Your 7% Bond Gain Isn’t What You Think It Is

I read an article that bonds are having a “good year” as the AGG index is up 7% year to date (as of Nov. 11, 2025).

That’s great, but the reality is investors lost nearly 50% of that to inflation, according to government statistics (CPI Report). And if you incorporate “real world inflation,” I estimate that investors could have lost significantly more of their total return to inflation. Investors, we have argued for the past 5+ years, should own tangible assets and inflation-fighting securities to keep up with inflation. Remember, it’s all about after-tax, after-inflation, risk-adjusted returns.

Many may look at a headline performance figure like “the bond market is up 7%” and understandably feel encouraged. On paper, that appears to be a solid result. But nominal returns alone rarely tell the full story. Once we adjust for inflation, taxes, and portfolio risk, the final result can look very different. In reality, that 7% gain in your bond fund may have protected far less of an investor’s real purchasing power than it seems at first glance.

Let’s break this down.

The latest government inflation statistics (CPI) suggest that inflation has been persistent and elevated in recent years. If the bond market is up 7%, and inflation is roughly half of that, then your real return — what you actually retain in purchasing power terms — is meaningfully lower. It’s possible that an investor may only be left with roughly half of the headline gain once inflation is accounted for.

Unfortunately, that’s the optimistic version.

The “real world” inflation experience for most households can be even higher than what CPI reports. Everyday essentials, groceries, utilities, healthcare, home maintenance, and childcare have in many cases increased faster than the headline CPI figure. Suppose we use a more practical, consumer-oriented inflation measure rather than official statistics. In that case, it becomes reasonable to argue that an investor’s entire 7% nominal gain may have been consumed by inflation altogether.