction, and CUSIP 912810RF7 closed Wednesday with a yield of 0.922%. So today’s buyers gained from the market weakness (TIPS prices fall when yields rise). Here’s a look at the immediate reaction in the TIP ETF, which looks a bit negative:

TIP Oct. 23

Reaction to the auction

Despite the slight boost in expected yield, Bloomberg reports strong demand for this TIPS reopening, at least from foreign central banks, who are typically ‘indirect bidders’:

Indirect bidders bought 64.5 percent of the $7 billion in Treasury Inflation Protected Securities yesterday, compared with the average of 46.7 percent at the past 10 auctions. … The transaction was rated a “four” by seven primary dealers, based on a scale of one through five, with one being a failed auction and five judging the results as outstanding.

The Wall Street Journal managed to write an entire article about weakness in the Treasury markets on Thursday without mentioning the TIPS auction. TIPS don’t get a lot of respect, I realize, but the WSJ did manage to give us this Thursday: ‘Janus Capital makes room for Bill Gross, his sunglasses‘:

Wall Street wants to know how Gross is doing at his new digs. So far, the feedback is hugely positive. Janus CEO Dick Weil described Gross as having, “a positive halo effect for the fixed-income team, but also for the whole firm.”

Well, good for Bill Gross and Janus. Until the next temper tantrum.

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Quick check-in on today’s 30-year TIPS reopening

The US Treasury is reopening CUSIP 912810RF7 today, creating a 29-year 4-month Treasury Inflation-Protected Security with a coupon rate of of 1.375%. Non-competitive bids (such as through TreasuryDirect) need to be placed by noon, the auction closes for competitive bids at 1 p.m.

This TIPS – first issued in February – trades on the secondary market, so we can get a pretty good idea of today’s price. Here’s where we stand at 10:05 a.m.:

  • Bloomberg’s Current Yields page shows this TIPS trading right now with a yield of 0.94% and a price of about $111.10 per $100 of value. This is up about 5 basis points from when I wrote about this auction last week.
  • The Wall Street Journal’s Closing Prices chart shows this TIPS closed yesterday with a yield of 0.922% and a price of about $111.30.
  • The Treasury’s Real Yields estimate shows that a full-term 30-year TIPS closed yesterday at 0.94.
  • The TIP ETF is currently trading at $113.52, down about 0.25%, which indicates that yields are slightly rising.

So it looks like this TIPS might price with a yield of about 0.95% and somewhere around $111 per $100 of value, which results from the coupon rate of 1.375%.

This is down substantially from recent 30-year auctions, but much higher than the depths of yield we hit two years ago. I’ll post the auction results after 1 p.m. and provide more reaction later.

Meanwhile, you can study this … the results of every 29- to 30-year TIPS auction in history:

30 year TIPS

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