Find out all about how to trade government bonds with our step-by-step guide.
Find out all about how to trade government bonds with our step-by-step guide.
For many people, a government bond is a long-term investment opportunity, offering steady returns with low risk. But the inverse relationship between bonds and interest rates – not to mention other factors that impact bond prices – can also make them an intriguing trading opportunity for CFD traders.
Here’s a quick rundown of the differences between the trading government bonds and investing in them.
Trading bonds |
Investing in bonds |
---|---|
Speculate on bond price movements over the short and medium term |
Hold government bonds over the long term |
Buy a bond if you think its price will rise, or sell if you think it will fall |
Buy bonds, with the risk of losing out if bond prices fall |
Profit only from bond price movements |
Profit mostly from regular interest payments |
Take advantage of leverage - which can amplify both profits and losses |
Put down the full value of the position |
Trade with a leveraged provider |
Trade with a bond broker |
If you’re interested in investing in the fixed income market but you don’t want to have to go through a bond broker, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) can offer similar returns but with added liquidity and transparency. Find out more out investing in ETFs.
To trade bonds, you’ll need an account with a leveraged provider. You can open an account in minutes.
There’s no obligation to fund or trade when you open a leveraged account, but you will need to deposit some funds before you open your first position. Doing so is simple, with options to add funds via a bank transfer, debit or credit card.
When investing in bonds, choosing a bond that pays out out a different currency to your own raises the issue of currency risk. But when trading bonds, you’re free to buy or sell assets from around the world. IG’s platform, for instance, offers access to a wide range of government bonds, including:
Once you’ve chosen the government bond you’d like to trade, it’s time to decide when you’d like to open your position. Timing the opening and closing of trades has a major part to play in dictating how successful you are on the markets.
The key to timing your trading is understanding what moves government bond prices. The biggest factor in government bond volatility is usually interest rates – and many traders will use bonds as a way of speculating on whether interest rates will go up or down.
Say, for example, that you believed that the FOMC was going to announce a surprise interest rate hike at its next meeting. An interest rate rise would typically cause US treasuries to fall, so you could open a short position just before the announcement.
Once you’ve decided on your first trade, you’ll need to open your position using your provider’s online trading platform.
Once you’ve logged into the platform, find your chosen bond market by either searching for it or navigating through the available markets. Then you can open a deal ticket to choose how much you’d like to stake on the position, and whether you’d like to go long or short.
You might also want to consider adding a stop or a limit here. Stops automatically close your position once it moves a certain number of points against you, while limits close your position once it moves a certain number of points in your favour. Both can be hugely useful as part of your risk-management strategy.
Assuming that your trade hasn’t been closed automatically by a stop or limit, you’ll want to close it yourself to either take profits or cut your losses.
You close a CFD by making the opposite trade to the one you used to open it. So if you bought a government bond to open your trade, you’d sell in order to close it. To calculate your profit or loss, subtract the opening price of your position – the buy price for long trades, and the sell price for short trades – from the closing price.
If you’d like to trial your government bond trading strategy – or see how bond trading works – without committing any capital, open a demo account.
You can use a demo account to trade on live government bond prices in a completely risk-free environment. It comes preloaded with £10,000 in virtual funds that you can use to practise trading government bonds as well as indices, shares, commodities, forex and more.
When you buy a government bond, you are loaning your capital to whichever government issued the bond. Corporate bonds work in the same way, but you are instead loaning your capital to a company. Corporate bonds are usually riskier than government bonds, though, because of the increased likelihood of a company having to default on its loans.
Interest rates
Instead of speculating on interest rate movements via bonds, many leveraged trading providers will offer direct exposure to key interest rates from around the world. Using IG’s platform, for instance, you can open a long or short position on euribor, short sterling (LIBOR) and many other rates.
Gold
Like government bonds, gold's price will often go up when interest rates are falling, and drop when interest rates are on the rise. It is also a popular market in times of economic uncertainty, because it is viewed as a lower-risk investment – just like many government bonds.
Start trading bonds
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