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Business/Finance See other Business/Finance Articles Title: Havens and Traps if Rates Go Negative Havens and Traps if Rates Go Negative Published Tue, Feb 23, 2016 | Martin Hutchinson, Global Markets Analyst Likelihood of Negative Rates Increasing During recent Congressional testimony, Fed Chair Janet Yellen said shes looking carefully at moving to a negative federal funds rate. As income investors, we must protect ourselves from this very real possibility, while also recognizing that some investments are much safer than others. So lets start with one truly terrible investment group banks. Yes, banks will do very badly indeed under negative interest rates because they darent risk passing the negative interest rates on to their depositors. If they did, deposits would vanish into cash piles buried under mattresses. So long as banks dont pass negative rates on to their depositors, their profits will be badly squeezed. The cost of much of their funding will exceed what they receive on risk-free assets. And thats just one of many reasons why negative interest rates are a bad idea. Such rates would also cause banks to reduce their leverage and cut back on their lending, because the spreads between deposit and lending rates would no longer be sufficient to cover overheads. By pushing interest rates negative, central banks will achieve the precise opposite of their stated goals. Of course, the worlds central banks, along with various Keynesian pundits, are pushing the idea of getting rid of cash altogether. That would allow central banks to set rates at negative 20%, or whatever crazy figure they feel like. Thus, we have to hope that the combined power of peasants with pitchforks even in the EU and Japan, where the people have a sheeple quality about them will prevent central banks from implementing this very bad idea. In Japan, which has suffered with zero interest rates longer than any other country and recently went to a negative rate, fourth-quarter GDP was down at a 1.7% annual rate and January exports were down 12.9% from a year earlier. Whats more, Japan Post Bank shares are down 18% from their flotation price in November because Japans negative interest rates undermine the banks business model (its assets are almost all low-risk Japan Government Bonds, which now yield zero for a 10-year maturity). Traditional Japanese retail investors are rightly annoyed at a government that lured them into a supposedly safe investment and then destroyed it with dozy policies. A Silver Lining? Fortunately, theres also some good news for income investors. Negative short-term interest rates will produce a few winners, including a group of stocks that pays spectacular dividends: residential mortgage real estate investment trusts (REITs). Residential mortgage REITs fund themselves in the short-term markets and invest in home mortgages guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. By leveraging, they aim to turn the 3-4% yields on mortgage bonds into 10-20% returns, most of which is paid out as dividends. Id always been down on the mortgage REIT sector, regarding it as very high risk. If interest rates go up, the gap between short-term funding costs and long-term bond income disappears, and the value of the REITs bond portfolio declines. This happened in 2012-13, when American Capital Agency Corp. (AGNC) shares lost half of their value in six months. But with negative interest rates, the opposite happens. The cost of funding, being based in short-term money markets, declines probably below zero (the REITs can borrow cheaply because they can repo their low-risk bond portfolio). At the same time, the yield on assets stays well above zero. And if mortgage rates do decline, the value of the portfolio increases, giving the REIT a capital gain. Thus, either net income increases or capital does, a double-sided gain. The two largest pure home mortgage REITs are AGNC and Annaly Capital Management Inc. (NLY). AGNC, with a market capitalization of $6.1 billion, is trading at 79% of book value and offering a dividend yield of 13.7% based on quarterly dividends of $0.60 per share. NLY, which has a market capitalization of $9.4 billion and is trading at 83% of book value, offers a dividend yield of 12.3% based on a quarterly dividend of $0.30 per share. Neither of these companies earns enough to cover their dividends, based on trailing four quarters earnings, because short-term rates have been trending upwards, narrowing spreads and pressuring capital value. But if Yellen does decide to lower rates below zero, both companies are poised to benefit spectacularly, probably giving you a capital gain as they come to sell above book value. Still, dont put too much in them they remain high risk regardless. For better sleep-at-night protection, theres always gold. As everybody sneers, it offers no yield. But if yields elsewhere are negative, zero begins to look like a good deal. And theres no doubt it offers better capital protection than todays funny money. Thats probably why its up 15% since January 1. Good investing, Martin Hutchinson Poster Comment: Negative rates means your savings will disappear. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
Other than short-term fluctuations, gold is always better then government money.
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