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Interest Rate Risk The changing interest rate environment has prompted many individuals to examine their borrowing and take advantage of lower rates. The affect of the current lower rates has also been felt as individuals invest in or renew CDs. Lower borrowing rates have been coupled with lower rates being paid on savings accounts and CDs. Borrowers have been happy while savers have been less happy. What is interest
rate risk? This happens because the values of bonds are determined in the marketplace. There are thousands of traders and investors that are constantly buying and selling bonds. The prices at which they will buy and sell are based on the existing interest rate environment. The amount by which the values rise or fall is primarily dependent on the maturity of the bond. The longer the maturity a bond has, the greater its value will change when interest rates change. For short-term bonds, like 90 day Treasury Bills, the impact of changing rates is very small. For a 30 year Treasury Bond, a 1% rise in the interest rate can result in as much as a 12% drop in value. A 2% rise in rates can result in a fall of 22% in value. If interest rates fall, the values of bonds will rise, but not quite by the same percentages (because of the way the present value calculations work). If you include bonds (or other fixed income investments) in your portfolio, you should understand that their values can fluctuate with changes in interest rates. How should you
consider interest rate risk in your investment strategy? Summary |