Why to Consider Mortgage-Backed Securities Now

Mortgage-backed security yields remain high, and they can make sense for investors looking to extend duration to help reduce reinvestment risk once the Federal Reserve begins to cut rates.

Extending duration has been a key theme of ours for months. Short-term yields, like those offered by Treasury bills or money market funds, tend to fluctuate with the federal funds rate. While high now—Treasury bills with maturities of six months or less generally have yields above 5%—they should begin to fall once rate cuts become more likely.1 That could force investors to reinvest maturing securities at lower yields, a situation known as reinvestment risk. Investors should consider some intermediate- or longer-term investments to help reduce reinvestment risk by paying those higher yields for longer.

Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) may fit that bill: The underlying mortgages that make up the securities generally have 30 years to maturity when issued but often will be paid off earlier than 30 years. Mortgage-backed securities also have unique characteristics compared to traditional bond investments like U.S. Treasuries, so investors should be aware of how they work before considering them as an investment. Below we discuss what investors need to know before investing and how MBS yields stack up today compared to other highly rated alternatives.

Mortgage-backed securities: the basics

A mortgage-backed security is a type of investment that is backed by a pool of underlying mortgages. As homeowners make their monthly mortgage payments, those payments are passed on to holders of mortgage-backed securities. This makes MBS investing a little less straightforward than investing in traditional bonds, because: