Singapore Bond Duration Risk – see full definition below. For informational purposes only – not financial advice.
Table of Contents
- How Duration Measures Interest Rate Sensitivity
- Duration Risk in Singapore Savings Bonds (SSBs)
- Managing Duration Risk in a Singapore Bond Portfolio
- Duration Risk for Corporate Bond Investors
How Duration Measures Interest Rate Sensitivity
Duration is expressed in years and measures how long you wait to receive a bond cash flows. Modified duration: if a bond has modified duration of 6, a 1% rise in yields causes its price to fall approximately 6%. In 2022-2023, when the US Federal Reserve raised rates aggressively, long-duration bond ETFs such as LSBU (iShares Core SGD Government Bond ETF) saw significant mark-to-market losses even though the bonds carried no credit risk.
Duration Risk in Singapore Savings Bonds (SSBs)
SSBs can be redeemed early (following month) at face value with no penalty and no loss of principal — making them effectively zero duration risk. The step-up interest structure rewards long-term holders. As at mid-2026, SSB interest rates remain attractive versus bank fixed deposits for risk-averse investors, though off the 2023 peaks of ~3.47% p.a. (10-year average).
Managing Duration Risk in a Singapore Bond Portfolio
Key strategies: Bond laddering — buy bonds with staggered maturities (1, 3, 5, 7, 10 years). Short-duration tilt — in a rising rate environment, tilt towards T-bills and 1-3 year SGS; extend duration when rates fall to lock in higher yields. Floating-rate instruments — SORA-linked bonds have near-zero duration risk as coupons reset with market rates. SSBs as a duration-free anchor — eliminate duration risk while offering competitive yields.
Duration Risk for Corporate Bond Investors
SGD corporate bonds are typically sold in minimum denominations of S$250,000 to institutional investors, though some are available in smaller lots on DBS Bond Exchange or Phillip Bond Exchange. For retail investors, corporate bond exposure is best accessed via bond ETFs (e.g. A35) or unit trusts on FSMOne. Corporate bonds carry both duration risk (interest rate sensitivity) and credit risk (default risk), requiring more due diligence than SGS bonds.