your original topic was not about index funds. it was about you long holding bonds yourself
because with index funds YOU dont hold the 10 year bond, the fund does, You are not locked in for 10 years
the fund decides whats in the basket and you just get the averaged interest of the basket each year
however now you moved the conversation to index funds.. you dont need to worry or care about "long holding"... its the portfolio fund manager that holds. and you just take your yearly interest.. short or long term. you choose
so you wont care or mind about length. thats the portfolios problem. and in most cases.. they dont sell early. because you selling your share is just a new customer buying your share. so no impact on the portfolio manager for them to need to sell the bond
that said.. you need to, if you are just going to invest and forget your shares.. when the current 5% bonds expire in X years.. if the interest rates have dropped again where 2% are the only options the portfolio manager can buy post-expiry. then it can affect your interest on your side if the portfolio manager gets heavy in 2% bonds basket average
most other investments EASILY make a swing between 7-12% so if you are looking for a strong support of 5% plus.. investing in other markets, it can do you well..
bonds (actually holding them) is only done as a last ditch effort to throw money at bonds when other investment plans have been filled
..
again people only buy bonds directly when they have tapped out all of their yearly deposit limits of other investment plans. and they dont want more then $250k(FDIC limit) left in a bank account.
most people prefer to buy real estate or other things that appreciate before buying bonds direct.
bonds usually top out at 6% interest max.. other investments start at 6% minimum
How do you rate the TLT bet as of right now? Looking at the chart, looks pretty bottomed. I was looking at older articles, found stuff like this:
https://www.seeitmarket.com/one-chart-for-investors-watch-long-bond-etf-tlt/The descending triangle was bearish but this guy said to buy in, well we know what happened, now at still under 100, seems like a nice to buy, considering rates seem to be topped, keyword "seem", they can always raise again, but realistically, it seems inflation is going lower, and it's not on their interest to go into an election with high rates, it's unpopular, for both markets and families due mortgages being higher. So at the minimum possibility, I see them lowering them, however, as rates are lowered, it usually means the market tops after a while, or at least it's been the case 3 out of 3 times since the 2000's. So my possible bet is to buy TLT as an hedge in a recession, as my shares would go up since they are bought at higher yield, and I would be well diversified on a single fund, then to bet that BTC will do well and also to profit from ETF hype, im considering MSTR shares, at this point, it just tracks BTC. Im going to make a thread on this to see if anyone is holding this at all. Im not interested in buying big amounts of BTC with exchanges because they are all scams so I rather trust Saylor with the custody of the BTC, I don't even want to hold it long term just for a couple of years anyway.