Where to Buy TIPS

Shopping Plate

Where you choose to buy your Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) is very important.  As I mentioned in the article: Inflation Protection and Taxes, failing to put your TIPS into a tax advantaged account causes them to shed their inflation protection.  That’s because taxes are assessed as if inflation doesn’t matter.

You can buy Treasury Inflation Protected Securities directly from the United States Treasury at TreasuryDirect.gov.  There are detailed instructions on setting up your TreasuryDirect account in my article: How To Buy an I Bond.  TreasuryDirect accounts are not Roth accounts, though.  That means that you will not be protected from inflation losses due to taxation.

Finding an Online Brokerage Company

Instead of using TreasuryDirect to buy TIPS, I highly recommend that you open a Roth IRA account at an online brokerage company.  I have done a little research for you to make sure that there are some options, but I would not be surprised if there are many more good options.  I came up with four and they are almost the same in what they have to offer as far as TIPS go.

E Trade

  • Roth IRA accounts with no minimum balance
  • Can hold TIPS in the account
  • No trading fees for TIPS
  • Can buy at auction or on secondary market
  • Minimum trade is $1,000

Charles Schwab

  • Roth IRA accounts with no minimum balance
  • Can hold TIPS in the account
  • No trading fees for TIPS
  • Can buy at auction or on secondary market
  • Minimum trade is $1,000

Fidelity Investments

  • Roth IRA accounts with no minimum balance
  • Can hold TIPS in the account
  • No trading fees for TIPS
  • Can buy at auction or on secondary market
  • Minimum trade is $1,000

Things to Consider

Where you choose to hold your Roth IRA depends on your own needs and preferences.  It may be easiest to open one with a brokerage that you already use for your traditional IRA or 401k.  There are other things to compare as well, such as the fees that will be charged should you choose to leave them, so it’s good to do your homework.

Financial Advisors

If you have an advisor you trust, it might be easy to do it all through them.  Just tell them that you would like to hold your long term savings in TIPS using a Roth IRA and they should be able to take care of it for you.  As you can see, trading in TIPS doesn’t usually cost very much so it shouldn’t cost very much to just have your existing financial advisor do it for you.

If you have an advisor that is unwilling to put you into a Roth IRA or TIPS, I would consider looking for help elsewhere.  TIPS are one of the most secure investments available.  Remember that advisors are supposed to be working for you and they should be looking out for your best interests.

The Fine Print Takes Time

One of the things that really surprised me was the legal paperwork that an account holder is required to understand and agree to before opening an online account.  This creates a time cost that can easily be overlooked. It dwarfs the time it takes to enter your information and set up your account.  The fact that it is in small print and put right at the final button before you open the count should probably be illegal in and of itself, but that’s what we have to deal with right now.

When you click on that little tiny link, it exposes you to as much as 100 pages of legal paperwork that you are required to “read and understand.”  This part of the process took me about a week of reading after I got home from work.

This really hurts, but because I wanted to be honest before God and I could clearly see that I was likely to save thousands of dollars as a result, I eventually got through it.  I didn’t read the documents for all four of these brokerages.  I can only speak for Fidelity.  I did start on Charles Schwab and TD Ameritrade documents.  All of them were pretty difficult.  Schwab’s seemed a bit simpler in language but if I recall, it was about 100 pages printed.

When you read the fine print, you may want to have these links on hand to help you understand what you are reading.  These documents require that you understand jargon in three difficult professions: Tax, Securities and Legal.  Here are some helpful links:

You may even want to “share the pain” with your brokerage representatives.  That’s what I did.  If I got discouraged, I just called them up and told them that I have been going through their legal documents for a few days and I don’t understand “xyz”.

Funding the Account

There are several ways that you can fund an account.  One of the easiest ways would be to roll an existing 401k account into your Roth IRA.  Before you do that, talk to your tax advisor.  In general I think this is a good idea, but your specific situation is important to consider.  Taxes will be required in the year that you do the rollover.  It may be beneficial to do a rollover each year for a few years instead.  Rollovers don’t have a penalty of 10% when you do them before age 59 and a half, but you do have to make sure to specify it as a “Rollover.”  My understanding is that you can only do a certain number of rollovers per year.  Again check with your tax advisor.

You can usually fund an account by linking your checking account to your brokerage account.  This is similar to what you might do when you pay a bill online.

You can also just send a paper check by mail to your brokerage.  They should have a deposit slip that you can get with your account number on it after you set up your account.

The road is quite narrow to protecting your savings from inflation here in the United States.  Even though it’s not easy, it’s worth it to get your brokerage Roth IRA account open and ready to make it possible.

Inflation Protection and Taxes

Tax PaperIt’s important to understand that inflation protection is removed when taxes are applied.  Current tax rules disregard inflation, and as a result it’s easy to demonstrate that inflation can cause all of our interest on a TIPS and some of our principle to be lost through taxation alone.

When we consider our inflation adjusted returns, we can easily see that the real tax rate climbs to astronomical levels.  This simple example shows how easy it is for taxes to use up all of our real returns.

A Revealing Example

Let’s consider the effects of taxes on our inflation adjusted gains.  These adjusted gains are what finance professionals call our “real” gains.

Let’s use the actual TIPS that is being offered as I write this and our current inflation rate.  Our current inflation rate is actually 2.2% but we will use 2% make it easier and more conservative.  If you buy a $1000, Ten year TIPS with a 0.5% interest rate and experience inflation that averages about 2% during that time, the overall real gain would be 5% over 10 years and the overall inflation adjustment if it stayed the same during that period would be 20%.

After 10 years, your principle would be adjusted to $1,200 and you would have been paid about $60 in interest.  The problem is that you are not taxed on the just the $60.  The tax rules require that you be taxed on the $60 real gain + the $200 of principle adjustment.  If you are paying taxes at a low 15% rate, the rules say that you must pay 15% of $260 or $39.  Since you really only earned $60 in real value, you will have paid 65% in taxes.

That’s a very high tax rate for sure, but look what would happen if we had an unusual amount of inflation.  This is something we need to consider because our intention is to protect ourselves from both average and unusual changes in inflation.

Let’s change the average inflation to 5%.  After 10 years, your adjusted principle would now be $1500 and your 0.5% interest would be $75.  Your tax on $575 at 15% would now be $86.25.  Since you only really earned $75, taxes will have taken all of your real gain and forced you to take a loss of $11.25 on top of that.  That comes out to be a real interest rate of -0.1125% and a real tax rate of 115%.

In a taxable account, the greater the inflation, the less the protection.  I can’t honestly say that it provides any protection at all because a taxable account amplifies inflation.  It is wrong to assume that our savings is inflation protected just because we hold a TIPS.

One Safe Place

If you open a tax advantaged account such as a 401k or an IRA at a brokerage that allows you to hold TIPS within it, your savings is guaranteed to be protected.  That’s because all growth in a tax advantaged account is either not taxable or tax deferred.  This means that all inflation adjustments to your TIPS principle will only be taxed once, either before you put it into a Roth IRA or 401k or after you take it out of a traditional IRA or 401k.

The combination of a tax advantaged account and TIPS is currently the only option that I am aware of that will guarantee inflation protection to a person attempting to save money in United States.

I Bonds are Only Guaranteed in Certain Cases

I Bonds are tax advantaged in that they are exempt from state and local taxes.  That makes them an even better option than other “safe” investments.  This still does not protect them from a total loss of real gains through federal taxation on inflationary gains.  There is one more advantage though.  If an I Bond is used for tuition, it is tax free and becomes a great way to save for a child’s education.

It is also possible to sell your I bonds at a time in which your taxable income is below your exemption allowance.  If your total income falls below the your permitted exemption, then your I Bonds are tax free for that year.

A Problem for All Investments

It’s very important for all investors to understand that this problem exists outside of TIPS and I Bonds.  As far as I know, all investments have the potential of losing all of their real gains through taxes that are amplified by inflation.  Here’s an explanation of the effects on capital gains:

It’s not just a problem for investors, though.   Inflationary gains are taxed in your very own bank account.  Your interest may be only $1 per year, and you may have actually lost $5 of purchasing power in your account.  You would think that would mean that you lost $4 in purchasing power.  Since you pay taxes on your inflationary gain of $1, it pushes the loss even lower than $4.  Inflation amplifies your taxation because the more inflation there is, the more tax you pay.

Important Things to Remember about Tax Advantaged Accounts

If you have the ability to have 401k, I highly suggest that you do that.  IRAs only allow you to contribute $6,000 per year for those under the age of 50 and $7,000 per year for those over 50.  401k’s allow you to hold far more depending on your income.

If you are a high-income individual.  You currently have no guaranteed protection from inflation for savings that I know of.  It may be a good idea to consider moving your investments overseas.  There are several nations that don’t have capital gains taxes including Mexico and New Zealand.

Building Your Own TIPS Annuity

Building a CubeI got an interest payment from one of my TIPS recently.  It feels pretty good to watch your income automatically go up with inflation.  As I mentioned in the article: “Introducing Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS)“, these bonds pay out interest on your inflation adjusted principle.  The percentage of interest stays the same, but the bond amount itself goes up as it is adjusted for inflation.  That means that your income goes up too.

What I feel when I get my inflation adjusted income, may be a result of the fact that I’m so used to being charged an inflation premium.  All I’m really experiencing is consistency.  I’m just getting the same purchasing power from my money as I had when I purchased my bond.  As I considered the fact that loaning out money is capable of producing an ongoing, inflation protected income, I realized that this could be used to create a reliable income and preserve the principal at the same time.

Considering the Possibilities

I don’t talk very much about the income from TIPS because I primarily focus on their ability to protect our savings, but if you have enough money and don’t want to risk it somewhere else, you could use TIPS as a way of getting inflation adjusted income for the rest of your life while also protecting your principal.

You’re intention would be to preserve the principal for the rest of your life.  Perhaps you already have a large sum that is intended for your heirs or for charitable giving in your will.  You could be using that money to generate an income while keeping the principle safe and adjusted for inflation.

Even if you don’t really need the income, you could generate it and give it away while you are still alive.

Making Your Own Annuity

There’s really nothing new to creating your own “annuity” with TIPS.  It’s just a frame of mind.  The only difference is that you are using TIPS for the purpose of generating income.  If you do plan to use them in this way, you might consider getting the 30 year TIPS.  Not only will the income stay consistent for 30 years, you usually get the highest amount of income from the longer term bonds.

Keeping it Real

You might be wondering why you wouldn’t just use CD’s for this purpose.  Remember, that the interest rate for TIPS is a “real” interest rate.  That means that inflation has already been calculated into the TIPS interest.  You have to subtract the inflation rate from your CD’s current interest rate and then compare it to the TIPS rate.

If, for instance, the interest rate on your CD is 2.04%, and inflation is currently at 1.90%, your real interest rate for the CD is only  .14%.  If you compare that to a 1% interest rate on a TIPS, you would see that you would earn .86% more “real interest.”  That’s a whopping 614% more income on the same principal.

Fee Considerations

There really aren’t any fees when you buy a TIPS, but I like to consider any bond premiums and taxes as fees when you make an annuity out of them.

A premium is when you pay more than the face value for the bond.  This happens when you buy a TIPS at auction and the price for the TIPS goes above the TIPS amount itself.  It can also happen when you buy a TIPS from someone else on the market.  For instance, you may end up buying a $1000 TIPS for $1100 at auction.  If you do, you are paying a premium of $100 to get a $1000 TIPS.  That $100 is like a fee because you had to pay it up front just to get the bond.  It could take a while to recover that fee, but if you are doing it to protect a future income stream from inflation, it may not matter much to you.  You are paying for a guarantee, just like you would with insurance.  As long as you are still working, you can pay that fee with current income.  This is a way of protecting future income while you have current income.

Taxes are a similar kind of thing.  With TIPS, taxes are like an annual fee.  You could think of it as a fee to the government for using their system to protect your money.  The fee is paid at your tax rate.  The bad thing about this fee is that it goes up with inflation.  That makes this fee pretty expensive in a high inflation environment.

These fees may still be acceptable to you for protecting your income stream.  With a commercial annuity, you may end up in the same place when you calculate in the loss of principal to your heirs.

If you were to put this annuity in an IRA or 401k, you would completely remove the tax “fee” and if you were careful to only buy your TIPS at a discount instead of a premium, you would also not have to pay the premium “fee.”

You’re the Boss

The thing that makes this so much better than a commercial annuity, is that you have complete control over the principal.  The terms are very clear and your investment is backed by the full credit of the United States.  All of the money is still under your control.

If you are wondering why you’ve never heard of this before, it might be because there is no money in this kind of annuity for anyone else but you.  When you build your own TIPS annuity, you get to decide what to do with the principal and your heirs get it all back in the end without any exposure to the markets.