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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Laddered Bond Portfolios

I received a call from a Dow Jones newspaper reporter yesterday asking me my thoughts on laddered bond portfolios as a strategy for income in retirement. She was under the impression that I was not in favor of them - possibly from something I'd written in the past (although she wasn't able to quite recall what she'd read and I wasn't able to quite recall what I might have written). Anyway, we had a very pleasant half hour conversation about laddered portfolios, fee-only versus fee-based (brokers) advisors, variable annuities, and properly diversified multi-asset portfolios...among other investment topics.

But I thought I ought to pass on my thoughts on laddered bond portfolios to my readers, since it was the primary reason she called.

I think a laddered bond strategy makes quite a bit of sense for retirees, but only as a part of a properly diversified multi-asset portfolio. I am not in favor of single asset portfolios for anyone, let alone a retiree. Putting your eggs all in one basket is never a good idea, even if it is in the supposedly safe basket of Treasury bonds, which I personally believe carry quite a bit of risk currently. (Bill Gross of Pimco is on the same page by the way as his firm - the largest bond investor in the world - is currently completely out of Treasury bonds according to statements the bond king has made in recent months).

Bonds were known as certificates of confiscation back in the early 1980s, before the great bond bull market kicked off in 1982. Bond investors had lost their shirts over the prior 15 years or so as interest rates had risen steadily along with inflation. Negative real rates eroded bond wealth steadily for better than a decade. However, Paul Volcker's Federal Reserve changed all of that by committing to sound monetary policy designed to bring down inflation and restore the stability of the dollar as a store of value. Bonds have proven a splendid investment ever since... until now.

It is highly likely that inflation will continue to rise and, with it, interest rates over the next decade. We may have another year or two to wait before the trend really gathers steam, but without drastic changes in U.S. monetary and fiscal policy, the odds of a long bond bear market are high. A laddered dollar bond portfolio is not where you want all of your assets in such an environment. Yes bonds will mature yearly and can be reinvested at higher rates, but the bonds in you portfolio will lose value. Any sales necessitated by unexpected cash needs will result in losses. And generating capital losses in bond investing is a cardinal sin. Even more dangerous is the strategy of attempting to "ladder" a bond mutual fund portfolio, given that bond mutual funds have a perpetual duration - duration is a measure of bond price sensitivity to changes in interest rates. The longer the duration the bigger the price moves in a bond, and perpetual is as long as you can get.

Far better to build a properly diversified multi-asset portfolio for our retiree that might include a laddered bond portfolio to go with the high-quality dividend paying blue chip stocks, the dollar diversifying international assets, and the inflation hedging tangible assets (real estate and commodities primarily).

The S&P 500 is rallying short term after moving into oversold territory, but is likely to at least retest the recent low at 1256. It is still too early to tell if the correction is merely the pause that refreshes on the start of a topping process that will ultimately lead to the next downleg in the ongoing secular bear market. We reiterate that fair value for the S&P 500 is in the 900 area and that the economy is now showing clear signs of slowing - a combination that would suggest prudence is the better part of valor at the moment.