• Older bonds purchased at lower interest rates will go down in price. Why would you buy a bond with a 1.4% interest rate at the same price as one that pays you 2.9%?
• Larger borrowing needs by the U.S. government and corporations puts pressure on rates. If there isn’t a lot of demand for new issue bonds, the interest rate needs to increase to attract buyers.
- Adding fuel to the Treasury’s fire is a trillion dollars of corporate debt that needs to be refinanced in the next three years.
• A weaker dollar versus other currencies may cause inflation because we must pay more to buy imported goods. When imported goods prices go up, domestic prices on competing goods can be raised as well.
• Rising commodity prices (oil, copper, lumber to name a few) can cause inflation. As world economies grow, and businesses use more energy and materials, demand for those commodities increases. Commodity price increases are then passed on in the cost of goods and services that people buy.
• International tariffs, like a lower dollar, cause the cost of imported goods to increase, allowing U.S. companies to raise their prices.
• Your existing bond portfolio at a fixed interest rate will have difficulty keeping up with inflation, resulting in diminished purchasing power.
• The combination of low yields and falling bond prices means that bonds are not currently providing as good a hedge against falling stock prices. This is contrary to the typical relationship between stocks and bonds.
• If rates rise significantly, higher priced newly issued bonds become competition for stocks.
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