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How to bet on falling bonds - Your FREE article

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Bonds

How to bet on falling bonds

Rising inflation has the potential to derail global bond markets. That has major implications for your portfolio, which will unfold over the coming months and years. But what if you want to bet directly on bond markets falling? How can you do it – and what do you need to be aware of if you do?

As with most assets, you can “short” bonds (bet on bond prices falling and yields rising) with spread betting. However, the high levels of leverage involved mean it’s all too easy to get shaken out by short-term moves, regardless of whether or not your long-term view is correct. Assuming you don’t just want to take a quick punt, then the most obvious alternative is to invest in an “inverse” exchange-traded fund (ETF) that enables you to short the bond market. We’d suggest you avoid using leveraged ETFs – or at least, if you do, accept that it’s a punt, don’t risk too much money and don’t plan to hold them for more than a few days. We’ve gone into the maths before (search MoneyWeek.com for more), but the daily rebalancing means that the longer you hold, the more likely they are to diverge – often radically – from the performance of the underlying index. Even unleveraged short ETFs rebalance daily, but they won’t diverge as quickly from the underlying index.

Also, remember that shorting is very different to going long, even without leverage. You are explicitly timing the market – you are not aiming to make money from the income and return of your capital, you’re aiming to profit from a drop in prices. So this isn’t “buy and hold”. Keep a close eye on your short bond trades, make sure the index is behaving as you expect it to and don’t get overly confident – the end of the bond bull market might look like a “sure thing” today, but it looked like a sure thing in 2012 too (and on several occasions before then). So what should you use? We’d suggest betting against government bonds if you’re looking for a “big-picture” punt on higher inflation and interest rates. The longer a bond has to go to maturity, the more sensitive it is to interest-rate changes (as measured by its “duration” – defined below).

So if you are convinced we’re going to see higher-than-expected inflation (and thus interest rates), then you want to short the longest duration bonds. The ProShares Short 20+ Year Treasury (NYSE: TBF) has a duration of just under 18 and promises to return the inverse of the ICE US Treasury 20+ Year Bond Index (which contains US government bonds which mature in no less than 20 years). If you’d rather not take the currency risk, another option is to short UK government bonds. WisdomTree’s Boost Gilts 10Y 1x Short Daily ETP (LSE: 1GIS) has an annual fee of 0.25% and delivers the inverse daily performance of the Long Gilt Rolllng Future Index. I wish I knew what “duration” was, but I’m too embarrassed to ask “Duration” is a measure of risk related to bonds. It describes how sensitive a given bond is to movements in interest rates. Think of the relationship between bond prices and interest rates as being like a seesaw: when one side (interest rates, for example) goes up, the other (in this case, bond prices) goes down.

Duration (which can be found in the factsheet of most bond funds) tells you the likely percentage change in a bond’s price in response to a one percentage point (100 basis points) change in interest rates. The higher the duration, the higher the “interest-rate risk” of the bond – that is, the larger the change in price for any given change in interest rates. Duration also tells you how long (in years) it will take for you to recoup the price you paid for the bond in the form of income from its coupons (interest payments) and the return of the original capital.  So if a bond has a duration of ten years, that means you will have to hold on to it for ten years to recoup the original purchase price. It also indicates that a single percentage point rise in interest rates would cause the bond price to fall by 10% (while a single percentage point drop in interest rates would cause the bond price to rise by 10%).

As a rough guide, the duration of a bond increases along with maturity – so the longer a bond has to go until it repays its face value, the longer its duration. Also, the lower the yield on the bond, the higher its duration – the longer it takes for you to get paid back. All else being equal, a high-duration bond is riskier (more volatile) than a low-duration bond. For zero-coupon bonds (bonds that don’t pay any income at all), the duration is always the remaining time to the bond’s maturity. For interest-paying bonds, duration is always less than its maturity (because you will have made back your original investment at some point before the maturity date).

By John Stepek, executive editor, MoneyWeek

John Stepek

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