Banking, finance, and taxes

Beware the Sharp Rise in Treasury Yields (GS, TBT, TLT, MORT, XHB)

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Jon Ogg
Interest rates are nearly zero and the Federal Reserve has pledged to keep them that way until unemployment reaches 6.5% and as long as inflation does not get to a level that would be expected to remain above 2.5%. That being said, longer-term bond yields have risen handily and expectations (or fears) are growing that longer dated Treasuries have seen perhaps a generational low in their yields.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE: GS) is already calling for higher Treasury yields on top of the yield rise we have seen in recent days and weeks. With the 10-year yield around 1.935% now, the bulge-bracket firm and primary dealer sees the 10-year Treasury yield rising up to 2.00% to 2.25% in the near-term. The question that has to remain in the back of investors’ minds is whether or not THIS TIME really will be different. If the DJIA really rises more than 11% to our 14,590 peak target of 2013 will bonds still be as attractive? Very likely that answer is no.

Time after time we have seen large “generational high calls” in bond prices, meaning that bond yields supposedly cannot go any lower. That assumes that the economy does not roll back over into recession and that the rest of the globe does not drag the U.S. down with it.

All you have to do is to look at the yield curve below. Long-term rates are not just on the rise. They have been rising handily. The rise in rates will come with a sting for long-term bond holders. A two basis-point rise in the two-year Treasury will not really hurt any investor’s portfolio. What about a rise of closer to 40 basis points in the 10-year and 30-year Treasuries? Bonds are supposed to be safe but investors are not going to like it when their statements show big losses in their long-term bonds.

The most recent rise in rates has been adding to the value of the battered ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (NYSEMKT: TBT). This has driven its price up to $67.30 versus a 52-week range of $56.32 to $86.20. The value of this “leveraged short fund” has risen 10% in just the last month. On the other hand, the iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond (NYSEMKT: TLT) has tanked in price: at $117.45, its 52-week range is $109.69 to $132.21 and its implied yield based on the last payout was put around 2.7%.

With mortgages and funds tied to them having such a focus on how low long-term rates can remain, we would note that Market Vectors Mortgage REIT ETF (NYSEMKT: MORT) has actually withstood the rise in rates rather well.

Even the SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond (NYSEMKT: JNK) has held up well despite being a junk bond ETF. This has held up due to the underlying equity components holding up as well as S&P has shown that the “speculative grade composite spread” has narrowed down to 565 basis points. Some junk bonds are now trading with yields as low as the 5% mark. While the junk bond spreads have actually been tighter, they were up above 600 basis points just at the start of December.

It does not end there. Higher long-term rates mean higher mortgage rates. Higher and higher mortgage rates historically have been a drag on the housing market, which is currently still expected to remain in a fragile recovery. If the housing recovery stalls all over again, will that pressure an already-fragile broader economic recovery in the U.S. as many market historians worry? SPDR S&P Homebuilders (NYSEMKT: XHB) trades close to its multi-year high and its shares are up over 50% from the lows of 2012.

If you still have not noticed the very recent rise in rates, you better take a look. The 30-year Treasury is now at a yield not seen since a very brief spike in September of 2012 but they are now in position to challenge the rate pop going back to before last summer. Over the last month rates have risen 34 basis points in the 10-year Treasury Note and they have risen 37 basis points in the 30-year Long Bond. Here is a chart from Yahoo! Finance showing the rise in rates in just the last month:

yield curve Jan 4 13
Yahoo! Finance

The rising long-term Treasury yields might be a game-changer. The burning question remains just how different things may be this time around now that the fiscal cliff has been partially averted. The debt-ceiling fight continues. Stay tuned.

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