These 'Fed-Fueled' Dividends Whip Inflation

 | Jun 02, 2021 05:08AM ET

Are the best things in life actually free? It depends how we handle the hidden costs.

Free coffee is good. At home, I drink one mega-cup per day. At fixed income conferences, I typically scale that “complimentary” consumption up to double-digits per day. (Hey, they’re just hotel cups.)

Free breakfast is usually better than just free caffeine. And open bar, of course, reigns supreme for your income strategist.

No doubt these freebies are baked into ticket costs, but I will gladly accept the bacon and beer challenge to get my money’s worth.

When readers write in to ask my thoughts on “risk free” yields on certain bonds, it’s time for us to talk. No bond is perfect and inflation insurance—like it or not—always comes with a hidden cost.

US Treasuries played the “risk free” role from 1980 to 2020 so well that investors in them began to take this income buffet for granted. Yields went down for 40 years, so bond prices (which move inversely to yields) went up. Anyone who bought Treasuries during this epic bond epoch got some price upside with their payouts.

But rates can only fall for so long. By the end of last year, they had hit their lower bound, at least for now.

Bond bulls who recently bought the popular iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NASDAQ:TLT) probably didn’t think their four-decade win streak would end at year 41. But TLT owners are down nearly 12% on the year, wondering why they risked so much on a pathetic 1%+ payer:

h2 “Risk Free” Treasuries:/h2

Going Down Like Free Conference Coffees