全球金融领域三大黄金证书
为什么要持有债券?现在持有合适吗?债券有哪六种风险?中国cfa考试网
CFA作者 编者: By A. Michael Lippe 预计阅读时间: 4分钟 CFA发布时间 发布时间:2013-10-23
  • CFA

    特许金融分析师

  • FRM

    金融风险管理师

  • CQF

    国际量化金融分析师

In all of the PIMCO/Bill Gross excitement and speculation about what money will stay and what will go where, no one is asking whether some or all of the money should exit the bond arena.

I am asking the question both as a professional investment manager and as a member of a number of investment committees. There seems to be a fundamental belief that once serious investment money is devoted to bonds, one can change managers, durations, and credits, but the allocation to bonds is almost sacrosanct. I believe, as Socrates believed, that “The unexamined life is not worth living.” My proclivity — almost childlike — is always asking why.

The Classic Reasons to Own Bonds

Bonds are a contract to pay interest and principal in a timely fashion. Thus, there is no uncertainty about the future when you purchase a bond. Bonds provide income that can be spent or reinvested (particularly in open-end mutual funds). Historically, bond prices have moved inversely to stock prices. In addition, bond prices rarely go down.

The Siren Song of Bonds Is Global

Ever since the bottom of the stock market, if not before, individual investors and many institutional investors have been adding to their bond holdings at a much faster rate than their appreciating equity holdings. I see this rush throughout the mutual fund world in almost every country that has a sizable bond fund market. While the rush is understandable for those who suffered equity losses by selling in the decline or seeing their wealth on paper shrink, I nevertheless find any stampede a bit scary.

While I don’t often agree with the SEC, I was heartened to read what SEC Commissioner Daniel Gallagher said in a speech to the Securities Traders Association in reference to the $10 trillion US corporate bond market. Commissioner Gallagher said “It clearly looks like a bubble.” He indicated that roughly one-quarter of the total is owned directly by retail investors and 73% of the $3.2 trillion of outstanding municipal debt is owned by “small investors.”

I don’t know whether the Commissioner’s numbers include bonds owned directly in open- and closed-end funds, defined contribution plans, and variable annuities. My sense is that direct and indirect holdings of debt issues represent ownership of over half by individuals. He felt that in their chase for yield they did not stop to understand the risks of what they owned.

Commissioner Gallagher made another important point: In 2008, the average daily trading volume was $1.04 trillion; in 2013, it dropped to $809 billion. I believe trading has constricted even more in 2014 due to government regulations restricting the size of inventories that major banks and broker/dealers can own in their market making activities. Greater demand and smaller capital bases seem likely to lead to an increase in bond price volatility.

On a temporary basis, Money Market funds appear to be a resting place. Weekly numbers on flows into Money Market funds seem to be growing at a rapid rate this week through Wednesday, according to Lipper, Inc., my old firm. I find this encouraging on two fronts.

First, the former owners of PIMCO funds may be reassessing where they should invest. (I would hope that they will reduce their bond investment.) Second, investors have not been scared off from using Money Market funds despite the SEC’s misguided attempts to prevent a run on these funds. (They actually made a run much more likely, I fear.)Editor’s note: Read this article for CFA Institute’s perspective on money market fund reforms.

What Are the Risks in Bonds?

The first risk is that high-quality bonds can go down in price. Over the last 15 years, the Barclays Bond Market Index Fund on a capital basis fell in six years — 40% of the time. (Please note that this calculation is ignoring the income produced.) Unfortunately, most bond investors utilize the income produced for their spending needs. They are ignoring the fact that with long maturities issues, the reinvestment of the interest in the then-current interest rate market can produce more capital than the eventual return of their principal when it matures. A slightly less foreboding view is the last 40 quarters for the Vanguard Intermediate Term Investment Grade Fund, during which time it declined on a total reinvested basis 12 times — 30% of the time.

Second, the potential gains of investing in high-quality paper is not going to be large enough to restore the starting capital of a balanced account with at least 50% in general equities.

Third, there isn’t much, if any, room for interest rates to decline and thereby add to the value of existing bonds. At some point the manipulation by the major central banks can not ignore the misallocation of capital to higher credit risk issuers, which will lead to lenders demanding higher rates. My guess is that this will happen sooner than the governments are expecting.

Fourth, the traditional concept behind a balanced fund is that when stocks periodically decline, bond prices will rise as governments force interest rates down. In a major way, this can not happen now. Bond prices and stock prices, instead of being inversely correlated, will move in the same direction, but at different momentums.

Fifth, the bond investor craves certainty, but we are living in an uncertain world. I believe that we are going to be surprised by one or more of the following changes:

  • Inflation
  • Tax realizations
  • Contracts abrogated by courts and governments
  • Unforeseen crises which change cash flows

Sixth, a popular measure of risk is, how much can I lose? With bonds there is, perhaps, for an investment manager, a bigger risk. Bonds are essentially contracts, and they are expected to perform in a specified manner. If they don’t for any of the identified elements listed above, the expectational gap could lead to career risk for the manager.

The Weakness of “My Word Is My Bond”

I grew up in a world where stock exchanges were run by their member communities, which enforced personal verbal contracts. You did not have to like the counter-party to a trade, but you believed that the counter-party was good for his or her contract. The community would not tolerate any breaking of the contract. Under the current environment, I hope and believe that my word is taken as acceptable. With what is happening today I don’t know that I would have the same reliance on someone’s else’s bond!

If you liked this post, consider subscribing to the Enterprising Investor.

中国CFA考试网(www.cfa.cn)综合整理提供干货资讯,来源:网络,若标明原创文章,经授权转载,若需引用或转载,请注明出处 ,仅供参考、交流之目的。
cfa题库
今日领取时间仅剩
0 4
:
4 3
:
3 6
领取CFA试听课程
自动输入历史信息
立即预约
最新参与客户
用户163
112****290
1天前
**AoZ
130****8017
1 天前
用户651
127****21
2024-11-19
用户349
130****9630
2024-11-15
用户232
130****3420
一个月前
用户801
112****310
一个月前
用户101
130****7983
2024-10-15
**dAB
130****2737
2024-10-10
用户987
130****6344
2024-09-13
用户279
130****8868
2024-08-21

备考工具

    资料专题 模拟机考

登录

登录

请输入您的昵称
您正在备考CFA 几级?
您目前从事什么行业?
预约成功
您已经成功预约 考试短信提醒

为了更好的提供给您优质的预约和课程服务,我们会有专属课程顾问1对1与您取得联系,请您及时关注短信提醒与去电

扫码添加客服微信号

获取CFA定制学习规划

添加高级课程顾问即可领取
扫码添加客服微信号
>
扫码识别二维码,添加助教