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Yesterday I asked readersย Do You Know this about Vanguard Wellington and Wellesley Funds?ย I explained that we have not soured on the funds, but that their effective maturities are longer than we’d like. I also wrote that at Young Research we recommend laddering bonds.

One of the reasons we favor laddering bonds is to help strip-out interest rate risk. When you own a bond outright you have control over your holding period.

Duration measures a bondโ€™s sensitivity to interest rates. For example, a bond with a 15-year duration will decline by 15 percent with every one percent increase in interest rates. Would you pay the same price for a bond you bought last year that yields one percent more today? No, youโ€™d pay lessโ€”about 15 percent less in this case.

Compared to a three-year durationโ€”it will decline by about three percent if rates increase by one percentโ€”youโ€™d lose a lot less. And if you happen to own the bond in a ladder you could hold it, collect your interest along the way, and receive your principle at maturity.

Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.