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Inflation-Indexed Securities
I don't really see how we can avoid a period of dramatic inflation in the next decade. Not buying the doomsday scenarios, but all those giant piles of cash in the reserve banks need to hit the streets someday.
I was doing some research into Inflation-Indexed Securities. I like the idea in principle, but these are products offered by the US government. Given the gravity of the fiscal situation facing our country, I don't feel confident the terms of my investment would honored. Are there products out there pegged to CPI that do not rely on government bonds? |
This might give you what you need.
Inflation-indexed bond - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia People have been buying the TIPS for the past 4ish years and earning next to nothing as they thought inflation was about to take off. Well here we are 4 years later and they are still waiting. My question is why not wait until inflation starts to jump way up and then buy them? That seems to make more sense that buying them when inflation is low and then waiting for it to go up. |
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Why is the price of the bond moving so much if the coupon is moving at the same time? Is it not true that the interest rate on TIPS bought 4 years ago will be the same as what TIPS are currently being issued at? I mean if all the TIPS are following the same inflation index shouldn't they all be paying the same interst rate no matter when they were issued? What am I missing? |
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The price you should pay for a bond is the expected future payments, discounted by corresponding interest rates for those terms. With a regular bond the payments are known with certainty, so we simply discount the future coupon and principal payments by rates found on the yield curve. With a TIPS, you have to make an assumption about what inflation is going to be over the life of the bond. Using that assumption, you can figure out what your payments will be, and discount those payments the same way as you did with an ordinary treasury bond. With this in mind, if we look at pricing on TIPS, we can see what "the market" believes future inflation will be by comparing them to nominal Treasuries. If you go and buy a TIPS, and inflation behaves exactly as as "the market" expects, you won't make much more money than if you had simply bought a normal treasury bond (think about it... otherwise you could simply short a nominal bond, and use the proceeds to buy a TIPS, and be guaranteed free money as the coupons on the TIPS were gradually re-indexed higher) The way you make money on a TIPS (over and above the money earned on a nominal bond) is if inflation turns out to be higher than the market expected when you bought the bond. Does that make sense? |
I think four years ago folks on this board were confidently predicting hyperinflation by now.
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I'm not predicting hyperinflation. I'm predicting a steady rise in inflation over the next decade.
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If the rate does fluctuate with inflation wouldn't TIPS bought 4 years ago pay the same rate as TIPS being issued today? |
The point is that if inflation in the future is expected to be 5%, the TIP bond today will be priced (high) based on future payments consistent with 5% inflation. So you don't get any especial return for buying it. The only way you make an especial return is if future inflation is expected to be 5% but it actually turns out to be higher, say 7% (numbers as examples only). So, do you feel able to forecast future inflation better than the professional investors whose bidding determines TIP prices?
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I had I bonds in mind when I posted this. TIPs are a different animal, one I will need to examine in the morning.....ZZZzzzzzzzz....
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Though I diversify over several asset classes, I tend to go for individual stocks of solid companies with a long track record of paying (and increasing) dividends, and that has worked well for me over the years. I average slightly over 5% returns (dividends only), and imo the inflation-protection is "built in" to the stock price over time. I also figure that a solid "corporate bond" fund has a similiar "built in" protection. Just my .02 worth...YMMV. |
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[Edit: following comment refers to traditional fixed rate bonds, not TIPS.]
Why will fixed rate bonds be good investments in a high inflation environment, if that is what you expect? The coupon payment is fixed, so it is worth less in real dollars (the classic misery of living on a fixed income in a high inflation period). And high inflation usually means interest rates rise. Rising interest rates mean bond values decline. So not only is your fixed coupon payments not keeping up with inflation, but you are taking capital losses on the bond. I don't pretend to be a bond expert - not my field - but I'd have to hear a pretty good argument to make me think fixed rate bonds are a good place to be if you think future inflation will be high. |
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And just to make sure the vocabulary isn't causing any mis-understanding - by fixed rate I mean a bond that pays a coupon that is a pre-determined and unchangeable percentage of face value. |
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