Alfonso Peccatiello Tweeted out the following;
We are not in a 5% world (yet?) for US treasuries but I could see where that level would entice more investors to lock in for longer than a year or two. I would want to see yields up near the bottom end of the normal range of equity returns, like maybe 7%, before I would consider taking on any sort of real duration and even then I don't know if the volatility would be worth it.
But that's me, that doesn't make me correct, maybe you would decide 5% is worth the volatility that goes with duration. My point with is though is if you want plain vanilla treasury exposure, just buy an individual issue not an ETF. Unless there is a BulletShares type of treasury ETF out there that matures, the typical treasury ETF will distribute at the prevailing interest rate.
If you bought when yields were at 5% and yields then went to 2% over the next year or whatever, yes you'd have a nice capital gain but the fund would then be yielding 2%. If rates went from 5% up to 7%, then the fund would pay 7% but the price would drop a lot and unlike an individual issue there is no par value for an ETF to revert to at maturity. The TLT ETF is at $89. It topped out around $170. Yields would have to go well under 1% for the fund to ever see $170 again. If nothing else, a terribly timed purchase of an individual treasury would revert to its par value at maturity.
Next, an interesting reader comment from yesterday's post that I will try to respond to here;
If the reader is asking me how I value services, ok, I wasn't thinking on those terms, I wasn't thinking about what he describes as subtext. How anyone values things like access to healthcare, how convenient it is or isn't for everyday errands like groceries as well as utilities
probably factor into these decisions.
I say probably to acknowledge that they could be important but don't have to be for everyone. We don't have access to good healthcare here. For something acute and not serious then yes there are a couple of hospitals and several urgent cares but we don't have any level 1 trauma centers here, those are in Phoenix and Flagstaff and my physician is in Phoenix. I try to avoid needing healthcare beyond a physical with habits related to diet and exercise.
The reader mentioned homestead sites in New Mexico that have no services. These properties are also very inexpensive.
The picture is from Ramah, NM which is in the far western part of the state, due south of Gallup. There is a restaurant there, a volunteer fire department and I believe a store of some sort but if you need to make a real grocery run you'd go to Gallup or to go to Costco you'd need to go to Albuquerque for an overnight. The road between Ramah and Gallup has a relatively high number of vehicle accidents though. The picture is from the Airbnb where we stayed for one night. It's on a 100 acre parcel. The property is tucked way back in there off the main road and when we visited, a couple of the other nearby parcels were for sale.
I don't know if there are any utilities or if the power was generated through some combo of wind and solar. Internet can be had via several different satellite services (now there is Starlink too) and the properties in the area all had their own wells. There are some similarities to where my wife and I live and some big differences. We could be self-sufficient for utilities if the grid failed here, we're on a well, internet is via satellite. The big difference, although it feels like we are out there a ways, we're 8-9 miles from Costco, Trader Joe's and Walmart. Amazon delivers to the bottom of our hill but the delivery times are longer than most other people.
One other thing about Ramah though, as secluded as it feels, both El Morro National Monument and El Malpais National Monument are both pretty close.
The reader's last sentence, how do you prioritize those items? Chances are you know what role they play in your life and the extent to which they would influence ever making a big change in life or deciding not to. The point of the original post was about being open to the possibility that it is ok to deviate away from the track that most people go on. Plenty of people think they want something only to achieve it and realize it was not what really mattered to them.
The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.