We’d like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum.

This is to keep it a safe and useful space for MoneySaving discussions. Threads that are – or become – political in nature may be removed in line with the Forum’s rules. Thank you for your understanding.

📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!

Tide turning for interest rates?

Glen_Clark
Glen_Clark Posts: 4,397 Forumite
edited 5 September 2013 at 7:53AM in Savings & investments
10 year UK Government Bond Yields now stand at 2.93%.
Sounds low until you consider that on May 2nd they stood at 1.62%
Thats an 80% increase in 4 months
Leeds Building Society have just launched a 3% ISA.
Small investors have piled into the stock market whilst Osborne is guaranteeing 0% sub prime loans with taxpayers money.
(Traditionally the small investor, and the taxpayer, always loses)
So can Osborne's money printers hold back the tide until after the election?
“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” --Upton Sinclair
«1345678

Comments

  • alanq
    alanq Posts: 4,216 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    Glen_Clark wrote: »
    Leeds Building Society have just launched a 3% ISA.

    The 3% 5-year fixed rate is available for in both ISA and non-ISA form.
  • Glen_Clark
    Glen_Clark Posts: 4,397 Forumite
    edited 5 September 2013 at 10:31AM
    alanq wrote: »
    The 3% 5-year fixed rate is available for in both ISA and non-ISA form.
    Ah Thanks for the udate.
    I should have added the Bank of England has predicted interest rates staying low, given their record on inflation forecasting the opposite seems more likely - indeed bond yields rose as soon as they said it..

    (Being undecided as usual I have;
    Shares 51.3%
    4.5% fixed ISA 13.8%
    NSI Index linked Bonds 11.3%
    Instant access cash earning 2% gross 23.5%)
    QwTBTvqVuq4AAAAASUVORK5CYII=
    QwTBTvqVuq4AAAAASUVORK5CYII=
    “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” --Upton Sinclair
  • John1993_2
    John1993_2 Posts: 1,090 Forumite
    Glen_Clark wrote: »
    10 year UK Government Bond Yields now stand at 2.93%.
    Sounds low until you consider that on May 2nd they stood at 1.62%
    Thats an 80% increase in 4 months

    No, it's a 1.31% increase in 4 months.

    You've also picked the recent low as your comparison point, which does rather call for an explanation. Go back just a little further to Feb and they were at 2.2%.
  • Glen_Clark
    Glen_Clark Posts: 4,397 Forumite
    edited 5 September 2013 at 9:49AM
    If you invested £x 4 months ago you would be getting £100 interest
    If you invested the same amount now you would be getting £180 interest
    Thats an 80% increase in 4 months.
    (Yes of course yields were higher before they bottomed out in May.)
    “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” --Upton Sinclair
  • John1993_2
    John1993_2 Posts: 1,090 Forumite
    Glen_Clark wrote: »
    If you invested £x 4 months ago you would be getting £100 interest
    If you invested the same amount now you would be getting £180 interest
    Thats an 80% increase in 4 months.
    (Yes of course yields were higher before they bottomed out in May.)

    No-one talks about fractional changes in yields, though, especially as they can go negative. Using your language, what would you say was the increase in yield when you went from -10bp to +1%%? Would you say "interest rates wennt up by minus 1,000 percent"?

    Also, you mischarectarise how yields are calculated in your example above. Yield and interest are not the same, as yield includes capital gain through draw to par on expiry.

    Yield is a theoretical number, reflecting the return that you could get if you were able to reinvest the coupons at the same IRR as implied by the bond price. Because you can't assume this, you can't say that your return will match the quoted yield.

    But, what do I know, I'm only an interest rates trader?..
  • Ark_Welder
    Ark_Welder Posts: 1,878 Forumite
    John1993 wrote: »
    No, it's a 1.31% increase in 4 months.

    No, it's a 1.31 percentage point increase in 4 months. If the difference between the two was to be expressed as 'percent' then it would be stated as 80%.

    John1993 wrote: »
    Yield and interest are not the same, as yield includes capital gain through draw to par on expiry.

    Yield is a theoretical number, reflecting the return that you could get if you were able to reinvest the coupons at the same IRR as implied by the bond price. Because you can't assume this, you can't say that your return will match the quoted yield.

    The word 'yield' is rather ambiguous when used in relation to bonds, so - in this particular case - qualifying it as 'yield to maturity' would have carried more meaning.
    Living for tomorrow might mean that you survive the day after.
    It is always different this time. The only thing that is the same is the outcome.
    Portfolios are like personalities - one that is balanced is usually preferable.



  • lvader
    lvader Posts: 2,579 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    Talk of an 80% increase while technically correct is fairly pointless. It's still just a 3% yield which isn't that great. A decent buy in price if you are light on gilts.
  • Glen_Clark
    Glen_Clark Posts: 4,397 Forumite
    John1993 wrote: »
    what would you say was the increase in yield when you went from -10bp to +1%%?
    But, what do I know, I'm only an interest rates trader?..
    Well as you are an interest rates trader perhaps you can tell us when UK Bond yields were -10bp ;)

    More seriously;
    Since I referred to interest, not capital, I was treferring to the percentage increase in the interest, not the capital.
    Look at this way. Say a £100k rental property yields 1.62% - £162pa
    The rent is increased from £162 to £293
    Does the rent increase by 1.31%, or by 80%?
    “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” --Upton Sinclair
  • Glen_Clark
    Glen_Clark Posts: 4,397 Forumite
    lvader wrote: »
    Talk of an 80% increase while technically correct is fairly pointless.
    So an 80% increase is fairly pointless. (and it rose another 3% today.)
    How high will it have to go before it isn't pointless?
    “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” --Upton Sinclair
  • bowlhead99
    bowlhead99 Posts: 12,295 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Post of the Month
    Glen_Clark wrote: »
    Say a £100k rental property yields 1.62% - £162pa
    The rent is increased from £162 to £293
    Does the rent increase by 1.31%, or by 80%?
    It's somewhat irrelevant as that one specific rental property is not the only fruit ; without knowledge of inflation and the risk adjusted prospective returns from every other opportunity out there for which your 100k could be suited, a change in the nominal amount of pounds received is meaningless. And if you are the tenant rather than landlord you would have a different set of metrics to compare with to assess the cost or value of staying in the property.

    Any of these measures are useless without context. For example, say the 'risk free rate' that you could get from a government security is 1%. Of course governments can default but generally the big ones don't. Then consider a bank offering savings rates of 3% in the same currency.

    Then markets change and the bank is now offering savings rates of 5% (for the sake of argument, say the risk free rate from the government has not changed).

    Based on this thread, one of you would be saying that the bank's rate has gone up by 2%. The other would say the return on £10,000 has gone up from £200 a year to £500 a year which is clearly a 150% improvement.

    Of course, a fuller analysis would consider other comparatives (i.e. the risk free rate) and say that the bank's premium over the risk free rate has gone up by 2% ; or that the premium over the risk free rate has doubled (100% increase, not 150% increase). This is more useful as it at least builds in the opportunitiy for incorporating the fact that over time we get different prevailing conditions, inflation and so on, and a rate on its own without considering alternatives and the general state of the union is useless.

    Now going back to the first post case you could say the yield to maturity on a government 10 year bond has gone up from 1.62 to 2.93, by cherry picking yor time periods. But basically this is the risk free rate. So essentially the return has gone from risk free rate plus zero, to risk free rate plus zero. The 2.93% product today is giving the same 'relative return' as the 1.62% product a few months ago.

    You might prefer to buy/save/invest today with higher yield and perhaps lower relative capital loss potential than a few months back. But effectively the market is telling you that it's at the right price, all risks and alternatives considered; just like it was before. As that's what markets do. The movement in rate is simply driven by varying perceptions of risks over time and an assessment of alternatives that is changing from period to period.
This discussion has been closed.
Meet your Ambassadors

🚀 Getting Started

Hi new member!

Our Getting Started Guide will help you get the most out of the Forum

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 351.7K Banking & Borrowing
  • 253.4K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
  • 454K Spending & Discounts
  • 244.7K Work, Benefits & Business
  • 600.2K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
  • 177.3K Life & Family
  • 258.4K Travel & Transport
  • 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
  • 16.2K Discuss & Feedback
  • 37.6K Read-Only Boards

Is this how you want to be seen?

We see you are using a default avatar. It takes only a few seconds to pick a picture.