Municipal Bond Forum

FMSbonds, Inc.’s Municipal Bond Forum is an exclusive opportunity for investors to submit questions and comments on the bond market or to respond to one of our articles.

To participate, just send us an e-mail. Be sure to include your name or initials and your state of residence. Posted e-mails may be edited for length and clarity. If you prefer a private response, please note that in your e-mail. Responses are provided by James A. Klotz, president and co-founder of FMSbonds, Inc., a municipal bond specialist for more than 35 years, and other members of the firm as noted.

Postings are listed by date. If you have any questions, please call us at 1-800-FMS-BOND (1-800-367-2663) or e-mail us.

Role of the yield curve

I appreciated your article on laddering. I agree that predicting future rates is futile and that ladder strategies are not necessarily wise — if you want to make money. I notice you didn’t mention the importance of slope in determining what maturities you should buy. Given enough incentive, or slope, a buy-long-and-hold strategy is brilliant for the tax-free investor. In a flat yield curve environment (I have no idea the last time the muni curve was any degree of flat), I still wouldn’t favor a ladder strategy, but I don’t think I would buy long and hold, either.

D.W.

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‘Thoughtful presentation’ on public employee pensions

I enjoyed your article on public pensions. My wife and I receive three public employee pensions from Illinois. Needless to say, the hype Illinois has received in this regard has been on my mind recently. As usual, you have given us a thoughtful and balanced presentation to consider against the popular press, which often runs to hysteria. As an FMSbonds client, I appreciate the service you perform by offering us informed commentary, and the insight it shows gives me confidence in the research underlying the recommendations we receive from our broker, Edie Nasello.

G.B., Montana

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Muni bond yield curve historically steeper than Treasury, corporate bonds

As a client of FMSbonds and active muni bond investor, I read your article about laddering with interest but felt that it raised some unanswered questions. First, isn’t your critique of laddering really a product of a steep yield curve? Would your criticism of laddering soften if the yield curve flattened out so that short-term bonds yielded substantially more in relation to long-term bonds than they currently do? Secondly, in the current market, would you be as critical of laddering, which encompasses maturities from, say, 10 to 30 years as opposed to holding a portfolio of all 30-year plus bonds?

M.G., New York

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Older investors appreciate more current and reinvestable income

In your article on laddering, you forgot one important point: 30 years is a long time. If the holder of the bonds needs the money before maturity and has to liquidate these bonds, they will suffer losses. Interest rates have nowhere to go but up. If an investor is 55 and buys 30-year bonds now, it is a disaster waiting to happen. Also, if you believe this theory, why do you offer shorter-term bonds?

M.S., California

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More cash flow trumps interest rate concerns

In your article on laddering, you don’t address the situation where the investor uses the income each year and perhaps some of the principal, especially in a rising interest rate environment. Surely you don’t believe long- term interest rates will not be in a significant uptrend the next 10 years.

A.B., Florida

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Quality first

Regarding your laddering article, you presumably don’t have a problem with “chasing yield,” assuming good credit quality. If the concern is quick Fed tightening, would you still go long now?

H.B. Massachusetts

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Better off leaving emergency funds in cash

You missed the whole point of laddering. For retirees, it gives you the cash reserve to cover emergencies if there should be any. If there are no emergencies or you don’t need the cash, you can reinvest it. Retirees live on bond interest and do not accumulate interest to cover emergencies.

H.W. Texas

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‘Long-term ladder’

I completely agree with your advice and value your editorials. The only caveat I would add is that I like to purchase what I call a “long-term bond ladder.” I only buy bonds delivering the most interest (generally 20 to 30 years) but with various maturity/call features. This has served me well as I have been averaging 5% returns over the last 18 years and still get “interest rate protection.”

D.M., New Jersey

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Margin buying risky

Excellent facts on laddering. I will never need the principle of my portfolio and have more than $1 million in long-term tax-free bonds. May I suggest you touch on margin buying in the future.

L.V., California

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No free lunch

I disagree with your points concerning the drawbacks of ladders. You’re not accounting for credit risk, for which you’re not well compensated for going out longer. In a ladder structure, being able to keep buying 10-year bonds is, in effect, a free lunch. The ladder gives you more access to your cash to meet cash-flow needs. Long bonds are callable and are not efficient investments, and they can be called at the worst time for the investor. Going long term only works in combination with a mostly equity portfolio, say, 70 percent or more.

A.S.

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