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'It's Too Risky,' Says the Bond King
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
Last week, Bill Gross – the Bond King – told Bloomberg Television "it's too risky" in government bonds right now.

In short, interest rates have gone down too far, too fast.

While the "smart" money (like Bill Gross) is avoiding buying bonds today, the "dumb" money (like mutual-fund buyers) piled into them last week in the wake of the "Brexit."

(Specifically, bond funds had inflows of $14.4 billion last week, according to EPFR Global.)

Where do you side? With the smart money, or the dumb money?

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This crucial indicator signals a 'buy' in silver
With the gold/silver ratio hitting above 80 earlier this year, historical data suggested a correction resulting in higher gold and silver prices. Silver is now up almost 43% in 2016 – catch this bear market before it rises to historic levels.
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With so many fears around the world, investors have fled to supposedly safe government bonds… which pushes interest rates lower.

You might not have noticed… But all of a sudden, long-term interest rates have crashed to the downside.

Take a look at this one-year chart of the interest rate on the 30-year U.S. Treasury bond…


Long-term interest rates have fallen from 3.2% to 2.1% in the last year. That's a 34% decline!

And this isn't some obscure number I'm talking about here… This is the U.S. government bond.

This massive fall in interest rates is thanks to investor fear… Investors are now buying government bonds for safety.

We've hit an extreme in the short term. The dumb money is "all in."

The thing is, when the entire herd is putting its money into one investment, there's no money left to be made there.

(For example, when the herd bought property in 2008, there was nobody left to buy. That meant there was no demand… and prices fell. It's the same story in bonds today.)

The dumb money is about to get hurt, likely starting soon, in bonds.

For reference, during similar extremes in the past, interest rates have typically shot higher over the next 12 to 18 months.

You have to go back 18 years, to 1998, to find a moment when investors were as convinced as they are today about lower interest rates (based on bets in the futures markets in 30-year Treasury bonds).

In 1998, the interest rate on the 30-year Treasury bond bottomed at 4.7%. Then it rose more than 2 percentage points higher – to more than 6.7% – in 15 months.

It's not just government bonds…

The "dumb" money has also been piling into high-grade corporate bonds and junk bonds. Just last week, a record $2 billion flowed into LQD – the most popular corporate-bond exchange-traded fund. That's a weekly record – by more than a billion dollars.

I introduced the idea of betting on higher interest rates (and lower bond prices) to my True Wealth readers last month. We still haven't seen the start of the uptrend… So we haven't pulled the trigger just yet. But we look forward to it soon.

Instead of placing our bets today, we are going to wait for the uptrend in long-term interest rates… We are going to wait for confirmation of our idea here before we step in to take advantage of it.

I urge you to do the same – wait for rates to begin moving higher before you consider betting against bonds. But more important, I urge you to NOT buy bonds now – of any kind.

"It's too risky." Chances are good you'll lose money as bond prices fall in the coming months…

Good investing,

Steve
Further Reading:

"Money flows where it's treated best," Steve wrote in March. See why he believes low interest rates around the world will send money flowing into the U.S. here: Record-Low Mortgage Rates Are Coming.
 
Extreme Value analyst Mike Barrett knows great investment ideas "don't just drop from the sky." That's especially true with all of the fear in the markets today. Learn how Mike says to take advantage of it here.
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DON'T BUY THE HYPE: AMERICAN PAYROLLS ARE STILL BOOMING

Today's chart is a different look at how things "can't be all that bad" in America.
 
Read a financial newsletter or tune in to CNBC and you're bound to hear someone arguing that unemployment is still the biggest economic problem for Americans. But companies that handle employment-related services are telling a different story...
 
Automatic Data Processing (ADP) is the country's leading payroll-processing and benefits-administration company. It has more than 500,000 customers, with more than 80% of its business coming from the U.S. That makes ADP a great gauge of U.S. employment trends.
 
As you can see below, ADP's business is healthier than ever. The company recently announced that the U.S. private sector added 172,000 jobs in June – handily beating expectations. This has pushed ADP shares up 10% in the last two weeks alone... to a new all-time high. As long as ADP is booming, it's hard to deny that that the U.S. economy, while not great, "can't be all that bad."
 

How I'll bet against interest rates when the time is right...
 
A great opportunity for betting on higher interest rates could be right around the corner...
 

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