2011 Midyear Investing Outlook: What Now for Bonds?

Consider bond funds run by seasoned pros to navigate this tricky fixed-income environment.

This is a tricky time for fixed-income investors. Consider the ten-year Treasury bond, which currently yields 3.2%. If you own a ten-year Treasury and yields increase to 4% by year-end (far from a heroic assumption), your bond will lose about 7% of its value.

Because of the Fed's extraordinary efforts to keep interest rates low, high-quality bonds are not adequately compensating investors for heightened inflation risk and the chance that these IOUs may lose a significant amount of value if rates rise. If you do buy Treasuries, government-agency bonds and high-grade corporate debt, keep maturities short and plan to plow interest and maturing principal back into bonds with higher yields as rates rise.

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Contributing Writer, Kiplinger's Personal Finance