Consumer Price Index falls 0.1% in October

Investors in Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities and I Bonds have been enjoying decent returns for the last year, thanks to higher-than-expected inflation.

But that trend turned in October, with the Consumer Price Index falling 0.1% because of lower prices on gas, cars and computers. The index for all items less food and energy (the ‘core inflation rate’) rose 0.1% in October, the same increase as in September.

This October number isn’t great news for holders of TIPS, who will see their principal balances fall slightly. But over the last 12 months, CPI has increased 3.5%, still providing a return that make TIPS attractive over nominal Treasuries.

It’s also interesting that the stock market is shaky today because the price of oil is rising above $100 a barrel. If this continues. it’s likely that the recent fall in gas prices would be reversed.

Update on Nov. 17 reissue of 10-year TIPS

The market rate of the Jul 2021 TIPS that will be reissued Thursday has risen into positive territory, and the overall TIPS market has weakened slightly today. That may mean the reissue will carry a positive yield (in addition to inflation adjustment to principal).

No 9- to 10-year TIPS has ever auctioned with a negative yield, and that trend might continue. We will learn the result at 1 p.m. Thursday.

Here’s my post from last week with more information on CUSIP 912828QV5.

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Next TIPS auction: 10-year reissue auctioning Nov. 17, 2011

The U.S. Treasury has announced that the 10-year TIPS auction set for Nov. 17 will be a reissue of CUSIP 912828QV5, which originally auctioned on July 21 with a coupon rate of 0.625% and a yield to maturity, before the inflation adjustment, of 0.639%.

Back in July, I was wary of the new issue because it looked like it would auction below 0.5%. Boy, I was wrong about that! It ended up that this 10-year was quite attractive. The yield at auction ended up higher than predicted, and since then, TIPS yields have been plummeting.

Here’s the current picture for CUSIP 912828QV5:

CUSIP 912828QV5The yield to maturity is slightly negative, at -0.08%, meaning that investors today are willing to accept -0.08% less than the rate of inflation over the next 10 years.

Buyers of the Nov. 17 reissue are going to have to pay about a 6% premium to get this issue’s 0.625% coupon rate. That means a $1,000 investment is going to cost you $1,060, resulting in a yield of about -0.08%.

(That rate might not hold, however. The European debt crisis and turmoil today in the world stock markets will assure higher Treasury prices today. You can check daily TIPS prices here.)

The case for CUSIP 912828QV5. If you are buy-and-hold TIPS investor, and need to place money in a super-safe investment, this issue might still be attractive. You have few alternatives:

  • The standard 10-year Treasury today is paying 2.1% (and that could dip again this week). If you think inflation will run higher than 2.18% over the next 10 years, this TIPS is a more attractive investment.
  • The best 5-year CD you can find today is paying 1.89%.
  • The standard 5-year Treasury is paying 0.92%

I think 10-year issues are the ‘sweet spot’ TIPS investment, giving you some advantage in yield over shorter-term issues, plus they are excellent for use in a TIPS ladder, with your TIPS maturing every year in the future. (Nowadays, the 30-year TIPS is the sweet spot for yield, but lousy for a ladder for the buy-and-holders.)

If you are TIPS ‘trader,’ I can’t see buying this TIPS for quick capital gain. You should have bought it back in July.

The case against CUSIP 912828QV5. As an old-time TIPSter, I know that the ‘normal’ yield for a 10-year TIPS is in the 1.5% to 2.5% range, and I do believe we will return there if the U.S. economy gets back into growth mode. (When? In my lifetime?)

This same TIPS was reissued a month ago with a yield of 0.078%, which broke through the record low by a wide margin. One month later, the yield has fallen another 16 basis points, and could go lower by next week.

Here’s a look at every 9-to 10-year TIPS ever issued (the yield column is where you need to focus to appreciate the historical trend):

There has never been a 10-year TIPS issue or reissue with a negative yield. Will the Nov. 17 reissue finally break through this barrier?

Keep watching.

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New I Bond interest rate: 3.06% through April 30, 2012

The U.S. Treasury today announced the new inflation-adjusted interest rate for I Bonds: 3.06% through April 2012. This was a dip from the 6-month rate of 4.6% for the preceding May 1 to Oct. 31 period.

I Bond Nov. to April 2012Although 3.06% is a good six-month rate for a super-safe investment, I predict the Treasury won’t be selling a lot of I Bonds before Jan. 1. Why? Almost everyone interested in I Bonds bought to the maximum before Oct. 31, to capture the 4.6% rate for six months.

(The Treasury puts yearly limits on I Bond purchases. You can buy $5,000 in Treasury Direct and $5,000 in paper bonds. A couple can buy twice that. Paper bonds will no longer be issued after Dec. 31, except as a tax refund.)

Those May-to-October buyers will earn 4.6% for six months, and then 3.06% for six months, for a one-year  rate of return of 3.83%. I Bonds can be sold after one year (with a three-month interest penalty, or after five years with no penalty.)

So if a May-to-October buyer sells out after one year, they will have earned about 3.06% over the year. That is significant – and indicates the high desirability of I Bonds – because:

  1. The best one-year bank CDs are paying about 1% right now and average 0.73%.
  2. A one-year U.S. Treasury is paying a paltry 0.13%.

The new rate: Come Jan. 1, when most of us can buy I Bonds again, this 3.06% six-month rate is likely to look attractive. It means anyone who buys I Bonds before April 30 and holds them for the required one year will earn an interest rate of at least 1.53% over the year, even if they sell out after one year.

If you didn’t buy I Bonds up to the limit before Oct. 31, you missed an opportunity. Still, the new I Bond is preferable to any super-safe investment, including TIPS.

Here is Treasury Direct’s FAQ on I Bonds if you want to learn more.

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Reader asks: Won’t rising inflation make TIPS more valuable?

Reader LDD posted a lot of great questions about TIPS, so I will share them and attempt to provide some answers:

I am new to TIPS. I have only owned some for no more than a few months in my accounts and accounts of relatives that I manage for them. … I am still trying to figure out where prices and yield of existing TIPS go in different circumstances. I just can’t find a place that shows long-term prices and yield for TIPS like they have it all over for stocks. If inflation goes up a lot, say 12% a year, the price of existing already issued TIPS should go up on the secondary market, correct? After all, they will be earning you interest on a 12% greater principal. There are 30-year TIPS you can buy on the secondary market that pay you interest right now that is about 2.5% of the price you’d pay for them. They’re the ones that mature in April of 2029 – they’re all I own as far as TIPS go. (By the way, the two brokerage firms I use do not even offer 10-year TIPS on the secondary market). If Buffett is right and in the next decade or so inflation does get as bad as in the late 70s, the value (and price on the secondary market) of existing TIPS should be going up, correct? It seems really straight forward. Which is why I don’t understand the comment by the Calafia Beach Pundit that “If you expect the economy to eke out at least some degree of growth and if you expect inflation to rise, then you had better be prepared to see TIPS prices fall (since real yields would rise), even as rising inflation improved the effective nominal yield on TIPS.” I must really be missing something, because I don’t see how rising inflation can cause a decrease of the price on my existing TIPS.

Thought one: If inflation rises to 12% in coming years — and stays there — you are going to be extremely happy that you bought those April 2029 TIPS. That is the exact reason for buying TIPS — to protect the super-safe portion of your portfolio against higher-than-expected inflation. (Not that we would be happy about 12% inflation, of course.)

Thought two: You say that you buy TIPS through a broker on the secondary market. That’s fine, and it’s the only way to buy them in a tax-deferred account. But I do suggest opening an account at TreasuryDirect.gov and begin building a ladder of TIPS there, especially if you plan to buy and hold. In 2011, there has been a TIPS auction every month of the year, some new issues and some reissues, 5-, 10- and 30-years. There are no fees for Treasury Direct. You can also buy and hold iBonds there.

Thought three: The market value of a TIPS is established by its yield to maturity. A TIPS pays a coupon rate of interest, plus the inflation adjustment. But when it goes on auction, or when you buy it on the secondary market, you pay more (or less) than the principal value. That establishes the yield to maturity.

For example, the 30-year TIPS that reissued Oct. 20 carried a coupon rate of 2.125% but auctioned at a yield to maturity of 0.999%, meaning that buyers had to pay $132.95 for $100 of this TIPS. A few months earlier, in June this same TIPS auctioned at a  yield of 1.744 and a cost of $111.69 per $100.

So the yield of this 30-year TIPS has plummeted, and the value has soared. Will that continue? It could continue, but not forever.

Thought four: What drives the TIPS yield to maturity to rise or fall? I am not confident I know, but I can say that most experts say it is: 1) the expectation of higher inflation (which makes TIPS more appealing than nominal Treasuries or bank CDs, and 2) the overall state of the economy, with the TIPS yield rising along with the national GDP.

The U.S. inflation rate for the 12 months ending in September was 3.87%, meaning that TIPS investors (and iBond buyers) did pretty well, at least compared to investors in CDs or nominal Treasuries.

The question is: Will this continue? And is that justification for these super-low yields, by far the lowest in the dozen-year history of TIPS?

The economy is going to be the key. Back in 2009, the one-year U.S. inflation rate ran negative for eight months in a row. During this time, 10-year TIPS were yielding above 2.0%, compared with about 0.195% today.

If the fear of inflation declines, the TIPS yield should increase, and the value of existing TIPS will decline. On the other hand, if inflation stays steady in the 2 to 3% range, and there is no fear of higher inflation, TIPS yields could also rise since the fear of inflation is muted.

On the economy, Scott Grannis makes the point that TIPS yields are forecasting a super-weak economy with moderate inflation (not deflation like we had in 2009.) I think that is accurate. So one factor (the economy) is holding TIPS yields down but the other factor (moderate inflation) could cause them to rise.

That is the near term. How about the longer term?

In the life of a 30-year TIPS that you buy today – and pay a premium price to get a record low yield – the economy is going to turn around. When that happens, the 30-year yield will increase to a more normal level (above 2%) and the market value of the TIPS will decline.

Inflation itself doesn’t determine the value of a TIPS — all TIPS give you the inflation adjustment. The one factor that varies is the yield to maturity — the rate that determines the price of the TIPS on the day you buy it.

When that yield rises, the TIPS value goes down. When it falls, as has been the trend for years, the value of the TIPS rises.

If you are a buy-and-hold buyer of TIPS, I still say, ‘Don’t focus on the market price.’ Build a ladder of TIPS, hold them to maturity, and then reinvest. (Many sophisticated investors disagree with me on this. Sometimes, life’s simpler when you are unsophisticated.)

If you are a buy-and-sell investor, then you need to know the risks. The price in the future may be lower. Same goes for investors in TIPS mutual funds, which have sold off a little recently but are still at historically high prices.

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Reissue of 30-year TIPS auctions at record-low 0.999%

The U.S Treasury has announced the results of its reissue of a 30-year  Treasury Inflation-Protected Security, CUSIP 912810QP6, which drew a yield-to-maturity of 0.999%. In addition, the principal of this TIPS increases with the rate of inflation until maturity.

That was a bit lower than the 1.038% experts were expecting.

The previous record low of 1.744% was set in the last reissue of CUSIP 912810QP6 in June.

Dow Jones called the auction demand ‘impressive’:

The $7 billion offering attracted the strongest demand in the history of 30-year Treasurys Inflation Protected Securities, drawing a bid-to-cover ratio of 3.06, compared to a lifetime average of 2.40. The government was able to sell this debt handing out a yield of just 0.999%–the lowest ever.

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