Total Return Investing In Municipal Bonds

 | Jun 23, 2017 09:07AM ET

“The best bond values today will not be the best bond values next year and will certainly not be the best bond values until maturity.” – Sidney Homer, January 1973, Salomon Brothers study

Sidney Homer’s statement from a study published 44 years ago still rings as true today, when the 10-year US Treasury bond is yielding 2.2%, as it did in January 1973, when the yield stood at 6.4% and was heading much higher over the next eight years.

Cumberland Advisors practices total-return bond management in most accounts. We have the freedom to manage the durations and maturities of bonds in the portfolio over an interest-rate cycle while remaining vigilant about monitoring credit and tailoring portfolios to clients’ needs.

We employ the Barclays (LON:BARC) Muni Index as a benchmark. If defensive bond decisions are called for, then we will employ a strategy oriented toward protecting capital while still providing tax-free income. If we believe that municipal bond interest rates are too high relative to where fair value lies, we will employ more offensive strategies that should provide some appreciation in addition to the tax-free income. We then compare our results to the benchmark, not manage to the benchmark.

Whereas with equities long-term value may often be achieved by a buy and hold strategy (think Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) or Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) or other companies with long track histories of adding value), changes in bond portfolios are FREQUENTLY called for – in some cases to make strategic maturity and duration changes and in other cases to take advantage of tax-loss swapping. Changes can also be made to reduce exposure to what we perceive as a deteriorating credit and to gain exposure to what we see as an improving situation. All bond prices rise and fall inversely with interest rates. But it is the RELATIVE differences in bond prices that allow us to be opportunistic. Let’s look at what differences in maturity and duration have meant in just the past year.

The chart below shows the total-return differences among different maturity sectors of the market in succeeding six-month periods.