10 Things You Should Know About Bonds (2024)

10 Things You Should Know About Bonds (1)

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10 Things You Should Know About Bonds (2)

By Anne Kates Smith, Dan Burrows

last updated

in Features

When it comes to bond investing, there's a lot more to know than the current interest rate on Treasuries.

Bonds have two primary roles: income – whether taxable or tax-free – and portfolio diversification. Much of the time, when stocks or other investments struggle, bonds hold their value.

Read on to learn some key concepts every bond investor should know.

10 Things You Should Know About Bonds (3)

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1. It's all about interest rates

The Federal Reserve has raised interest rates by more than 5 percentage points over the past two years. Why is this important to investors in bonds?

Bond prices certainly are linked to interest rates, but inversely. When interest rates overall are on the rise, older, lower-yielding bonds become devalued. Conversely, falling rates raise the value of older issues with higher coupon rates.

So remember this like it's your mantra:

  • When interest rates rise, bond prices fall.
  • When interest rates fall, bond prices rise.

Rinse, wash, repeat.

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2. What does 'duration' mean?

To dispel with some misconceptions, "duration" is not a rough estimate of how long it will take to reach your investing goal. Neither is it the number of years a bond issuer has gone without a negative credit event. And it doesn't refer to the number of years before the borrower has to return your principal.

Rather, it’s a measure of a bond’s interest rate sensitivity. As a general rule, for every 1% increase or decrease in interest rates, a bond's price will change approximately 1% in the opposite direction for every year of duration.

Duration – roughly related to a bond’s maturity, or the average maturity of the bonds in a fund’s portfolio – tells you approximately how much the price of a bond, or a fund’s net asset value, would fall or rise depending on the direction of interest rates. A duration of 5.5, for example, implies that a fund’s share price would fall roughly 5.5% if market rates rise one percentage point over a 12-month period.

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3. What's the single biggest risk to bond returns?

A rising stock market that attracts investment assets at the expense of bonds or a growing government budget deficit can hurt returns on bonds, but nothing cripples them like the "I" word.

Indeed, nothing is as pernicious to a lender than inflation, which represents a double-whammy for bondholders.

After all, inflation both devalues the real worth of future interest payments and usually results in higher interest rates that detract from a bond’s current market value.

Recession talk makes bond investors nervous for good reason. Corporate bonds are at increased risk of default when the economy is contracting. It turn, that keeps a lid on bond prices.

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4. What is an inverted yield curve?

Nothing gets recession talk started like an inverted yield curve.

A wild and volatile bond market, also known as an upside-down bond market, isn't nearly as worrisome. It's also not good when Treasury securities pay higher interest rates than corporate bonds or mortgages with the same maturity.

But an inverted yield curve is worse. When short-term Treasury notes pay a higher interest rate than long-term government notes and bonds, there be monsters ahead.

Inverted yield curves are usually taken as a warning that the economy is slowing and might go into a recession. Longer-dated maturities typically yield more than shorter ones; when that relationship reverses, it could be because investors foresee lower interest rates as the economy slows along with borrowing demand.

However, there are exceptions, and an inverted yield curve doesn’t always spell disaster.

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5. What is the highest rating a bond can have?

The two most important agencies that rate the creditworthiness of bond issues are Moody's and Standard & Poor's.

The highest credit score for borrowers – be they companies or countries – is AAA. Both agencies use the same designation when it comes to the very best, most reliable debtors.

AAA ratings are precious and hard to earn. The government of Canada gets one. Pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson also has a AAA rating. Amazon, however, even with its massive war chest and firehouse of free cash flow, gets a rating of A1 from Moody's and S&P rates Amazon at AA-.

Famously, the U.S. lost its top-notch rating from Standard & Poor’s when the rating agency downgraded Uncle Sam to AA+ in August 2011, citing a high level of debt and weakened “effectiveness, stability and predictability of American policymaking” with regard to the debt load.

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6. What is a bond's yield to maturity?

Don't mistake this for the interest rate on the bond when it is issued, or the interest rate the bond pays between now and the date it is scheduled to mature.

Yield to maturity is the total return, including a gain or loss in the bond’s price, that you can expect if you buy the bond today and keep it until it matures.

Rather, it's a total return calculation.

Although the word “yield” is in the phrase “yield to maturity,” the figure also includes the future gain or loss in the bond’s value to bring it back to par.

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7. Where do bondholders rank in case of bankruptcy?

If a company goes out of business and liquidates, bondholders have the first claim on whatever cash becomes available in the bankruptcy.

Anyone who does not own securities but is owed money by the borrower becomes a general creditor. General creditors might include employees, contractors and suppliers. Stockholders are last in line.

Everyone else – including shareholders, bankers with delinquent loans to the business, and the company's suppliers – must get in line behind the bondholders.

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8. What's the minimum order my broker will sell me?

It's a misconception that when you buy bonds from your broker, you must order in multiples of $1,000.

In fact, you can buy $25 “baby bond” units, and often those are better and more liquid than bonds with a face value of $1,000. The $25 units are simple to buy because they are listed just like stocks or ETF units.

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9. When do low-rated, high-yield bonds do well?

High-yield bonds, also known as junk bonds, can have a legitimate place in a fixed income portfolio.

That's especially true when the economy is so strong that even weak companies are profitable and paying their debts.

Junk bonds are often seen as more related to stocks than to other bonds, and they tend to do better when the economy is growing swiftly and stocks are rising.

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10. What's the deal with munis?

Municipal bonds are often known as tax-exempt bonds, but that doesn't mean you always escape income tax on the interest.

Some municipalities issue both tax-free and taxable bonds because some buyers, such as pension funds and foreign investors, would benefit from the higher yield but do not get anything from a tax exemption.

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10 Things You Should Know About Bonds (23)

Anne Kates Smith

Executive Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance

Anne Kates Smith brings Wall Street to Main Street, with decades of experience covering investments and personal finance for real people trying to navigate fast-changing markets, preserve financial security or plan for the future. She oversees the magazine's investing coverage, authors Kiplinger’s biannual stock-market outlooks and writes the "Your Mind and Your Money" column, a take on behavioral finance and how investors can get out of their own way. Smith began her journalism career as a writer and columnist for USA Today. Prior to joining Kiplinger, she was a senior editor at U.S. News & World Report and a contributing columnist for TheStreet. Smith is a graduate of St. John's College in Annapolis, Md., the third-oldest college in America.

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10 Things You Should Know About Bonds (2024)

FAQs

What do I need to know about bonds? ›

Bonds are issued by governments and corporations when they want to raise money. By buying a bond, you're giving the issuer a loan, and they agree to pay you back the face value of the loan on a specific date, and to pay you periodic interest payments along the way, usually twice a year.

What are the most important aspects of bonds? ›

Key Takeaways

Some of the characteristics of bonds include their maturity, their coupon (interest) rate, their tax status, and their callability. Several types of risks associated with bonds include interest rate risk, credit/default risk, and prepayment risk.

What are the key points of bonds? ›

Key Points
  • The three basic components of a bond are its maturity, its face value, and its coupon yield.
  • Bond prices fluctuate inversely to interest rates.

What are some questions about bonds? ›

Consider a bond's maturity date, and whether the issuer can call it back in before it matures. Is the bond's interest rate a fixed or a floating one? Does the issuer seem able to handle the interest payments? In case of default, where does this bond stand in the pecking order of repaying principal?

What is the safest bond to invest in? ›

But generally, cash and government bonds—particularly U.S. Treasury securities—are often considered among the safest investment options available. This is because there is minimal risk of loss. That said, it's important to note that no investment is entirely risk-free.

What is the risk with a bond? ›

The biggest risk for bonds is typically considered to be interest rate risk, also known as market risk or price risk. Interest rate risk refers to the potential for the value of a bond to fluctuate in response to changes in prevailing interest rates in the market.

Can I lose any money by investing in bonds? ›

Bonds are a type of fixed-income investment. You can make money on a bond from interest payments and by selling it for more than you paid. You can lose money on a bond if you sell it for less than you paid or the issuer defaults on their payments.

What are the four main issues of bonds? ›

What are the benefits and risks of bonds?
  • Credit risk. The issuer may fail to timely make interest or principal payments and thus default on its bonds.
  • Interest rate risk. Interest rate changes can affect a bond's value. ...
  • Inflation risk. Inflation is a general upward movement in prices. ...
  • Liquidity risk. ...
  • Call risk.

Do bonds pay dividends? ›

Bond funds typically pay periodic dividends that include interest payments on the fund's underlying securities plus periodic realized capital appreciation. Bond funds typically pay higher dividends than CDs and money market accounts. Most bond funds pay out dividends more frequently than individual bonds.

What are 10 basis points on a bond? ›

Eliminating Ambiguity
Basis Points and the Equivalent Percentage
10.01%
100.1%
500.5%
1001%
3 more rows

What are the pros and cons of bonds? ›

Types of bonds: Advantages and disadvantages
  • Advantages: Safety and low risk, thanks to backing of U.S. government.
  • Disadvantages: Limited growth potential and prices will fall if interest rates rise.
Sep 3, 2024

Can you lose money on bonds if held to maturity? ›

TAKEAWAYS: Not losing money by holding a bond until maturity is an illusion. The economic impact of market rate changes still impacts investors holding bonds until maturity. A bond index fund provides an investor with greater diversification and less risk.

Which bonds will be most difficult to break? ›

In the case of covalent molecules, more is the sharing of electrons between the atoms; stronger is: a single bond 2 electrons are shared, in a manner, 4 in double bond and 6 in a triple bond. Therefore, a triple bond is the strongest and most difficult to break.

Can bonds ever fail? ›

Every bond also carries some risk that the issuer will “default,” or fail to fully repay the loan.

Why avoid bonds? ›

Bonds lower volatility but have significantly higher inflation risk when compared to shares. The risk of inflation destroying the purchasing power of your portfolio is one of the biggest risks that you face as an investor.

Is it worth putting money in bonds? ›

Historically, bonds are less volatile than stocks.

Bond prices will fluctuate, but overall these investments are more stable, compared to other investments. “Bonds can bring stability, in part because their market prices have been more stable than stocks over long time periods,” says Alvarado.

How to invest in bonds as a beginner? ›

You can buy bonds through a broker, just like you can buy stocks and other investments. The bonds you buy are typically sold by investors. Depending on the interest rate market, you may be able to buy the bond at discount. You can buy government bonds directly through the federal government.

Are bonds a good investment now? ›

“As retirement moves closer, it could make some sense for investors to shift more of their portfolio into bonds as the lower volatility and principal preservation characteristics of the asset class become more valuable in a portfolio context.

How do you make money in bonds? ›

Bonds are a type of fixed-income investment. You can make money on a bond from interest payments and by selling it for more than you paid. You can lose money on a bond if you sell it for less than you paid or the issuer defaults on their payments.

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