Don’t Be a Last Minute Rate Shopper

The 2024 wild ride has proven to be a continuation of last year’s. Many worldwide events have reigned consequences upon the markets through investor sentiment and volatility including: the BRICS Bloc expansion (Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates join Russia, India, China and South Africa), the Israel-Hamas war, university heads antisemitism caused resignations, campus pro-Palestinian protests, Epstein documents, Boeing airplane mishaps, the Mexico-United States border crisis, Odysseus (private spacecraft moon landing), mysterious high-altitude (spy?) balloon, Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse, AT&T data breach, General Electric split, multi-tornado outbreaks, solar eclipse, Dow Jones surpassing 40,000 points, $2 billion additional Ukraine aid, student-loan cancellations, Nvidia becoming the world’s most valuable publicly-traded company, Artificial Intelligence ChatGPT, Putin being re-elected, President Biden’s withdrawal – Harris’ nomination, CrowdStrike’s software glitch affecting airlines, American-Russian prisoner exchange, state abortion rules, Trump assassination attempts, Florida’s destructive hurricane season, announcement of the future Department of Government Efficiency, Trump cabinet choice debates… to name a few.

The consequences include this year’s Treasury market volatility. The 10-year Treasury yield began the year at 3.95%, peaked in April at 4.70%, fell as low as 3.63% in September, and sits at ~4.21%. The December 1, 2023, 10-year Treasury rate was 4.22%. All that volatility and yet the 10-year Treasury ends up nearly unchanged. 2023 was a volatile year with a silver lining – income opportunity. One year later investors still have an opportunity to reap the benefits of this silver lining.

This has been the “chart of the year,” but with good reason. It reminds investors that rates don’t necessarily wait for them to time benefits that suit their needs. Instead, investors may benefit by taking advantage when attractive levels of income are offered. The current interest rate environment has been absent for roughly 17 years. Thus, the advantage may not last forever, so don’t to be a last-minute rate shopper.

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