Interest Rate Lock

There is a minimum level of return that we would all want to get. If you were to lock in all your i

  • I would never do such a thing

    Votes: 5 20.0%
  • 3% or less

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 4%

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 5%

    Votes: 2 8.0%
  • 6%

    Votes: 1 4.0%
  • 7%

    Votes: 3 12.0%
  • 8%

    Votes: 6 24.0%
  • 9%

    Votes: 1 4.0%
  • 10% or higher

    Votes: 7 28.0%

  • Total voters
    25

retire@40

Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Joined
Feb 16, 2004
Messages
2,670
There is a minimum level of return that we would all want to get.  If you were to lock in all your investments for the rest of your life at a GUARANTEED interest rate, what would the MINIMUM rate be?
 
I am assuming that the rate is not real, but nominal. Therefore, I do not see how one can lock up all investments at a set rate for the rest of life. Many on this board can remember US Treasuries at 15%.
 
I'd be willing to play the odds at some point. Anybody want to give me US T-bills at 75% right now?
 
justin said:
Real or nominal?

Nominal.

I know that the real rate may be more meaningful at an individual level, but this is to say, for example, would you lock all your money in long-term treasuries if they could give you a certain nominal rate of return for the rest of your life?

With 12 people voting so far, it looks like if long-term rates (30-year bond) ever hit 7%, that is when people would start jumping in. Below that, nobody is willing to commit their money in a long-term lockup. That was my gut feeling too before the poll.
 
Perhaps - if I lock in the 12-15% rates for a 30 yr Treasury - like the good old days.

On second thought - maybe not.
 
unclemick2 said:
Perhaps - if I lock in the 12-15% rates for a 30 yr Treasury - like the good old days.

On second thought - maybe not.

You're kidding, right?
 
I worked with a guy (the one who hired me for my 95 temp job) who bought a bushel basket of bonds circa 80-82 and was bitching because some in 95 - not the treasuries - some others were getting called.

He took early out - 57:confused: within a year after my temp stint. I know two others who left early in that time frame.

Heh, heh, heh - I like to think - I offered the proper bad influence.
 
retire@40 said:
With 12 people voting so far, it looks like if long-term rates (30-year bond) ever hit 7%, that is when people would start jumping in. Below that, nobody is willing to commit their money in a long-term lockup. That was my gut feeling too before the poll.

There is a huge difference to me, between buying some 30 year treasuries, and locking up all my assets at a fixed nominal rate til I die.

For the former, I might start biting at 7 or 8%, and have a significant holding at 10 or 12%. Would have to do research&thinking though.

For the latter, maybe would accept 15 or 20%. Not sure I would though. Maybe if it could be in a basket of currencies/nations. Can I invest the interest anywhere, or does that have to go into the same bonds too?
 
unclemick2 said:
Perhaps - if I lock in the 12-15% rates for a 30 yr Treasury - like the good old days.

On second thought - maybe not.

Yeh, that would b great if we also want to pay $3 for either a quart of milk or a quart of gas.
 
I put in 8% figuring an after tax rate of 5%.
Assuming a 4% spending rate increase I would be OK.

I would leave an estate of 3.5m - that is what my spread sheet says anyway.
 
retire@40 said:
With 12 people voting so far, it looks like if long-term rates (30-year bond) ever hit 7%, that is when people would start jumping in.
Hmmm, 4% withdrawals and 3% inflation over a 30-year retirement life expectancy. I can see that.

I sat next to a man at a Schwab seminar who was facing the expiraton of the 30-year Treasury bonds in his portfolio. IIRC he'd purchased them in 1974 at 9%. He'd been pretty unhappy with them in the late '70s/early '80s but he was even more unhappy in 2004...
 
Nords said:
Hmmm, 4% withdrawals and 3% inflation over a 30-year retirement life expectancy.  I can see that.

That's the way I look at it too. For me 7% would be the minimum, although if I had a gut feeling rates were going up even more (ala early 80s) and decided to be a little greedy, I would wait for an 8% lock and wouldn't look back.

I need more than a 30-year lock, but 30-year treasuries are the longest term guaranteed vehicle I know of.
 
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