one would hope they were bought at a huge discount ( to face value )
i don't think 1% yield ( less 0.19% fees ) will very helpful in nine years time ( not to mention the inflation ravaged face value )
That's not how it works. The 1% you see quoted is the bond coupon.
The bonds price to whatever a 9 year Aus Gov bond is worth in the market today. You (hopefully obviously) don't pay face value on a bond in the secondary market (except perhaps coincidentally).
The current 10y yield for an Aus Gov is 2.24% so this bond should trade around $90 and you can see on
https://www2.asx.com.au/markets/trade-our-cash-market/equity-market-prices/bonds that it does
just saying , a while back i was buying MBLHB paying BBSW + 1.5% but was paying 62 cents in the dollar for them
MBLHB was a preferred share, not a bond. The BBSW+1.5 you got was to compensate you for credit risk, capital structure risk, inflation risk etc. Government bond pricing is considered "risk free" in nominal terms.
so what are those bonds really worth ??
Unlike equities, bond pricing is a purely mathematical effort, there is no speculation required.
With inflation,bonds like that are dead money IMHO.i only kept a few inflation indexed ones in my portfolio and even these are not going to be winners.cpi being so distorted
Most people are completely uneducated about bonds, the difference between Gov and Corp bonds, what drives their pricing, concepts like duration, YTM, etc.
I hold 25% of my portfolio in long duration (20+y) AU and US government bonds and sleep like a baby. I was happily dumping them into the market during Q12020 when the market was desperate for liquidity and declining growth/inflation expectations to buy equities, and I have been buying them back ever since as they have fallen while selling equities. I think there's a decent chance Gov duration does very well this year as growth and inflation struggle to beat their comps.
https://www.pragcap.com/is-the-bond-bear-market-over/ is a good place to start educating yourself a little.