Controlling portfolio structure
Doug Drabik discusses fixed income market conditions and offers insight for bond investors.
Regardless of how inflation is measured or debated, households continue to feel the cumulative effect of higher prices. The cost of goods and services have risen at a high pace over the past several years, and wage growth has not always kept pace evenly across households. At the same time, what appears to be a resilient economy still has important caveats.
A sluggish housing market, rising credit-card balances, persistent federal deficits, and aggressive capital spending tied to artificial intelligence all represent potential headwinds. Yet investors have plenty of reasons to feel confident. Equity markets have delivered strong returns, and higher interest rates have improved the income available from fixed income portfolios.
That combination can create a sense of complacency. The problem is that strong recent returns can make investors overly optimistic and less attentive to risk. The economy is driven by consumer spending, business investment, monetary policy, fiscal policy, and confidence. Equity markets respond to changing expectations around earnings, valuations, innovation, policy, and global events. None of these variables are fully within an individual investor’s control.
Portfolio structure, however, is different. Investors cannot control the next market correction, the next inflation report, or the next shift in Federal Reserve policy. What they can control is how much of their portfolio is positioned in assets with defined characteristics. This is where individual bonds can play an important role.
When an investor purchases a high-quality individual bond, the stated coupon, maturity date, and expected cash flows are known at the time of purchase. Assuming the issuer does not default, and assuming the bond is held to maturity, interim price fluctuations do not determine cash flow, income, or the final return of face value. The market price may rise or fall along the way, but the bond’s maturity value remains fixed.
This distinction matters. If a bond is sold prior to maturity, the sale price may be higher or lower than the purchase price, and the realized return may differ from what was expected. But when the bond is suitable for the investor’s liquidity needs and is held to maturity, it can provide a more defined investment experience than many other assets.
Market corrections are not a matter of if, but when. Stocks, bonds, and the economy will all move through cycles. The key is not to predict each turn perfectly, but to build portfolios that can withstand them. Individual bonds do not eliminate risk, but they can provide known cash flow, stated income, and a defined maturity value.
This is not an argument against equities. Stocks remain important for long-term growth. It is a reminder that when investor confidence rises, discipline becomes more important, not less. In today’s elevated-rate environment, high-quality individual bonds may offer investors something that has been harder to find for much of the past decade: meaningful income, greater predictability, and a clearer path for keeping portfolio cash flow intact.
The author of this material is a Trader in the Fixed Income Department of Raymond James & Associates (RJA), and is not an Analyst. Any opinions expressed may differ from opinions expressed by other departments of RJA, including our Equity Research Department, and are subject to change without notice. The data and information contained herein was obtained from sources considered to be reliable, but RJA does not guarantee its accuracy and/or completeness. Neither the information nor any opinions expressed constitute a solicitation for the purchase or sale of any security referred to herein. This material may include analysis of sectors, securities and/or derivatives that RJA may have positions, long or short, held proprietarily. RJA or its affiliates may execute transactions which may not be consistent with the report’s conclusions. RJA may also have performed investment banking services for the issuers of such securities. Investors should discuss the risks inherent in bonds with their Raymond James Financial Advisor. Risks include, but are not limited to, changes in interest rates, liquidity, credit quality, volatility, and duration. Past performance is no assurance of future results.
Investment products are: not deposits, not FDIC/NCUA insured, not insured by any government agency, not bank guaranteed, subject to risk and may lose value.
To learn more about the risks and rewards of investing in fixed income, access the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s website at finra.org/investors/learn-to-invest/types-investments/bonds and the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board’s (MSRB) Electronic Municipal Market Access System (EMMA) at emma.msrb.org.
