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I'm Pumping the Brakes...

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wealthyretirement.com

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wealthyretirement@mb.wealthyretirement.com

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Tue, Jan 16, 2024 09:52 PM

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This investment is not the right move... SPONSORED ["Weird" Savings Account Boost ] "Magic Code" FOR

This investment is not the right move... [Shield] AN OXFORD CLUB PUBLICATION [Wealthy Retirement]( [View in browser]( SPONSORED ["Weird" Savings Account Boost (Seniors Shocked)]( [Boost_Income]( "Magic Code" FORCES Banks to Pay You Up to [255 Times MORE Cash Interest]( (Give This Code to Your Bank ASAP.) [Show Me the Code!]( [MARKET TRENDS]( [Time to Pump the Brakes...]( [Marc Lichtenfeld, Chief Income Strategist, The Oxford Club]( [Marc Lichtenfeld]( Yields on Treasurys, corporate bonds and certificates of deposit (CDs) are higher than where they were a year ago and much higher than they were a few years back. As a result, one of the most common questions I'm asked is whether investors should lock in these rates for the long term. [I don't think that's the right move.]( Short-term rates are higher than long-term rates across many kinds of fixed income investments right now, which is the opposite of how things usually are. You can get 5.39% on a 4-week Treasury and 5.4% on an 8-week Treasury, which is the highest-yielding Treasury. But if you go out to one year, you'll earn 4.67%. Beyond that, the 5-year Treasury yields 3.89% and the 10-year yields 4.01%. (Keep in mind that all of these rates are annualized.) The best six-month CD rate is 5.5%. If you lock your money up for a year, you'll still earn 5.5%. But if you do so for three years, you'll earn 4.75%, and for a five-year CD, that drops to 4.6%. In corporate bonds, you can earn about 6% on a BBB rated bond for one year and 7% on a bond with a three- or five-year maturity, but that goes down to 6.48% for a 10-year maturity. Personally, I would never lock up my money for several years to earn less than 5%. Now, with respect to interest rates, nearly everyone believes they are going to be much lower by the end of this year. I don't. (You can read why I don't expect rates to be meaningfully cut this year in my Annual Forecast Issue of The Oxford Income Letter. [Click here for details.]( But even if I'm wrong and rates do fall, they won't stay low forever. Look at how drastically rates have climbed recently. Only three years ago, the 10-year Treasury yielded just over 1%. Many investors have anchoring bias. They rely too heavily on previous information even if that information is not accurate or no longer relevant. SPONSORED [Want Alex's Next VIP Picks... FREE?]( [Alex]( Join The Oxford Club's first-ever VIP All-Access Week... January 22-26... And get the newest VIP trade recommendations from Alex Green. He booked a 275% win on CyberArk on January 3 (with only a four-month hold time)... And he banked a 410% win on CrowdStrike in the first week of the year (with just a three-month hold time) in his Momentum Alert VIP research service. Alex's next VIP picks can all be yours - FOR FREE! - but you must first... [Register for FREE by clicking here.]( Better yet, you'll have the chance to win thousand of dollars' worth of prizes at our VIP All-Access Week! For example, retailers take advantage of anchoring bias all the time by offering similar products at different prices, which pushes you to buy the cheaper product - even if it's not a great deal. You may be at a ballgame where a large beer costs $18 but a regular beer is $14. That $14 Michelob doesn't sound so bad now, does it? Or when you're looking at a $60 stock and it drops to $55, you may think it's a steal... even though some fundamental research would suggest that it is still too expensive. The low rate world that we lived in for several years has made today's rates seem juicy. But historically, they are not high at all. Going back to 1962, the average yield on the 10-year Treasury is 5.87% - quite a bit higher than where it is today. The same is true for inflation. We got used to near-zero inflation for years, so today's 3.35% still seems high. But the long-term average inflation rate is 3.28% - right about where we are today. I believe fixed income should be an important part of everyone's portfolio because it can provide ballast when stocks tumble and it can generate safe income. But unless interest rates really take off and get to very high levels, I do not recommend locking your money up in bonds with maturities longer than a few years - and certainly not in any long-term bond mutual funds that are guaranteed to lose money if rates rise. I have a lot of my cash in Treasurys and CDs that mature in one year or less. Those vehicles are great places to keep your short-term cash. Sure, if rates drop, you could miss out on some extra interest for a few years by not investing in longer-term bonds. But even if rates do fall, I expect it to be part of a normal cycle in which rates and fixed income yields are constantly fluctuating. I don't suspect we're going back to a zero interest rate or even low rate environment anytime soon. Good investing, Marc [Leave a Comment]( [The Oxford Club's Wealth, Wine and Wander Tour of Spain - Barcelona, Granada, Seville and Madrid, June 6-16, 2024 (plus special extension through June 21)]( BUILD AND PROTECT YOUR WEALTH [Wall Street PROJECTS $30 Energy Stock Will Rise to $280 in 18 Months!]( [How to Make Money in 2024]( [Whatever You Do, DON'T Invest in the Wrong AI Companies.]( [The Secret to Playing Earnings Strangles Effectively]( MORE FROM WEALTHY RETIREMENT [Article]( [A Super-Cheap Retailer in an Emerging Market]( [Article]( [Will Magic Software Cut Its 6.7% Dividend Yield?]( [Article]( [Will the Fed Really Lower Rates in 2024?]( [Article]( [The Odds of a Bull Market in 2024]( [Facebook]( [Facebook]( [LinkedIn logo]( [LinkedIn]( [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Wealthy%20Retirement...&body=From%20Wealthy%20Retirement:%0D%0A%0D%0AMarc says this fixed income investment is NOT the right move...%0D%0A%0D [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Wealthy%20Retirement...&body=From%20Wealthy%20Retirement:%0D%0A%0D%0AMarc says this fixed income investment is NOT the right move...%0D%0A%0D [Push Alert]( [Push Alert]( SPONSORED [Five Dividend Stocks to Buy Now (FREE INSIDE)]( Marc Lichtenfeld - income expert and author of Get Rich with Dividends - is giving away his Ultimate Dividend Package... Completely free of charge! Seriously, no credit card required. Inside, you'll get the names and ticker symbols of his TOP FIVE dividend stocks right now, including... - An "A"-rated, ultra-safe dividend stock with a huge 8% yield - Three of Marc's favorite "Extreme Dividend" stocks, which could supercharge your income - And finally, his No. 1 dividend stock for a LIFETIME of income. [Click here before the download link expires.]( [The Oxford Club]( You are receiving this email because you subscribed to Wealthy Retirement. Wealthy Retirement is published by The Oxford Club. Questions? Check out our [FAQs](. Trying to reach us? [Contact us here.]( Please do not reply to this email as it goes to an unmonitored inbox. [Privacy Policy]( | [Whitelist Wealthy Retirement]( | [Unsubscribe]( © 2024 The Oxford Club, LLC All Rights Reserved The Oxford Club | [105 West Monument Street](#) | [Baltimore, MD 21201](#) North America: [877.808.9795](#) | International: [+1.443.353.4621](#) [Oxfordclub.com]( Nothing published by The Oxford Club should be considered personalized investment advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed personalized investment advice. We allow the editors of our publications to recommend securities that they own themselves. However, our policy prohibits editors from exiting a personal trade while the recommendation to subscribers is open. In no circumstance may an editor sell a security before subscribers have a fair opportunity to exit. The length of time an editor must wait after subscribers have been advised to exit a play depends on the type of publication. All other employees and agents must wait 24 hours after publication before trading on a recommendation. Any investments recommended by The Oxford Club should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. The information found on this website may only be used pursuant to the membership or subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of The Oxford Club, LLC, 105 West Monument Street, Baltimore, MD 21201.

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