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Posts Tagged ‘municipal bond market’

But Look At The Yield!

April 4th, 2025 by Kurt L. Smith

Last month I left you looking for higher rates. The ten-year treasury note had corrected from 4.80% in mid-January to 4.10% (all prices and yields per Bloomberg). The 4.10% yield on March 4th was indeed the low last week; on March 27th the yield hit 4.40%.

My point is not how to trade the ten-year treasury note. My point is performance matters. Since 2020, the trend in bonds has been down in price (up in yield). This makes performance in the bond markets very difficult. Rather than having the wind at your back (bull market), the wind is in your face.

This makes bond market corrections, as we saw earlier this year (4.80% to 4.10%), a signal for what comes next. Looking at the bigger picture, we saw 5% yields in October 2023 and 3.60% in September 2024. Understanding that those moves in rates were corrections gets us ready for what is next: still higher rates.

Higher interest rates and lower prices are easily seen in the trading of longer-term bonds. The March 2025 treasury bond future traded at 119.5 on March 4th and below 115.5 on March 27th. Losing four points inside of a month makes positive performance very difficult; a wind in your face.

Municipal yields also jumped comparing the Texas A&M bonds below with last month’s El Paso Water and Sewer. With individual ownership of municipal bonds at seventy percent or $3 trillion of a $4.2 trillion market, we can assume owners will continue to do what they have done: hold and buy more. This is not a recipe for success; it has certainly not been our recipe.

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Bears Out The Problem

March 5th, 2025 by Kurt L. Smith

Trend reversals take time with long term trends taking a long time to reverse. Throughout the multi-decade stock and bond bull markets we were used to trend reversals. By the time a downward trend was recognized, the odds were the correction was nearing its end and prices began to rise again. You might know this as buying the dips. It worked well for both stocks and bonds following the corrections of 2000, 2008 and 2020. But bonds failed to continue their bull ways while stocks went on to set new highs since then.

Bonds reversed trend in March 2020 almost five years to the day. We have entered a bond bear market, and you know it largely because I remind you every so often. Investors bought bonds on the dip in 2020, including you. Other investors invest in the bond market. Here at The Select ApproachTM, we rely on individual bonds to perform differently from the market.

Rather than selling one’s bonds in 2020 investors continued to buy because they were accustomed to buying dips. Even when the bond market failed to reach new highs in price, investors seemed pleased to buy cheaper bonds at yields much higher than in 2020. Buy more in a bear market? That is the power of Wall Street. That is the power of optimism. That is the power of not knowing the power of a bear market.

Of course, it may also be that investors do not really know how bonds work. Last month I discussed how individuals now own about seventy percent or $3 trillion of the $4.2 trillion municipal market. In a February 12th Bloomberg article, author Martin Z. Braun looked at the returns (after fees) of open-end municipal bond mutual funds compared to customized portfolios known as Separately Managed Accounts (SMAs). Long national municipal open-ended mutual funds delivered 2.25%, -1.01%, 0.83% and 2.21% for one year, three-year, five-year and ten-year respectively. Looking at the performance of long national municipal separate managed accounts (SMAs), those clocked in with 0.58%, -1.35%, 0.47% and 2.13% for the same respective periods.

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Your Bonds Need Your Help

February 5th, 2025 by Kurt L. Smith

Everyone seems to have some bonds. There are tens of trillions of dollars in bonds out there. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) puts the figure at $46 trillion in the United States and $119 trillion worldwide. Closer to home, municipal bonds now make up $4.2 trillion of the market, per the Federal Reserve, with individuals making up 70% of the market (about $3 trillion) according to Franklin Templeton.

As we discussed last month, investors in the bond markets own the market. Everyone’s portfolio looks like everyone else’s portfolio. When the municipal market started 2024 like a house on fire, everyone benefited. Year-to-date returns, per Bloomberg’s Municipal Bond Index, approached double digits through the first three quarters, only to lose almost all of it in the fourth quarter.

This is what happens when you are not investing with the trend. The trend for bonds is lower prices. I discussed for many months how trending markets will usually undergo a multi-month correction, and that is how I was describing 2024’s bond performance. Individuals piled into municipals, not realizing they were buying into a bond bear market and at the wrong time.

Investing in bonds the same way one has always invested in bonds is…, well you tell me. Look at your results over the past year, or three years, or five years. You are investing in a market in which the trend is down. And you are paying for the privilege, either a little, or a lot.

When it comes to bonds, it also does not matter what fund you own or who the manager is or what their past performance has been. You own bonds and in a bear market your performance is going to suffer. Since seemingly no one has determined that this is a bond bear market, I would say the greatest suffering is yet to come.

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Come On In

December 6th, 2024 by Kurt L. Smith

One of the sales pitches for buying bonds (albeit an effective one) these past few years has been to buy bonds because now they earn you something. But while everyone knows 3% or 4% is greater than 1% or 2%, it is hardly a reason to do something silly.

The fact that interest rates were once near zero and now they are not should give you pause. Higher interest rates are not a recipe for bond investment performance. It was the trend toward lower interest rates over three decades that provided the wind in the bond bull market’s sails. With the new trend of higher interest rates, bond investors face headwinds that crimp performance.

Taking a longer-term perspective may help. The “higher” interest rates we now have are like where they were ten years ago. We buy a number of bonds issued ten or so years ago, so I am reminded daily. It also explains why the Bloomberg Municipal Bond Total Return Index for the past ten years is 2.73%. On December 2, 2014, the Index stood at 1064 and last week on November 29, 2024, it was 1355 (all prices and yields per Bloomberg). This Index covers the long-term tax-exempt bond market across four main sectors: state and local general obligation bonds, revenue bonds, insured bonds and prerefunded bonds.

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Bonds Reverse on News

October 28th, 2024 by Kurt L. Smith

The Federal Reserve’s September 18th rate cut was the news. This move followed excitement for the cut as three-month treasury bill yields moved from about 5.40% in July to 4.75% on the 18th. Six-month treasury bills moved from 5.30% to about 4.50% in the same time frame (all yields and prices per Bloomberg). The Fed merely followed the markets, as expected.

While the short-term interest rates have largely held in since the cut, longer term bonds have tanked. Sell on the news indeed! Our bellwether poster child, the US treasury bond 1.25% of May 15, 2050, sold at just over 56 on September 17th and below 50 today, October 25th. This is essentially the same level the bond traded at on October 24th, 2022.

It is difficult to make money in a bear market. The first step needed is to recognize that this is the trend. We reached this point years ago, back in 2020 when the bellwether sold at twice its current price, near par. Most investors have failed to recognize this first step. They have done what most investors have done: they held and/or doubled down. Unfortunately, with respect to bonds, they have not held bonds which have treated them well.

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Is This It?

September 25th, 2024 by Kurt L. Smith

For about eleven months now, bonds have traded higher in price and lower in yield in the most recent correction of the nascent bond bear market. From near 0% interest rates in 2020 to over 5% in 2023 in longer US treasury notes (below 0% to 5.50% for treasury bills), corrections are natural movements in how trends are developed.

While bond prices have rallied, we have also seen stocks hitting new highs as well. Even the Federal Reserve jumped on the bandwagon cutting rates this week to fulfill the promise made last month.

Yet for so much time, for so much work, the rebound in bonds looks pathetic. Most, if not all, of the rally occurred in the final nine weeks of last year. Our favorite long treasury bond, the 1.25% of May 15, 2050, traded at 43.25 on October 20th, 2023, and just over 55 on December 28th, weeks later. That’s a nice 27% gain for prescient traders, but a far cry from the 102 on August 6th, 2020 (all prices and yields per Bloomberg). This is what a bond bear market looks like.

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Change Appears At Hand

July 31st, 2024 by Kurt L. Smith

In April my letter examined whether the Federal Reserve would begin cutting rates. Optimism abounded as the ten-year treasury note yield fell from 5% to 3.88% (prices rose) in the fourth quarter of 2023 (all prices and yields per Bloomberg). By April such optimism had taken a hit as higher yields (lower prices) left the bond market correction hanging on by a thread.

Since October of last year, the treasury market has been in a correction. From near 0% (0.31%) in March 2020 to 5% on ten-year treasury notes, the market was due, if not overdue, for a correction. Short term treasury bills had seen a similar run from negative yields on the six-month treasury bill in March 2020 to 5.59% in August of last year, with most of the move happening in the preceding twenty months.

The bond market correction has not only hung in, but treasury bills (three months and six months) hit their lowest yield (highest price) in the correction last week, completing an A-B-C correction. Three-month bills moved from 5.51% on October 6th to 5.28% this week, while six-month bills went from 5.59% to 5.12%. A ten month correction of a twenty month move? One can make an argument that short term treasury bills next move from here is toward higher interest rates not lower.

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Managing Municipal Bond Portfolios

June 28th, 2024 by Kurt L. Smith

It seems we cannot get enough of municipal bonds, taxable or tax free. The deals keep coming, the orders overflow, and some even get filled. Shampoo, rinse and repeat.

More demand than supply should keep bond prices buoyant. Unfortunately, financial products do not work that way. Wall Street’s job is to supply more when demand is high, and Wall Street is doing exactly that by creating more and more bonds (debt) to keep up.

Demand is high so municipal bond deals are large as well, some well over a billion dollars. According to Joe Mysak, Bloomberg’s long-time resident municipal bond market expert, this week marked “the 27th deal of $1 billion or more, with overall borrowing accelerating at a torrid pace.” Amazingly, the municipal bond market remains around $4 trillion, the same as 2020, according to SIFMA website. Actual current figures are $4.1 trillion, the same as two years ago and barely higher than $3.9 trillion in 2019. So perhaps the $200 billion difference is due to larger deals! Shampoo, rinse and repeat as old bonds mature and they need to be replaced.

So how does one manage municipal bond portfolios? Largely they are managed with scale. This is where new deals like this month’s Eagle Mountain – Saginaw ISD featured bond comes into play. The best time, perhaps the only time, to buy a $5 million, $10 million, or $25 million piece is when they are first distributed. This is not new. The new issue market has been on the shampoo, rinse repeat treadmill for many years.

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Everyone (It Seems) Loves Municipals

May 29th, 2024 by Kurt L. Smith

After many months of expensive pricing relative to treasuries, municipal bond prices began to capitulate this week. Together with treasury price weakness, longer term municipal bond prices are breaking down with yields jumping upwards.

Last month we discussed that the bond market correction was hanging on by a thread. By mid-month it appeared the correction phase was intact as ten-year treasury yields moved from 4.73% on April 25th to 4.31% on May 16th (all prices and yields per Bloomberg). The spirited move saw some sympathy with two-year treasury notes (from 5% down to 4.70%), but just a few days later the two-year note is back to 4.95% on May 24th.

Remember, it is the shorter-term treasury yields that shape Federal Reserve policy, not the other way around. With short-term treasury bills and two-year notes at or near their highest yields for the year, this trend is not encouraging.

If there is such a thing in the bond market as everyone on one side of the boat, it is the duration trade. With yields on bonds at levels investors have not seen in years it seemed to make sense to buy some longer bonds to take advantage when the Federal Reserve lowers interest rates again. This could help explain bond prices rallying nicely in last year’s fourth quarter. Municipal bonds were trading about 75% of treasuries (ten-year maturity basis) to begin the move in October and later hit a record low of 57% in March, further amplifying municipal bonds bounce up in prices.

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The Right Bond, Part 2

February 29th, 2024 by Kurt L. Smith

Interest rates on ten-year U.S. treasury notes are closing out the month of February near their highest in three months. Not so for municipals. New issue municipals, usually the driver or yardstick for other municipal bond prices and yields, continued to trade near record relative values.

While ten-year U.S. treasury yields began the month near 3.90% and spent most of the last two weeks at or above 4.25%, municipal yields went the other way. We can compare Wylie TX ISD in Collin County, on the east side of Dallas, with last month’s Wylie TX ISD in Taylor County, on the south side of Abilene. Yields are lower across the board on this week’s Wylie compared to last.

Today, February 28th, the ten-year AAA municipal-treasury ratio was below 60% at 59.6. This ratio was consistently above 80% for the last twenty-plus years, save the past three. Asset values, including municipal bonds, were quite volatile in the period of the lockdown in 2020 when U.S. treasury yields plunged to near zero percent and bond prices hit their bull market highs. But as the market settled down, it appears investors have a desired preference for municipal bonds making the 80% ratio the new high rather than the old low.

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