I Bonds Rise to 5.27%. Should Clients Invest Now?
What You Need to Know
Advisors suggest clients have more appealing choices.
I bonds are attractive but have limits, they note.
The bonds may offer clients peace of mind.
Investors may be eager to buy inflation-linked Series I Savings Bonds now that the new composite rate has risen to 5.27% for bonds issued for the next six months.
The more appealing rate — up from the 4.30% composite rate for I bonds issued from May through October 2023 — doesn’t necessarily make these U.S. government securities the best choice for clients, however.
To be sure, low-risk I bonds offer attractive features. Designed to protect investors from rising prices, they combine an inflation-adjusted interest rate that the Treasury Department updates every six months and a fixed rate good through the bond’s 30-year maturity date.
The new fixed rate for I bonds issued from Wednesday (Nov. 1) to April 30, 2024, was set at 1.30%, an increase from the 0.90% for those issued in the previous six months.
These securities, though, also come with drawbacks, market experts note, including purchase limits, a one-year minimum holding time and loss of the last three months’ interest if selling before five years.
While the new composite rate “sounds great” and may seem a panacea to inflation problems, “a prudent investor needs to dig a little deeper and see if anything is appropriate to be included in their portfolio,” Jamie Battmer, chief investment officer at Creative Planning, told ThinkAdvisor in an interview Wednesday.
The bonds do adjust with inflation and sometimes offer “extraordinary, eye-popping numbers,” he said. (In 2022, amid soaring inflation, buyers flocked to purchase I bonds at a 9.62% rate.) “It is a very easy story to tell at the 10,000-feet level.” But “you have to weigh a whole host of additional considerations.”
Based on a client’s risk profile and portfolio needs, there may be a place for I bonds, Battmer suggested, although Creative Planning typically prefers to be owners, through equities, rather than creditors — even with stock risk premiums compressing.
“If this will somehow allow an investor to sleep better at night” and reduce the risk that they’ll hit the panic button when markets are volatile, “then we would absolutely be comfortable with it,” Battmer said.
In any year, an individual can buy a maximum $10,000 in electronic I bonds and, by using their tax refund, up to $5,000 in paper bonds.
For clients with big portfolios, the purchasing restrictions may limit I bonds’ ability to make a big difference, Battmer said. Those with smaller portfolios could take on some financial stress if I bonds accounted for 10% or more, given rules that can limit liquidity, he added.
I bonds aren’t as liquid as other conservative instruments, which can create risk for people across the socioeconomic landscape, according to Battmer, who suggested there are more effective instruments to generate higher, long-term returns.