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The Basics Of Bond Investment

If you are planning to invest in bonds, you need to do some extensive homework. You must scrutinize projected earnings, and examine any debts or irregularities, or any possible legal entanglements, as each of these factors can considerably affect you. In the end, you are merely a bank, and you are giving a loan to a party and you need to know that you will be paid back.

  

There is not a central exchange for the trading of bonds like for the stock market. Yet, the procedure is almost as simple as trading stock. You need a brokerage account from a qualified full-service broker or an on-line trading account. It would be necessary to call in or place an order on the Internet. Yet that's the easy part, as it gets slightly more complicated after that.

Besides an interest rate, bonds have a purchase price and sale price. Buying one entitles the bondholder to the payment of principal at maturity - the time when the principal amount must be paid in full, along with twice-annual interest payments.

Risk

As an investment, there is no doubt that bonds entail risk. Yet bondholders have precedence over shareholders who are the owners of company stock. In the case of bankruptcy, if there's no money to pay, the position in line is unimportant. Yet there is a relatively low risk, as they do repay bondholders the principal.

And while this low risk tends to associate itself with low return, there are several long-standing, esteemed bond rating agencies. The most renowned are Standard and Poor (S&P) and Moody. Both companies rate bonds in accordance with highly analytical formulas and publish their findings.

Price Variations and Interest Rates

Like stocks, bond prices are varied. The opening prices along with the interest rates are set at the same time they are issued. And seconds later, or a few days later, they might just be worth a lot more than the initial price or a lot less than the initial price. The interest rates at the general market prices are a major factor affecting these irregularities. If the interest rate on real estate loans or large corporate bank loans plunge after the bond gets issued, then the price of the bond will usually tend to rise.

So if you buy a 5-year bond for $1,000 which pays 7%, and 6 months later the interest rate falls to 6%, you would now hold a bond which pays more interest than in any other competing investment. You can command a higher price when you do choose to sell. Trading bonds 'over 100' is trading at premium, and trading bonds 'under 100' is trading at a discount. This terminology refers to value that is 100% under or over the initial price. As an example, a bond sold at a face value of $1,000 that is selling currently for $1,100 is said to be trading at a premium. The irregularities of interest rates are a complex matter based on a large number of market factors.


   

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Determine Value Of Savings Bonds News

Dear Abby: Mom won't relinquish savings bond - Monterey County Herald


Dear Abby: Mom won't relinquish savings bond
Monterey County Herald
When I was a little girl, my grandmother gave me a US savings bond for my birthday. It has matured to its full value. My mother refuses to give it to me. She said that my grandmother intended it as a wedding gift. The last time I brought it up, ...

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Scott Burns: Comparing TIPS and I Savings Bonds - Daily Breeze


Scott Burns: Comparing TIPS and I Savings Bonds
Daily Breeze
by Scott Burns Q: Are I Savings Bonds better to have than TIPS? They are paying me about 4.5 percent. - GF, Austin, Texas A: Although both I Savings Bonds and TIPS offer inflation protection (as measured by the increase in the Consumer Price Index), ...

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Retired against his will - Montreal Gazette


Retired against his will
Montreal Gazette
Now, at the age of 58, he has come to the conclusion that he will not be able to find a new position in his former field - communications. "I am facing the reality that I may have retired against my will," Leonard explains. "My problem is to make the ...

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Negative Interest Rates---a Minus for Growth? - Barron's


Negative Interest Rates---a Minus for Growth?
Barron's
That doesn't take into consideration the inflation compensation in the form of payments based on the consumer price index. (Hoi polloi can get a relative bargain with I-savings bonds, which are savings bonds that receive the CPI adjustment, ...

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Days of savings bonds you could touch are long gone - Sarasota Herald-Tribune


Days of savings bonds you could touch are long gone
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
The Treasury says savings will come from cutting the printing, mailing and other expenses associated with paper savings bonds. But a sharp decline in sales of the bonds also is a factor in the shift. Consumers bought $1.7 billion worth of the bonds in ...

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