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Bonds have been sinking. Do they still have a place in your retirement account?

Common wisdom dictates that as we steer our savings toward retirement, we should gradually bulk up on bonds.

Bonds are supposed to be safe, predictable, and boring: the perfect antidote to mercurial stocks.

Lately, though, bonds have felt anything but safe. Between August 2020 and October 2022, a benchmark Bloomberg bond index plunged 18%. Even now, the index remains roughly 10% below that 2020 high.

The bond bloodbath has prompted some investors to question whether it is time to rewrite the rules of retirement saving.

“It’s been a rough – really, a rough 10 years,” said Ashley Folkes, a certified financial planner in Birmingham, Alabama.

Recently, Folkes has watched clients back out of the bond market in favor of alternative investments, which they deemed safer, and which weren’t shedding value with every passing month.

"Boring" bonds are supposed to provide a buffer against mercurial stocks.
"Boring" bonds are supposed to provide a buffer against mercurial stocks.

Bonds betrayed investors in 2022

Bonds are supposed to provide a hedge against stocks. When stocks go down, bonds go up – or, at least, they don’t go down very much.

In 2022, the financial market seemed to turn upside down. Stocks lost 18.6% of their value that year, as measured by the S&P 500. And bonds lost 13.7% of their value, according to the Vanguard Total Bond Market Index. Inflation pushed that figure to 20%, the worst bond return in 97 years, according to a NASDAQ analysis.

Sinking bond values inspired a question that has made the rounds in financial circles: Is the 60/40 rule dead?

The rule instructs that a worker approaching retirement, and anyone seeking investment stability, should aim to have 60% of their holdings in stocks and 40% in bonds.

The stocks yield robust returns. The bonds provide modest but stable income and serve as a buffer when stocks go south.

Most advisers say that, even after the events of 2022, the rule is not dead.

“The rules still apply; 2022 was an anomaly,” said Jonathan Lee, senior portfolio manager at U.S. Bank.

The U.S. stock market as measured by the S&P 500 has risen more than 11% in 2024 and 23.7% since May of last year
The U.S. stock market as measured by the S&P 500 has risen more than 11% in 2024 and 23.7% since May of last year

2024 is 'a good time to hold bonds'

Investment advisers say now is a fine time for bonds. They are a good investment in 2024, experts say, for the same reasons they felt like a bad investment in 2022.

That year, the Federal Reserve embarked on a dramatic campaign of interest-rate hikes in response to inflation, which reached a 40-year high.

Bond funds tend to lose value when interest rates rise, and when inflation ticks up.

“The aggressive nature of those interest rate hikes contributed to the aggressive decline of bond values,” Lee said.

Rising interest rates tend to lift rates on new bonds. That makes older bonds less attractive because they have lower rates. That cycle pushes down the value of bond funds.