I editted this to "fund discussion status" because of all the great "fund discussion" going on here...
A Fidelity article:
building-portfolio-for-income"If you are saving for retirement, you should be taking a total return approach that considers both income and capital appreciation. If you’re in retirement, you likely have some guaranteed1 income streams like Social Security, a pension, or an annuity. But you may also want or need to generate income off your investment portfolio. And regardless of your stage in life, there may be times you want to generate income for a specific goal..."
Some income investment sectors to consider:
Comments
Thanks Derf
Hi Derf,
My assumption is risk over a three year period...Aug. 1, 2009 - July 31, 2012
Hey Slow,
Thanks for this choice.
As I screened PPSIX using bloomberg screening tool it listed two other funds, VWESX and DEERX. They are both LT corporate bond funds...a bit different than a preferred stock fund but Bloomberg groups them together.
bloomberg screen tool
Their volality and performance seem a bit better over the last three years. Both may be impacted negatively when interest rates rise.
Here they are charted together over the past three years:
Thanks for the tip to use bloomberg screen tool. "Preferred Stock" is not a distinct category with other mutual fund tools and I was having trouble finding funds in this category.
Hi BobC,
I agree. Can you suggest some actively managed funds that will transistion well as rates reverse? I recall an interview with Dan Fuss and his experience investing during the interest rate rise of the 80"s. He mentioned laddering as one way of staying with rate increases. Are their investment sectors that shine when rates rise?
Hi HY,
Are you able to buy ABTYX with a minimum of less than $250K(USAA Brokerage)? I'm just a little short of this hurdle this week.
Bob, in August you wrote: Since it sounds like you're now calling this fund a "buy" (rather than a "hold"), are you now more sanguine about it, even as the management company implodes? (Or is there positive news about Artio?)
Bob,
While M* categorizes OSTIX as a multisector bond fund, it appears essentially to be a high yield bond fund (at least at this moment) with an average credit quality of B, a duration of 2.30 years, a 5.38% yield, and a ER of 0.92%.
Would it not a better to go with VWEAX with the same credit quality, a little longer duration of 4.26 years, a 6.36% yield, and a ER of 0.13%?
Mona
Dave
High yield (corporates) in '04-'06 are kind of intriguing: not so good in the one year in that period, 2005, when the Fed was raising short rates over the course of the whole year, but knockout figures for 2004 & 2006, when rates were rising for only half the year. (The rate-rise period was June '04 to June '06.)
So I'm wondering: was HY hot in early '04 and late '06 only, right before and right after the series of rate increases, or did the category do okay during the rate-rise phases of those years too? I can't find a quarterly breakdown of bond returns by category to do the comparison.
FWIW, the '04-'06 rate-rise period is also a reminder that the conventional wisdom these days, that the Fed's raising short rates always hits the value of long bonds, is not entirely correct. It worked that way in '94-'95, but not in '04-'06, as the first page of this Fed paper points out:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/07/07/Rudebusch.pdf
Best Bond Funds For Rising Interest Rates
Bond Fund Types to Beat Interest Rates and Inflation
Best Bond Funds For Rising Interest Rates
"Short-term Bonds: Rising interest rates make prices of bonds go down but the longer the maturity, the farther prices will fall. Therefore, shorter maturities will do better in a rising interest rate environment."
No, not always, not the last time the Fed raised rates, and it depends on what category of bond he's talking about. If the author had just added a contingency phrase like "most of the time you would expect" etc., rather than a blanket statement, it'd be okay, but he makes it sound like a rule of physics ... and it's not.
Andy, you are correct about 2006: High Yields were hot in late 2006 as interest rates leveled off. In 2004, however, High Yields did well in the second half of the year, in the face of rising interest rates:
Thanks-