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Home»BUDGET»20-Year Treasury Bonds At 5% Looks Attractive For Retirees
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20-Year Treasury Bonds At 5% Looks Attractive For Retirees

Editorial teamBy Editorial teamAugust 31, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
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I recently had a zero-coupon Treasury Bill redeem in the amount of $102,000. This money is part of the 35% of my taxable brokerage portfolio that’s in bonds. Somewhere between a 60/40 and 70/30 equity/bond split is what I like to maintain at age 48, as a dual-unemployed parent alongside my wife.

Redemption of Treasury Bill investment - 20-Year Treasury Bonds At 5% Looks Attractive For Retirees

Given I enjoy investing more than spending, the first thing I did was check the latest bond yields, not the latest Range Rovers. And the bond that jumped out at me was the 20-year Treasury Bond at 5%. Not bad for retirees, especially if interest rates are going to get cut multiple times again.

20-Year Treasury Bond Yield Of 5% Could Outperform

One of the problems with the S&P 500 trading at 23X forward earnings is that expected returns are lower due to valuation mean reversion. The average forward P/E for the S&P 500 since 1989 is about 18.5X.

So we must either believe there will be a permanent step-up in valuation thanks to AI-driven productivity, or assume P/E multiples eventually decline back to the long-term average. I assume a little of both.

According to JP Morgan, if you bought the S&P at 23X forward earnings at any time in history, in every case your annualized return over the next 10 years landed between +2% and -2%. Given that backdrop, a risk-free ~5% starts to look mighty enticing.

August 26, 2025 Fixed Income Table with all types of bonds and yields

How Does A 5% Guaranteed Return Sound?

If I was still in my 20s or 30s, I’d say a guaranteed 5% rate of return sounds uninspiring. Back then, as a growth stock investor riding the internet boom, I was chasing 20%+ annual returns.

But now that tech stocks have already boomed since I made my first stock investment in 1996, the ability to lock in capital at 5% for 20 years feels like a win.

The older and wealthier you get, the more appealing a 5% guaranteed return becomes. Here’s a post on how to buy Treasury bonds for your reference.

A Fantastic FIRE Scenario

Imagine you stumbled across Financial Samurai in 2009 as a new college graduate. You maxed out your 401(k), saved at least 20% more after-tax, and invested in stocks and real estate. You want to FIRE!

After 16 years of saving and investing $50,000 a year on average with a 14% compound return, your net worth grows from $0 to $3 million. At 39, you’re ready to retire early at 40. Hooray! You only spend $90,000 a year, so you’re set for life.

Now imagine that $3 million sits in your taxable brokerage account. After retiring and reducing your active income to $0, you can sell investments up to $47,025 as a single and $96,700 as a married couple and pay a 0% long-term capital gains tax. Then there’s the standard deduction, which enables you to earn even more tax-free income in retirement.

If you live long enough, you could shift the full $3 million tax-free into 20-year Treasuries yielding 5%. That’s $150,000 a year in guaranteed, state-tax-free income. You’d be able to boost annual spending from $90,000 to $110,000 while still maintaining risk-free income.

Since 5% is greater than 4%, you’ll never run out of money following the 4% Rule as a safe withdrawal rate. Yes, inflation will still chip at your purchasing power. However, at least you’re not touching principal. And if interest rates plummet again before maturity, you can always sell these 20-year Treasury bonds for a profit. This should be a dream scenario that is good enough for everyone!

2024 for 2025 long-term capital gains tax rates

But You Probably Won’t Go 100% Risk-Free

Even though this scenario guarantees financial security, greed (or optimism) usually wins. We still want more, more, moooooooar! But maybe that hunger for more isn’t purely selfish. It can also be driven by selfless reasons.

Personally, I’m no longer investing just for myself. I’m investing for my kids, who don’t yet understand the power of compounding. But within 10 years, they will and hopefully they’ll appreciate the foundation being built for them. And if they don’t value the money as much, I hope they’ll at least treasure the time we spent together during Daddy Day Camp.

That said, this is where DIY investing gets tricky. While the $102,000 redemption could (should) easily roll into Treasuries to maintain my ~35% bond allocation, part of me wants to swing for the fences. Maybe put $50,000 into tech stocks at nosebleed valuations, private AI firms growing the fastest, or even Bitcoin.

I mean, surely a company like AI-defense contractor Anduril, fresh off raising $2.5 billion at a $30.5 billion valuation, will compound faster than 5%, right? In just three years, I could see Anduril being valued at over $100 billion. Too bad there are no guarantees when it comes to risk investments.

Reinvesting Half The Treasury Bond Proceeds In Venture Capital

After several days of deliberation, I decided to reinvest $50,000 of the $102,000 into Fundrise Venture. The open-ended fund with only a $10 minimum, holds private AI companies such as Anduril, OpenAI, Anthropic, Databricks, and others. I expect these firms to grow much faster than 5 percent annually and to raise new capital at significantly higher valuations over time.

This investment is in a new personal account I’ve opened with funds earmarked for my young children. My hope is that by continuing to dollar-cost average into venture capital over the next 15-20 years, it will grow to an amount that can help them launch into adulthood.

Now I’ve got to figure out what to do with the remaining $52,000. I should reinvest it in Treasury bonds, but I’ve got $255,000 more in Treasury Bills coming due within two weeks.

Reinvesting Treasury bond process into Fundrise Innovation Fund
New investors get a $500 bonus if you invest at least $25,000, which is why I initially invested $26,000

Risk-Free Treasury Bonds As Your Financial Bedrock

At the end of the day, a 5% Treasury yield doesn’t have to be an all-or-nothing bet. For retirees and near-retirees, it can serve as the bedrock of your portfolio, covering core living expenses and providing peace of mind.

With that foundation in place, you can still allocate a portion of capital toward higher-risk, higher-reward opportunities without jeopardizing your lifestyle. This is the dumbbell investing strategy in action.

Just remember to review not only your asset allocation within individual portfolios, but also across your overall net worth. Like me, you may have multiple portfolios spread between taxable and tax-advantaged accounts, plus venture capital investments, real estate, or even alternatives like rare books or coin collections.

Security plus upside is what makes Treasuries at today’s yields so compelling. But don’t forget to swing for glory every now and then. Your future self, or your children, will thank you for it.

What do you think, readers? Would you put money into a 20-year Treasury bond yielding 5%? If rates fall, you could always sell early and lock in some gains. So really, what’s the downside to locking in a guaranteed 5% return for a good chunk of your life once you’ve built up a solid net worth?

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