You want a forward-looking indicator? Look at the stock market or 10-year Treasury bondโboth flashing warning signs this week. But how about years from now? What will the decades aheadโyour retirement lifeโlook like? What if weโre going back in time?
You and I, weโre in the business of patience. With so much attention paid to what the market did this week or who won last nightโs game, it can be difficult to remember that investing is an endeavor in b-o-r-i-n-g. At least until you have enough to retire on, and then itโs fun.
Saving money takes time. Every day youโre taking baby steps toward your goals. Looking at the scoreboard, like checking social media, is short-term. Itโs price checking. Emotional.
The question you asked me the most this week is, โSurvival Guy, where are interest rates headed?โ Good question. I know the thinking is higher. Because with all this debt and inflation, how could they not go higher? But what if, for example, the Fed gets its wish and cuts rates? And what if it stops issuing 10-year treasuries like it stopped issuing the 30-year back in 2001?
What if the government only issues debt with maturities around a couple of years so they can have more control? Wouldnโt that make existing treasuries maturing beyond a couple of years more valuable?
Look at the real estate market. Americaโs pastime. If mortgage rates reflect the 10-year Treasury, why keep it? Why not intervene (not that word again) and create a new mortgage rate based on some federal invention? A new acronym like the horrible twins Fannie and Freddie? Guaranteed low rates.
We just donโt know. And because of that, if your goal is to be able to live off the interest and dividends from your savings, donโt be too cute and think the yield curve is predictable. Itโs not. Wouldnโt it be a shame if you didnโt lock in pretty good rates today by being greedy with too much in short-term holdings?
Action Line: Beat inertia. Save โtil it hurts. Work with an advisor whoโs a fiduciary. You got this. When you want help, Iโm here.
But hereโs the time travel lesson for today. Remember this?
NEW YORK (CNNmoney) – The U.S. government said Wednesday it no longer will issue 30-year Treasury bonds because they don’t meet the government’s cash needs and discontinuing them will save U.S. taxpayers money.
“We do not need the 30-year bond to meet the government’s current financing needs, nor those that we expect to face in coming years,” Peter Fisher, the Treasury Department’s Under Secretary for Domestic Finance, said in preparedย remarks.
Fisher said the decision would cut borrowing costs, since the government currently pays a higher interest rate for long-term bonds than for short-term bonds.
“They’ve been moving in this direction for a couple of years, reducing the size and frequency of 30-year auctions,” said Bill Hornbarger, bond analyst at A.G. Edwards. “The big surprise is the timing, not the act itself. It happens in front of a couple of years where it looks like we’ll be running deficits.”
The price of the 30-year bondย soaredย 5-10/32 points to 107-28/32 after the announcement, pushing its yield, which moves inversely to the price, down to 4.87 percent, the lowest in nearly three years, from 5.21 percent late Tuesday.
Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย



