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Originally posted November 1, 2017.

A phrase I often hear from prospective clients is, โ€œI donโ€™t understand bonds, but I know I need them, and thatโ€™s one of the reasons Iโ€™m talking with you.โ€ Thereโ€™s a lot of wisdom in that phrase. Itโ€™s like saying to your dentist, โ€œI donโ€™t understand root canals, but my tooth is killing me and I know I need one, and thatโ€™s the reason Iโ€™m sitting in this chair.โ€ Knowing what we need is different from understanding how to do it.

When I think back to when I first joined Dick Youngโ€™s management firm in 1998, he had a huge following of investors seeking guidance in U.S. Treasury zero-coupon bonds. Investors knew they were a safe way to keep and make money (thanks to Dick) but they didnโ€™t really know how to construct a portfolio of them. The same was true for preferred stocks where investors needed help wading through a sea of products. And all along, the beacon over the dark horizon was the ever present โ€œNorth Star,โ€ the Treasury Bill, guiding the way. Itโ€™s doing the same today.

Today nothing has changed in terms of the T-billโ€™s guiding principles. What has changed is its position over horizon, if you will. Back in 1998, it was a steady beacon of light yielding around five percent. Today itโ€™s a mere flicker yielding around one percent. What has changed? Not much as far as Iโ€™m concerned.

Just like back in 1998 my work today will revolve around conversations with clients and prospective clients. Not once have I been asked โ€œE.J. tell me where the T-bill is this morning?โ€ or, โ€œHow did the T-bill do yesterday?โ€ or โ€œWhere is the T-bill today?โ€ But, replace T-bill with โ€œthe marketโ€ and you have the beginning of a conversation about the future.

Which brings me back to 1998 when the T-bill was paying around five percent. Thereโ€™s no way anyone could predict with any kind of certainty, whatsoever, that T-Bills would pay less than one percent, period. But thatโ€™s the world we are living in today and the near future. And without giving any thought to where the T-Bill will be next year or in twenty years, I can tell you without hesitation that bonds should play a role in your portfolio.

You may not understand bonds, but if you know what it feels like to lose money, you may opt for a root canal. And while everyone talks about โ€œthe market,โ€ they continue to forget that the North Star is still shiningโ€”although not nearly as bright as it once did.

Originally posted at Yoursurvivalguy.com.