7Mo·
22.05
iShares $ Treasury Bond 20+yr ETF D logo
Acheté x116,57 à 3,153 €
367,48 €
5
16 Commentaires

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F*ck, the trading costs are really hitting you hard at the moment. I'm very curious to see whether interest rate cuts will come and how the portfolio will then develop
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@Gerit The figures are not correct anyway. The accrued interest paid is included in the trading costs. In fact, it is about 50%. But yes, buying bonds via the Stuttgart Stock Exchange is expensive. But it's still only 0.3%! Neobrokers don't offer anything.
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@kleberj Would you recommend an ETF as a bet on falling interest rates? As soon as my cash ratio is back to around 5%, I would want to invest half of the savings rate in something with a "good" interest rate.

Unfortunately, I can't buy 3-month US Treasury bonds directly. Neither with TR nor with DKB

I don't know whether my thoughts fit in with the ETF, as it also regularly(?) buys new bonds.
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@Gerit ETFs should behave in a similar way. I only invested larger sums directly in bonds at the beginning. My monthly savings quotas now only go into ETFs, as the trading costs for smaller sums would have a full impact
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IE00BGR7L912 what do you think of this?
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@Gerit Do you want to link it?
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@cashwithhead hey, of course, never thought of it 😅😂 $IBTU
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@Gerit Take a currency-hedged US bond ETF instead. The interest payments are negligible compared to the currency fluctuations.
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@Epi because of the short-lived system?
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@Gerit No, because of the currency fluctuations. 🤷
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@Epi $T3RE one of these? (there are only a handful on TR)

I've read up a bit, the volatility is supposed to be up to 50% lower. But of course it has higher costs.

The question is whether the whole thing is still worthwhile instead of simply parking the money at 4% on TR, up to 50,000 it's no problem.

You can't estimate the interest rates either, if I take a look at what it looked like historically between 1970 and 1990.

Hm.
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How do you feel about the USA's debt?
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