Stock price when the opinion was issued
While we would be quite comfortable buying long term bond funds right now, and can suggest TLT and XLB (for Canadian) it does require a belief that interest rates have peaked. Long bonds have the most leverage to interest rates. If rates do not drop as expected, losses on such funds can be amplified. TLT, for example, is still down 8% over one year even with very significant rally this month. A spike in inflation would hurt these funds quite a lot. Thus, we see them as much more aggressive fixed income holdings. That being said, we do think rates have now peaked.
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MER is about 20 bps. Very long bonds, 14 years of duration or so. Rough performance with interest rates moving higher, as have a lot of other bond strategies. YTD, down 7.4%. Rates were supposed to move down, but have inched up.
Over time, long end of curve should start to drop, but still a risk with long-term bonds. Nice yield of about 4%. Short-term bonds will give you much the same yield, but without duration risk.
This one would do phenomenally if rates were to come down on 10, 15, and 20-year bonds.
As a DIY investor, it's really hard to get access to the best-quality bonds. Generally if you buy them on the secondary market, you're buying at a premium. He'd be comfortable owning bond funds through ETF structures such as XCB or XLB on the TSX.