"Bond Math Reveals High Returns and Low Risk for Bold Traders, Despite Inflation Concerns"

TL;DR Summary
Traders are using "bond math" to justify contrarian bets on long-dated Treasurys, as they believe the potential gains from a rally outweigh the losses from further price deterioration. Calculations show that a 50 basis point decline in yields could result in a 13% return, while the opposite would lead to a 2.6% loss. However, critics argue that factoring in the opportunity cost of holding a one-year Treasury bill with a higher yield diminishes the attractiveness of these returns. While this bond market theory has little impact on price direction, it highlights potential outcomes for traders.
- 'Bond math' shows traders bold enough to bet on Treasurys could reap dazzling returns with little risk MarketWatch
- Bonds have proven to been a very bad hedge against inflation, says Wharton's Jeremy Siegel CNBC Television
- Treasury Bonds Crashed Because They're a Bad Inflation Hedge: Jeremy Siegel Markets Insider
- Jeremy Siegel says Treasurys crashed because everyone forgot they're a bad inflation hedge while stocks 'do beautifully' Business Insider India
- View Full Coverage on Google News
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
1
Time Saved
4 min
vs 5 min read
Condensed
90%
932 → 95 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on MarketWatch