MachineGhost wrote:
moda0306 wrote:
If I were to lock in my loss by selling my bond fund, what would keep me from buying a bond just like the one that you hold that is now selling at a discount equal to what I lost out of my fund ?
Human behavior. Why would you have locked the loss in other than for tax selling purposes? You had to have a rational reason to have bought bonds in the first place, unless it wasn't rational to begin with in which case you made a rational decision to get out, that looks overall irrational. I really don't think the average boob has any concept of duration. Didn't last year prove that? Everyone freaked out on a 1% rise for a 15% loss. Just wait until a real bond bear market hits. It won't be pretty with all the lemmings throwing themselves off the proverbial cliff.
In my case, what I thought was a rational buy decision later turned out to be irrational, so rather than the agony of waiting 16+ years to recoup my loss and principal (which I now realize would NOT have happened because we only hold bonds for 10 years max, so I dodged a bullet), I hemmed and hawed on the last day of the year then said "fuck it!", sold and took the tax loss. And I'd been a lot less concerned about if if I actually had any equity exposure to hedge, even though the overall PP does royally suck in decreasing real rate periods.
I have to agree with doodle... sometimes I simply don't know what the hell you're talking about...
If we can agree that the "paper losses" between a 25-year bond and a 20-30 year bond fund (think TLT) is going to be
similar, then I'm in the same position to reinvest in a shorter duration and ride the wave down the curve as the years go by. However, if I want to stick to my barbells (which is SOP anyway), I can continue to do so.
Now don't get me wrong... having the ability to be a bit more particular about what you buy/sell could be valuable... For instance, in 2008, 20 year bonds, for some reason, in spite of a steep yield curve, were higher than 30-year bonds in yield... so instead of selling the 20-year bonds in a PP in that year to buy into 30-years, maybe I would have held them... perhaps I would have sold a good chunk of 30-year bonds to buy a bunch of 20-years and pray that the "arbitrage" works.
There's lots of cool little tricks you can play in the bond market... If you're taxable you can buy bonds for maximum capital gain and minimum interest income. If you're not, you can go for the income but keep the same duration but with a smaller face amount. In fact, with short-term muni bonds, you can play a trick with buying bonds at a premium so you can claim a capital loss (hopefully against ordinary income) because you're receiving higher-than-market tax-free interest. With taxable bonds, you could do the opposite, buy at a discount so you realize the short-term "income" as capital gains instead of taxable interest.
But this isn't the precision you're talking about. You're talking about holding to maturity, but you can mimic the affect of that (even in funds), by continuously buying into shorter-duration funds as you go. On the list of "reasons to buy bonds individually," it's way towards the bottom. If you can "recoup your losses" by holding your bond to maturity, then I can do the exact same by buying into shorter-duration bond-funds that are now yielding a much more lucrative interest rate.
If I'm going to be holding individual bonds, it's going to be because of either 1) safety (no securities-lending BS), or 2) the precision I can have to play tax, income, and yield-curve arbitrage games. Perhaps in a LTT disaster, holding individual bonds will help, but I think it will be because securities-lending is not a worry, and we will be able to be more particular about our rebalance decisions. Suze would do well to help people understand the intricacies of investing in individual bonds, because she utterly throws them to worse wolves by giving extremely loose advice.
Simply put, I trust you and I investing in bonds instead of funds, but most people who rely on bonds the most for their portfolio (retirees), are going to get themselves into a lot more trouble trying to invest in individual bonds than just using a nice, laddered bond fund arrangement (perhaps with a decreasing-duration fund on the long-end to mimic the need (or the lack thereof) of super-long-term bonds in later retirement).
So in the end... yes... Suze's advice is hogwash. In fact I'd call it dangerous. Most old folks have no idea what they're doing in the individual bond market. At least trading individual stocks usually screams "THIS CAN BE DANGEROUS... DON'T DO THIS!" Bonds look safe. They look predictable. It's important to know how they behave before you just dive into them. If bonds ever get to a point where re-investing is a disaster, it's likely that bonds are failing your portfolio either way.... and if you're going to hold them, you're probably holding them for income... income that reinvesting at new high rates within your fund WILL provide you. If you don't want to be re-buying within the fund... sell the damn thing, and use the proceeds to buy a 20-year bond or something... They'll have the same thing (or close-to) as someone who held his bonds past the 20-year mark.
Essentially, if I have the option to always turn a 20-30-year bond-fund into a 20-30-year bonds of similar value and income, as well as an eventual face value of what I paid for the fund (those underlying bonds still exist in the market and are selling at a discount equal to my loss), I always have the option to get out.
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine