Sunday, January 10, 2010

Bond Funds That Perform

By Christopher Fitch

Investment management has become an all-important component to investing, particularly after the past 3 years since the collapse of the US credit system. A lot of investors have taken a good, hard look at their asset allocation model and determined that their risk tolerance might be a lot lower than they might have originally believed.

Those dark market days that tested new lows and personal strength pushed the ideals of risk tolerance to the surface and made both conservative and aggressive investors alike realize that risk tolerance has to be paramount. For conservative investors, that has meant no longer being able to rely on term deposits and treasuries to contribute to the growth of an investment portfolio.

For the aggressive investor, the implications were probably more grave. It meant proper diversification needed to take center stage. That meant finding opportunities in the income class, a class that might have been ignore completely in the past.

But the income class has evolved tremendously over the last decade or so. Increasingly, bond funds have taken on greater risk profiles, investing high yield investments that not only provide better income streams, but whose underlying debt respond to various market forces in much the same way that equity assets respond.

In fact, many high yield investments today are more volatile that many conservative equity funds, providing not only greater income stream and growth into the funds and to investors, but less overall risk than similar equity funds.

All things being equal, a bond fund will be much less risky than an equity fund. The problem that bond funds have faced is in their rating system, with Moody's and Standard and Poor's having come under fire after the credit crisis. Therefore, what was an investment grade and low-paying bond two years ago is now B-rated with higher rates as the spreads between government and corporate bonds widened. The result? The bond investor benefits.

These high yield bond funds will actually generate greater returns than conservative equity funds. And since bonds come with less research and trading costs, there are even more savings for the investor... all with one important benefit: less risk. - 23309

About the Author:

No comments:

Post a Comment