Vanguard Inflation Indexed Bonds vs S&P 500

by | Oct 14, 2022 | Inflation Hedge | 16 comments

Vanguard Inflation Indexed Bonds vs  S&P 500




================================
Sign up for email list here.

LET’S SOCIALIZE!
Linkedin:

My course “Can I Retire” will help reduce your stress when it comes to retirement planning.
Get it here:

and don’t forget there IS a 30 day money back guarantee if you’re not satisfied!

Get my books on Audible here:

Want to support what I’m doing for $10 a month?
Join my SubscribeStar page!

My Amazon Product page:

Anything you buy there Amazon pays me a commission. Much appreciated!

GET MY BOOKS:
ALL are FREE to Kindle Unlimited Subscribers!

You Can RETIRE on SOCIAL SECURITY:

The Tax Bomb In Your Retirement Accounts: How The Roth IRA Can Help You Avoid It:

Strategic Money Planning: 8 Easy Ways To Put Your House In Order

GET ALL MY LATEST BLOGPOSTS:
(read more)


HOW TO: Hedge Against Inflation

REVEALED: Best Investment During Inflation

HOW TO INVEST IN GOLD: Gold IRA Investing

HOW TO INVEST IN SILVER: Silver IRA Investing


See also  Treasury Inflation Protected Securities
Truth about Gold
You May Also Like

16 Comments

  1. Mike Flair

    ALWAYS stay invested in stocks, like 80% in ETF's at Total USA Level. The other 20% can be in bonds, also in ETF form at Total USA level. No need for gold, crypto, reits, options, shorts, hedges, memes, etc. As 'protection of down stock markets', which is over hyped, is actually very simple. CHANGE your mindset, and when stocks drop 10, 20, 30%, then SELL bonds and BUY stocks…simple, logical, and profitable. When stocks recover (they will), restore the money to the bond fund…kind of like borrowing from yourself. Get rid of fear!

  2. King David

    do you think owning precious metals ( gold/silver ) is good idea. if so how many ounces do your think it should be ( silver to gold )

  3. Wilma

    The bonds stay flat, I still prefer cash over bonds

  4. Gary from Pa

    If you look at just using Vanguard Wellesley Income (VWINX) or Vanguard Wellington (VWELX) they do have down side protection built in and if you only used one of these funds it would mean you don't need to rebalance at all. This could make it real easy use ether of these funds as a source of income with out much work on the investors part.
    The fees a little higher than these other funds but it could save you money if you don't keep up with rebalancing your account.

  5. Zach Tripp

    The 50/50 Stock/Bond portfolio is under appreciated in my opinion. Once deeper into retirement, 33/33/33 Stock/Bond/Cash is nice also. Purpose of my comment, how does a floating rate (like FFHCX) compare to TIPS in such a portfolio? Maybe longer duration floating rate with shorter duration TIPS?

  6. Vinny G

    Depending on your time line and tolerance for risk it may or may not pay to diversify. Not all markets react the same all the time, years ago bonds and stocks would rise and fall opposite of each other but they don't seem to be doing that these days. I'm no market guru, I was 100% stock and stock funds in 2007-2008 and actually added more money into them because in my thinking "the market will eventually go up" and it did. People asked me for advice and I said buy more and people said they can't stomach the loses.

    Times change, I'm closer to retirement and I am diversifying my portfolio and am keeping cash available.

    For investment safety, diversification is key. My knowledge of bonds is very weak, I have looked at inflation protected TIPS but don't really see a reason for them as they have a negative yield; haven't paid a regular dividend and up until now with no inflation I questioned why own them. Stocks, bonds, reits, maybe utilities and energy and possibly foreign stocks. As far as crypto or other assets the best advice I've heard from great investors is – if you don't understand it don't invest in it. This could be the best advice for most people.

  7. Mike del Caribe

    I never thought TIPS would have so much volatility due to capital gain/loss potential. I will have to consider them for my portfolio.

  8. Charles Dill

    You've got tons of videos laughing at inflation talk….now you're all in on the inflation train??

  9. Medic311

    I know I will be criticized for this, but it is my opinion to do 100% VT/VTWAX from Day 1, and add 2-3 cash flowing small multi-family rental properties by age 40. that is all one will need during wealth building phase. once you reach retirement you can evaluate where bonds are, where real estate is, and where things are in the markets.

  10. benny simpson

    We use the fifty-fifty strategy, and sleep well at night.

  11. shootandfish2

    Josh, your getting closer to my earlier comment regarding Vanguard's Retirement Income Fund, VTINX, as an intermediate, 'all-weather bucket' between Wellington and cash for retirees. Compare VTINX to Wellington and the S&P 500 from the fall of '07 to the spring of '13 and you will see what I mean. The reason that I keep bringing this up is that a lot of 401k plans (mine!!!) offer VTINX under the Target Retirement Series ( and very little other appropriate choices).

    Thanks,

    Fred

  12. Grandma's Malibu

    On the right hand side of the screen using that tool- Sortino Ratio. It's like Sharpe Ratio but it only penalizes on downside volatility. You mentioned that "nobody cares about upside volatility", which is true, and is what Sortino Ratio measures. Just thought I'd mention it.

  13. Charles Michael

    The bonds had a tail wind in the form of falling interest rates 2000 to 2021. Not likely that will repeat in next two decades as rates are near zero with nowhere to go but up. Do Tips behave differently than most bonds in a rising rate environment?

  14. Alberto Santa Barbara County CA

    Downside protection = capital preservation or risk reassessment. In the way up, a person has an allocation of 70/30. Once market turns down, we want to be 50/50.

    It does not work that way. Captial preservation equals at an allocation of 50/50 or 40/60 or 30/70.

    What happened to 0 bond allocation? I am somewhat confused. If you are truly so concerned about a downturn, sell stocks buy bonds to an allocation you feel protected.

    We are 70/30 and will remain 8n that allocation because we feel that is the proper allocation for our level of risk and cash. Do you have 3 years of cash? If so, why at 50 are you so afraid of market downturn? What is missing here?

    Sell stocks now at a high and buy bonds so you will be protected.

  15. Michael Lewis

    Very interesting comparison.

  16. Bob Riemersma

    I wouldn't be worried today. With D.C. pumping out a fresh slab of Wall Street Welfare they'll be riding high on that for a couple months at least. Build them charging stations, rich folks need more pork on the backs of the little people.

U.S. National Debt

The current U.S. national debt:
$35,866,603,223,541

Source

ben stein recessions & depressions

Retirement Age Calculator

  Original Size