Three Ways to Take Advantage of High Interest Rates

It’s no secret that we are currently in a high interest rate environment. The Federal Funds rate, the benchmark rate in the U.S. set by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), currently sits between the range of 5.00% and 5.25%. This matches where rates were in 2007, right before the financial crisis. As high as rates are, however, we may be due for even tighter monetary policy this year.

Inflation in the United States has come down from its peak of 9.1% in June 2022 to around 4% today. It remains higher than the Federal Reserve’s 2% inflation target. The Fed has repeatedly expressed its view in 2023 that this goal will not change any time soon. Rate hikes are the main tool the Fed is endowed with to combat inflation. The plurality of FOMC participants believes that we are due for a 5.75% fed funds upper bound by the end of the year. This is expressed in the dot plot below, where each dot is one member’s view.

FOMC Participants Assessments

Source: FOMC projections from June 2023 meeting.

If this forecast comes to pass, we are due for the highest interest rates in over two decades. This affects everything from credit card APRs to mortgage rates. While rates on financial liabilities are likely to keep climbing, investors can employ various strategies to potentially benefit from this new economic reality. Here are three strategies worth considering:

U.S. Treasury Bills

U.S. Treasurys are considered one of the safest investments due to their creditworthiness and the stability of the U.S. government. These securities currently hold a composite AAA rating from the three major credit rating agencies. The likelihood of default is extremely low, making them a reliable choice for risk-averse investors.

The yield curve is currently highly inverted. This means that short-term bonds have a higher yield than their longer-dated counterparts. As of July 6th, six-month Treasury bills to maturity yield 5.54%, whereas the longest-dated Treasurys, 30-year bonds, yield 4.01%. Investors can take advantage of this phenomenon by purchasing short-dated Treasury ETFs, which target this part of the curve.

High Interest Rate