LADDER
BONDS TO PROP UP SAGGING INTEREST INCOME
01/02
What's sauce for the goose isn't necessarily sauce for
the gander. In an effort to stimulate a sagging economy and
stock market, the Federal Reserve cut short-term interest
rates to a 40-year low in early November 2001, with the
prospect of yet further cuts. That's good news for borrowers
and spenders, but bad news for savers and retirees who want
interest income.
Imagine the retiree who's watched the interest rate on a
one-year certificate of deposit (CD) fall from 5.5 percent a
year ago to a paltry 2.5 percent by late October, and on the
ten-year Treasury note from 5.9 percent to 4.4 percent. That
makes it tougher to meet living expenses. One can search out
higher-earning alternatives, such as real estate investment
trusts or dividend-paying stock, but the alternatives are
usually riskier. Careful shopping can help, too. But another
way to improve interest income, while at the same time
minimizing the impact of fluctuations in interest rates, is
to build a bond ladder.
Here's how a ladder works. You buy individual bonds or
CDs with a mix of maturities; the date on which the bond or
CD issuer agrees to pay back the principal. For example, you
might buy roughly equal dollar amounts of various U.S.
Treasury securities, each maturity date representing a
different rung on the ladder (running from short to long
maturities). In mid-November 2001, the approximate yield on
6-month T-bills was 1.8 percent, 2.8 percent for 2-year
notes, 3.9 percent for 5-year notes, 4.6 percent for 10-year
notes and 5 percent for 30-year bonds. As each shorter-term
bottom rung matures, you reinvest the proceeds in the
best-returning rung on the ladder, which usually is the top
rung of securities with the longest maturity.
In time, the shorter-maturity, lower-paying rungs will
gradually be replaced by higher-paying longer-maturity
bonds. At the same time, you're minimizing interest-rate
risk. The price of bonds rises or falls inversely to the
rise and fall of interest rates, and bond prices rise and
fall faster the longer the maturity. For example, today's
low interest rates will inevitably rise at some point in the
future, driving down the value of longer-term bonds issued
while rates are low.
One could avoid the problem, of course, by buying only
short-term bonds, but then you're stuck with the lower
yields. On the other hand, if you buy only long-term bonds
for higher yield, you face the risk of greater
volatility and perhaps being forced to sell before maturity
at a loss of principal should you need the cash.
However, with a laddered bond portfolio, a portion of the
longer-term securities are maturing every three months, six
months or year, depending on how many rungs you build into
the ladder and how large the spread among the maturities. If
you need to sell a bond for emergency cash, you can sell one
at or near maturity with little or no loss of principal,
regardless of whether interest rates have gone up.
When building a ladder, you can choose whatever
combination of maturities you need. For example, you may not
want to go as far out as 30-year Treasuries (the government
has discontinued issuing new ones, but they are available on
the secondary market). Instead, you might use CDs only up to
five years in maturity, or only up to ten years in
Treasuries.
While Treasuries and CDs are most commonly used to build
a ladder, you can construct one out of higher-earning
high-grade corporate bonds, mortgage-backed securities or,
for investors in higher tax brackets, municipal bonds.
However, these ladders will carry more risk than Treasuries
or CDs.
It's possible, but more difficult, to build a ladder out
of bond funds because there's usually no definite maturity
date in a fund and redemptions are not controllable.
However, some funds focus on bonds with certain maturities,
such as ultra-short, short, intermediate or long-term bonds.
Investors who don't have enough money to buy sufficient
diversity of bonds (research suggests at least $50,000 to
$100,000 to sufficiently diversify) may want to consider
bond funds.
The ladder of bonds or CDs produces a smoother income
flow at a blended interest rate that's not as high as the
longest maturity but better than the shorter maturities,
while managing interest rate volatility. It's not exciting,
but fixed income, especially for retirees, isn't supposed to
be exciting, only comforting.
This article was produced by the Consumer Affairs Dept.
of The Financial Planning Association and provided to you
courtesy of Nigel B. Taylor, CFP, Santa Monica, California.
If you have any questions or concerns regarding this, or any
other financial topic and are a resident of Southern
California, please call me at 1-800-444-2237 (California
residents only please), or click on the "MORE INFO" button
to arrange for a free initial consultation in the comfort of
your home or office.
  
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