The Safest Bond Fund For 2022: My Mattress
2022.06.01 12:55
We’ve been extolling cash in these pages since the start of this year. As the Federal Reserve prepared to pause its money printer, we contrarians booked profits and stacked dollar bills.
Long before the media began saying “bear market,” we recognized that a volatile 2022 was highly likely. We were ready for a decline.
As I write, our premium portfolios are all sitting on cash positions:
Portfolio Cash Positions
Yup. Plenty of capital ready to be deployed after the final “wash out” in the markets.
These comfortable cash seats have served us well. Bonds kicked off their worst start to a year (per NASDAQ). Fixed income, often a safe haven, was . Even US Treasuries, which sailed in 2008, have been trampled in 2022.
The has never started a calendar year worse since, well, . And the SPDR® S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY)—the only investment most Americans own—clocked worst start since 1939.
Which made cash the perfect place to be, right?
There’s just one problem, though. Cash is just… so… .
I get it. We are income investors. We want to be fully invested in while we wait the bear out.
As thoughtful subscriber William writes:
Q: Why not use short-term bond funds or floating-rate funds as “cash equivalents?” We would at least get a small amount of interest while we are waiting.
William, I’m always up for interest, no matter how modest! But we need to find it securely and safely. Right now, that ain’t happening. And a few bucks in interest aren’t worth watching the principal get clobbered.
Let’s start with your short-term bond suggestion. A reasonable idea. The world has been “selling duration” with rates rising. Why not avoid long-term fixed income (and its duration) and park our cash in short-term bonds instead?
Because, unfortunately, . Here are three of the most popular short-term bond ETFs in the world. All have in the past year:
3 Poor Cash Equivalents
Short-Term Bond Funds Disappoint
What about floaters? They have variable coupons—interest payments—that are calculated regularly. Their rates start with a reference point, such as the federal funds rate and add a defined payout percentage to it. When the reference ticks higher, so does the coupon’s payout.
The iShares Floating Rate Bond ETF (NYSE:FLOT) is the ETF lovers’ alternative to iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NASDAQ:TLT).
FLOT buys corporate bonds with floating rate features.These bonds aren’t as bulletproof as Treasuries, but they are close, because FLOT only buys investment grade paper.
FLOT doing better than the fixed rate bonds above. Unfortunately, FLOT the cash stuffed under my mattress year-to-date:
FLOT-Disappoints
FLOT yields a puny 0.6%. Drop a million dollars into this fund, and we reap just $6,000 in yearly income. for a seven-figure account.
Sure, the FLOT fanboys will point to price upside. But if FLOT’s price can’t float higher under conditions, when it rally?
Now, floating-rate closed-end funds (CEFs) usually beat their comatose ETF counterparts. CEFs benefit from active management. When we let the ETF computers do the fixed income picking, they lose to my mattress.
My “go to” floating-rate CEFs are Eaton Vance Floating Rate Income Closed Fund (NYSE:EFT) and BlackRock Floating Rate Income Strategies Closed Fund (NYSE:FRA).
The yields on EFT and FRA look good today at 7% and 6.2%, respectively. Both funds trade at to their net asset values.
Should we park our cash there?
I income investing were that easy. Problem is, EFT and FRA prices . EFT is down 18% year-to-date, while FRA has shed 12%. Investors who buy these funds for inflation insurance have been disappointed.
Floating-CEFs Disappoint
Maybe iShares TIPS Bond ETF (NYSE:TIP)? Treasury Inflation Protected Securities are indexed to inflation. Their value, theoretically at least, is supposed to rise as inflation climbs because their interest rate payments adjust higher.
And these are Treasuries, so they’re even safer than FLOT and EFT and FRA.
Except… these three popular TIPS are losing to my mattress, too:
TIPS Disappoint
How about the new Series I savings bonds? They boast a sweet headline yield of 9.62%. But if we’re holding cash so that we can bargain hunt , I-bonds have two big drawbacks:
- We must hold them for one year.
- We can only invest $15,000 per year.
(The annual limit is $10,000 per person, plus an extra $5,000 per year if using a federal tax refund. These position size and liquidity restrictions prevent I-bonds from being a big play for us.)
We need to be nimble and ready to buy. The best deals happen at the end of bear markets.
Let’s not outthink ourselves with our cash equivalents. Sure, it’s boring, I get it—but cash . Our post-bear profits on this preparation.
And hey, since we’re friends, I’ll save some space under my outperforming mattress for your stack, if you’d like.
Disclosure: