“Quick, which has been the hottest investment since 1982, stocks or Treasury bonds?”

Bond guru Gary Shilling asked that question back in 1999 – while the dot-com boom was in full swing.

Stocks returned 20% a year over that stretch (with dividends reinvested).

From 1982 until the dot-com boom in 1999 was probably the best 17-year period for stocks in all of history.

Nothing could have beaten stocks during that time – right?

It turns out, a simple Treasury bonds strategy did. No kidding.

In fact, it crushed stocks – delivering a 24% annualized return…

The simple, stock-beating strategy was to buy a 25-year Treasury bond and hold for one year.

Then, you’d sell it, roll the proceeds into a new 25-year Treasury bond, and hold for one year again.

(The key to the big gains is to do this with zero-coupon Treasury bonds instead of regular Treasury bonds. Zero-coupon bonds don’t pay interest… Instead, they sell at a discount to their maturity value. Buying long-term zero-coupon bonds gives you a big discount, and potentially big upside potential.)

“But Steve, why are you telling me this?” you might be thinking. “You can’t make 24% in a year in Treasury bonds anymore.”

Shilling – the man who predicted lower interest rates in 1981 and has made a fortune using this strategy for decades – says it can keep going…

In a Bloomberg article yesterday, he explained that if interest rates on government bonds drop “from the current area of about 3% to my long-held 2% target in 12 months,” then the total return will be 25% for a 30-year Treasury bond… And a zero-coupon 30-year Treasury would return 33%.

Yes, that’s a 25%-33% return in Treasury bonds in just one year. Shilling concludes: “Where can you find comparable investment prospects?

Now, nearly all investors disagree with Shilling…

Last week, I told you that Bill Gross – known as the “Bond King” for his decades of great calls on interest rates – says we should expect interest rates in long-term Treasury bonds to stay around 3% for the rest of this year. And most investors expect higher rates than that.

But I agree with Shilling – at least in the short term.

In my True Wealth newsletter, we recently made a big bet that interest rates on long-term bonds will go DOWN this year – not up.

So far, subscribers who have followed our advice are making good money on this trade.

“But what about all the government spending, Steve?” It’s a fair question. The U.S. government is $20 trillion in debt. If it can’t pay it back, investors would lose confidence in government bonds, sending interest rates dramatically higher. The only question is, when will this happen?

According to Shilling, we’re not in any danger of this happening yet:

Don’t get too concerned. With inflation likely to remain low and Treasurys continuing to be a haven for domestic and foreign investors, financing the expanding federal debt should continue without major problems.

A key point here… In my True Wealth letter, we’re not making a long-term bet. Instead, we’re putting on a trade over a few months.

Investors are almost unanimously betting against Treasury bonds. They are nearly unanimously betting on higher interest rates. Only Shilling and I disagree with the crowd.

So far, so good.

I believe we have big gains to come in our bet on lower interest rates over the next few months.

If you are betting on higher interest rates today, you need to realize that you are part of a crowded trade. And when a trade gets this crowded, the consensus is usually wrong.

Looking years ahead, I get it – it’s a scary picture. The U.S. government is heading ultimately toward a debt crisis, with dramatically higher interest rates.

But that scenario is likely years away. For the next few months, my money is on lower long-term interest rates.

Good investing,

Steve

Strange change at your bank [sponsor]
At least 41 major US banks have just made a drastic change to the way money in America works. It could have some major implications for you, your money and your retirement. But it's crucial you understand what's happening, before these changes get applied to your bank account. Here's everything you need to know.

Source: Daily Wealth