bond investing header image


Which Should You Choose: Bonds Or Stocks?

Strange that stocks are on everyone's mind and there is so much written about them. Why is that so, when bonds are far less risky and the returns you earn on them are not to be scoffed at?

  

It's probably the thrill that stocks bring in their wake. It invokes the gambler in a person. Worse, if they were to go up due to some market movement, the one who bought the stock is absolutely convinced that he has a lucky streak or that he is extremely discerning. However, one has to face up to the fact that a stock is a volatile commodity and there are times when the swings can be quite upsetting.

Bonds are by and large the old faithfuls; reliable, even boring. You have the corporate AAA or the government bonds that pay an unexciting amount and you have the higher paying 15% bonds which could turn out to be junk bonds. Sure, there is the element of risk here too but it is far lower than playing the stock market where you don't often know which way the wind blows.

You need more money to buy a bond. You could get one for a price that could be equivalent to a hundred $10 shares in a company. You also have a choice of mutual funds; these are funds that invest in bonds. There are specific programs and you can ask your broker for those details.

Unlike stocks, which can be bought and sold ever so quickly, bonds are not as easy to sell. You cannot do online trading in bonds like you do with stocks. You might need to make a call to do so and the commissions you have to pay are usually larger. They are not traded by all brokers and you will have to ask your broker to list out the options.

From a short-term point of view, bonds are not as volatile but you do find changes when there are interest rates changes or certain other economic triggers. With bonds, you get a coupon rate unlike the dividends with stocks which could be subject to the management's fancies. This coupon rate is a rate that is fixed when the bond is issued and in case you want to sell it, this is what the buyer will also look at. You also have a maturity date on the bond and on that date, the total amount for which the bond is made out has to be paid to the bond-holder. The amount of time to maturity is another factor that affects a bond's sales price.

The government has a much stronger influence over bonds than stocks, whether it is regarding lending rates, policies, or any other economic decision, as well as any legislation that affects economic policies or insurance or banks.

If you want a reliable factor to be present in your portfolio, don't put all your eggs into the stock basket; a healthy mix with the reliability of bonds thrown in is always preferable.


   

Bond Investing Recommended Products

Be sure to visit the Top Links page for more information on Bond Investing.


Bond Investing News and Information


Cashing U.s. Savings Bonds News

Ford Foundation $30 Million Investment Kick-starts Effort to Expand Low-Income Families' Access to Financial Services ...

NEW YORK, Feb. 2, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- A $30 million investment from the Ford Foundation has enabled community development financial institution Self-Help to merge with seven credit unions in California, ...

Read more...


Pay Taxes on Savings Bonds for College?

When you redeem savings bonds for school, the tax impact depends on who bought them and when.

Read more...


Your Money: Checks being pushed aside as governments sign on to e-payments

Even in this fast-paced, high-tech electronic age, some of us prefer letters to emails, phone calls to texts, and one-on-one conversations to Skype.

Read more...


Special report: Romney's steel skeleton in the Bain closet

KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Reuters) - It was funny at first. The young men in business suits, gingerly picking their way among the millwrights, machinists and pipefitters at Kansas City's Worldwide Grinding Systems steel mill. Gaping up at the cranes that swung 10-foot cast iron buckets through the air. Jumping at the thunder from the melt shop's electric-arc furnace as it turned scrap metal into ...

Read more...


Ford Foundation $30 Million Investment Kick-starts Effort to Expand Low-Income ... - MarketWatch (press release)


Ford Foundation $30 Million Investment Kick-starts Effort to Expand Low-Income ...
MarketWatch (press release)
Across the United States, more than 9 million households do not have access to a savings or checking account and 21 million more have access to financial services only through costly payday lenders, check-cashing outlets, or other sub-prime financial ...

and more »

Read more...




Home
Types Of Municipal Bonds Information
Top Links
Premium Bonds Unclaimed Links
Terms of Service
Privacy Policy
Contact
Sitemap

Who is archilochus
Interest risk of bonds
Bond investing
Find municipal bonds
Bond market holidays
Corporate bond yield curve
Understanding bonds
How do municipal bonds work
Advantage of bonds
Stocks versus bonds
Understanding bond yields
Canadian bond market
Junk bond investing
Definition of bond market
Zero coupon bonds



Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /home/lara1003/public_html/bondinvestingfacts.com/includes/amazon.php on line 1053