Smarter Money
Rule No. 15: Don't Forget About Bonds
03/28/05 - 08:16 AM EST
Editor's note: Jim Cramer's new book, Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World, is available in selected bookstores now. As a special bonus to RealMoney readers, we will be running Cramer's "Twenty-Five Rules of Investing." For more about the new book and to order it, click here. Today, we present Cramer's fifteenth rule of investing. Read more about his rules:
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Pigs Get Slaughtered
It's OK to Pay the Taxes
Don't Buy All at Once
Buy Damaged Stocks
Diversify to Control Risk
Do Your Homework
Don't Panic
Buy Best-of-Breed
Defend Some Stocks
Don't Bet on Bad Stocks
Don't Own Too Many Names
Cash Is for Winners
No Woulda, Shoulda, Couldas
Expect Corrections
"Where are the bonds?" That's how I used to begin every phone conversation when I was on the road, away from my desk, back when I ran my hedge fund. Yet people forget the bond market all the time. They forgot it in 2000, even though it told them the economy was softening. They forgot it in 2001, when it was clear that the cash rates were too competitive to stocks and would cause a massive selloff. That's why I say:
Don't forget bonds.I was trained to focus on bonds because bonds are the competition to stocks, the competition I most fear. When short-term rates go sky-high, you have to expect companies that had been bought for good yields, stocks like Bank of AmericaBAC or BPBP, will sell off. When long-term rates fall to 4%, you have to believe that the economy may be too soft to own deep cyclicals or that stocks that have high yields, like utilities -- I like to watch Duke EnergyDUK -- will be on the move. You need to watch more than the stocks. If this were basketball, I would be saying that if you just watch the man with the ball, let's call him CitigroupC, and you don't watch what the others are doing on defense -- the bonds -- there's no way you are getting to the basket. The men without the ball -- the bond market -- can determine the action. Many people who got in this game in the last decade still don't even know what bonds are. They are troubled when you say bonds went up today. They think that means interest rates are going up rather than what it really means, which is that interest rates are going down. If you don't understand how bonds work, I think you will not be able to make nearly as much money as if you do. By the way, a lot of younger managers think they only need to think about bonds if they own Washington MutualWM, American International GroupAIG or Fannie MaeFNM. They don't think bonds matter with a portfolio of Research In MotionRIMM, eBayEBAY or QualcommQCOM. Wrong! When interest rates move significantly higher, no one's going to pay a lot for the future earnings growth stocks provide. So keep your eye on the ball, and on the men without it.
| 1. | Pigs Get Slaughtered | 2. | It's OK to Pay the Taxes | ||
| 3. | Don't Buy All at Once | 4. | Buy Damaged Stocks | ||
| 5. | Diversify to Control Risk | 6. | Do Your Homework | ||
| 7. | Don't Panic | 8. | Buy Best-of-Breed | ||
| 9. | Defend Some Stocks | 10. | Don't Bet on Bad Stocks | ||
| 11. | Own Fewer Names | 12. | Cash Is for Winners | ||
| 13. | No Regrets | 14. | Expect Corrections | ||
| 15. | Know Bonds | ||||
| Check back for more of Cramer's Rules | |||||
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