Comparing TIPS to Nominal Bonds

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This article originally appeared on ETF.COM here.

I’ve been getting lots of questions lately about the merits of owning Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPS] versus nominal bonds. With that in mind, today I’ll discuss how to determine the more appropriate strategy.

To begin, we need to recognize there are two ways one can hold TIPS and nominal bonds: purchase the bonds individually or invest in mutual funds/ETFs. When investing through taxable accounts and IRAs, one can do either. However, in corporate retirement plans, such as a 401(k), one is limited to funds.

Comparing five-year maturities

To keep the analysis simple, and because my firm, Buckingham Strategic Wealth, generally recommends building bond portfolios with an average maturity of about five years, I’ll analyze TIPS and nominal Treasuries with five-year maturities. (The same analysis can be done for other maturities.) As of this writing, Aug, 14, 2018, the five-year TIPS was yielding 0.77% and the five-year nominal Treasury was yielding 2.76%. Thus, the breakeven inflation rate was 1.99%. That doesn’t mean, however, the market is estimating future inflation of 1.99%.

There are two reasons why you cannot make this assumption about inflation. The first is that nominal Treasury bonds are the most liquid market in the world. While TIPS are relatively liquid securities, and also carry the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, they are not as liquid as nominal bonds. Investors in nominal Treasuries pay a premium (in the form of a lower yield) to own them. The second is that the yield on nominal Treasuries has three, not two, components: the real yield, the expected rate of inflation and a risk premium for unexpected inflation. TIPS yields are determined only by the real yield.