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Weekend reading: Cheaper bond funds, for those who want them

What caught my eye this week.

Vanguard cut the fees on seven of its bond ETFs this week. For the full list see the table below.

I got a heads-up on this fee-flailing from a thoughtful Monevator reader. They speculated that perhaps the price cuts were needed to gee up enthusiasm for bonds after the big crash of 2022 [1].

Given the scorn that some Monevator commenters heap upon bonds nowadays, I can see where this thinking comes from. But I don’t believe it’s right.

In fact money has been pouring into bonds recently.

UK bond funds recorded net inflows of £57bn in 2024 [2], after two years of outflows.

Also many cash-rich private investors have also been buying short-dated gilts for the tax benefits. We explained why and how in a member post in November [3].

So why the disconnect?

Once bitten by bonds

I believe that many thoughtful and engaged passive investors were a bit blindsided by the bond rout as interest rates soared a few years ago.

These investors had commendably educated themselves about the benefits of a diversified portfolio.

But they’d taken away an over-simplified mantra that ‘bonds are safe’, and skipped the small print.

In fact, bonds at near-zero yields were primed [4] for likely poor returns. The unpredictable thing was the bad returns came all at once. Instead of a slow bleed for a decade, balanced portfolios lost an artery.

Thus investors who’d put their money into, say, a 60/40 portfolio believing they were doing the responsible thing were blindsided when owning bonds made things even worse in 2022. Not such much a buffer as melting butter.

It might have gone differently. There are timelines were equities crashed and instead of inflation we got deflation. For instance: if governments and central banks hadn’t flooded the system with liquidity to fight the pandemic in 2020. In that case, think 1930s lost decade-style returns for equities.

True, you probably still wouldn’t have seen good returns from bonds – that’s maths – but annualised small losses from bonds may have buffered huge declines in the stock market.

Bonds are back

Today’s expected returns for bonds are much healthier anyway.

The yield-to-maturity on a ten-year gilt is 4.5%. Lend the government money for three decades and a 30-year gilt will pay you 5.2% annualised for doing so.

Of course you have to account for inflation, but in theory that should be around 2%. If you’re not convinced that will hold then an index-linked gilt of the same duration will deliver a 2% real return, if held to maturity [5].

Lower fees please

Vanguard’s cuts are small in that they’re just a few basis points – but chunky reductions with respect to these already tiny fees:

[6]

Source: Vanguard Investor [7]

What’s ironic is that these fee cuts have come when the expected returns from bonds are much higher.

Even ten basis points of fees made barely-there returns even worse when fixed income was brain-numbingly expensive back in 2020.

But with expected annual returns from UK bonds in the 4-5.5% range, smaller fees are gilding the lily.

Finally – just to reassure the strangely persistent Vanguard conspiracy theorists out there – no Vanguard didn’t pay for this post. It didn’t even alert us about the price cuts.

And yes other good ETF providers are available.

I just thought the move was worth highlighting given Vanguard’s size and all the ongoing confusion about the asset class.

Also, it’s a great demonstration that even very cheap funds can get cheaper.

Have a great weekend.

p.s. If you’ve ever been a fan of Formula One racing then you need to see F1: The Movie on a big screen. It’s Top Gun: Maverick on wheels and a nostalgic blast from the past!

From Monevator

Profiting from the UK stock market liquidation – Monevator [8] [Mogul Members [9]]

Trump’s ‘revenge tax’ and your US investments – Monevator [10]

From the archive-ator: What to expect from commercial property – Monevator [11]

News

Starmer’s benefits U-turns will cost £4.5bn, warns think tank – Independent [12]

Number of higher-rate UK taxpayers expected to breach 7m this year – Guardian [13]

Workers on-track for a ‘lost decade’ of stagnant earnings – Resolution Foundation [14]

JP Morgan turns bullish on British bonds – This Is Money [15]

UK set to ‘lose more millionaires’ than any other country… – City AM [16]

…while new map shows where Britain’s population will grow by 2032… – Yahoo [17]

…with 300,000 middle-earners priced out of Inner London by 2035 – Standard [18]

Edinburgh GDP-per-head surpasses London for the first time – Edinburgh News [19]

Gates close for private equity buying British companies cheap – This Is Money [20]

European countries ranked by average family income [Infographic]Visual Capitalist [21]

Russia’s economy is down but not out – BBC [22]

[23]

The US has bounced back into the danger zone (decile 1 in this chart) – Charlie Bilello [24]

Tough jobs market mini-special

UK graduates enduring worst jobs market since 2018, says Indeed – Guardian [25]

Young people face a hiring crisis. AI isn’t helping – The Atlantic [26]

UK jobs market is among worst I’ve ever seen, says Reed CEO – City AM [27]

Big Four slash graduate jobs as AI takes on entry-level work – City AM [28]

Government launches £54m fund to attract top researchers and innovators – GOV.UK [29]

Young professionals swamped by ‘infinite workdays’ – Guardian [30]

Economic inactivity is falling, but there’s more to be done – Economics UK [31]

Products and services

Zopa enters current account market with cashback and 7.1% savings interest – Standard [32]

Retirees risk losing thousands by not shopping around for annuities – Which [33]

Get up to £1,500 cashback when you transfer your cash and/or investments to Charles Stanley Direct through this link [34]. Terms apply – Charles Stanley [34]

Premium Bond prize fund rate will be cut from August – P.A. via Yahoo [35]

eSims for traveling abroad: how much can you save? – Be Clever With Your Cash [36]

Get up to £100 as a welcome bonus when you open a new account with InvestEngine via our link [37]. (Minimum deposit of £100, T&Cs apply. Capital at risk) – InvestEngine [37]

10 ways wedding guests can save money in 2025 – Which [38]

Got your Monevator mug? – Monevator shop [39]

Mortgages and property mini-special

Nationwide changes rules to allow first-time buys with a 5% deposit – T.I.M. [40]

FCA revisits rules on interest-only mortgages – Guardian [41]

Average two-year BTL rates below 5% for first time since 2022 – T.I.M. [42]

Ten hotspots for million pound properties – Rightmove [43]

Rules protecting homeowners from repossession may be scrapped – Guardian [44]

Homes for sale in harbour towns and villages, in pictures – Guardian [45]

Comment and opinion

Are UK workers over-taxed? Three infographics – Tax Policy Associates [46]

Happiness and money – Humble Dollar [47]

The rollercoaster ride of Britain’s financial markets [Paywall]FT [48]

Allan Roth: lessons on money and life learned from Warren Buffett – Advisor Perspectives [49]

What’s better than US bonds for downside protection? – Of Dollars and Data [50]

Being human means being a bad investor – Behavioural Investment [51]

A 2025 perspective on active management’s persistent failure – Wealth Management [52]

Investing in inflation-linked government bonds [US but relevant]Morningstar [53]

If IHT rules come in, there will be a ‘sea change’ in retirement portfolios – FT Adviser [54]

Naughty corner: Active antics

Investment trust numbers down 17% as ‘takeover frenzy’ continues – Trustnet [55]

Swapping a rental property for a share portfolio – Fire V London [56]

Cliff Asness of AQR on quant investing and more [Podcast]Money Stuff [57]

The King of Spacs is back [Paywall]FT [58]

Private markets are eating the world – The Irrelevant Investor [59]

Bitcoin company goes from £4m to £1bn in two months [Um…]This Is Money [60]

Are stablecoins money? [Paywall]FT [61]

Kindle book bargains

How to Own the World by Andrew Craig – £0.99 on Kindle [62]

The Algebra of Wealth by Scott Galloway – £0.99 on Kindle [63]

The Big Short by Michael Lewis – £0.99 on Kindle [64]

Skunk Works: A Memoir of My Years at Lockheed by Ben Rich – £0.99 on Kindle [65]

Environmental factors

Green investing with a vengeance – Klement on Investing [66]

The next financial crisis could start with the climate [Paywall]FT [67]

What do floating solar panels mean for wildlife? – Grist [68]

Plastic bag bans and fees curb shoreline litter, study suggests – BBC [69]

Extinction crisis could see 500 bird species disappear within a century… – Guardian [70]

…and it’s looking bad for coral reefs, too – Guardian [71]

No meat mini-special

Why there’s a growing backlash against plant-based diets – The Conversation [72]

Vegan, but you don’t try to convert others? You’ve a high EQ – VegOut [73]

Robot overlord roundup

Is talking to ChatGPT about personal finance ever a good idea? – White Coat Investor [74]

Can AI speak the language Japan tried to kill? – BBC [75]

Recalculating the costs and benefits of Gen AI – Harvard Business Review [76]

Checking in on AI and the Big Five – Stratechery [77]

Judge rules Anthropic training on books it purchased was ‘fair use’ – Sherwood [78]

How AI models remember, not predict, financial data – Larry Swedroe [79]

Not at the dinner table

How Britain’s new political divide delivers votes to Reform and the Greens – The Conversation [80]

The neocons a generation on [Paywall]Financial Times [81]

Attention and speculation are now primary economic drivers – Kyla Scanlon [82]

In the US, the expectation of political violence is becoming endemic – The New Yorker [83]

Off our beat

Science says these five simple tests can predict how long you will live – Inc [84]

The business of betting on catastrophe – MIT Press [85]

Elio sees Pixar peter out… – Spyglass [86]

…with its woes emblematic of bigger problems for Hollywood – CNBC [87]

The afterlife of our online accounts – Six Colours [88]

Prescribe weight-loss drugs first, say top cardiologists – Fortune [89]

Inside Hollywood’s $200m bet on Formula One – Huddle Up [90]

The UK’s best seaside towns, ranked – Which [91]

And finally…

“What was generally described as a ‘financial crisis’ a decade or so ago was just part of a huge structural change in how the world’s economy works. This is not some temporary cyclical blip; it is not just part of a normal business cycle. Things are not going to return to ‘normal’ and the economy is not going to ‘recover’, at least not to the way it was between 1945 and 2007.”
– Andrew Craig, How To Own The World [92]

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