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#3
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| BMS <mcfarland[at]yahoo.com> wrote: - quote - > You may want to consider a floating rate bond fund in this raising rate
I will look into that & the Vanguard fund for Ohio that Elle mentioned.> environment. > The Hartford, Eaton Vance for 2 have good funds. Yes, I'm debt free and max out all my possible retirement accounts. I'm not a very active trader or investor, I tend to be very passive. It looks like this money won't be in my possesion for another 3 months so perhaps the NAV will fall some to my advantage between now and then. Thank you everyone for your responses. -ellen |
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#2
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| - quote - > Intermediate term or longer high grade
To be sure, if interest rates rise the original poster will see a decline> bond funds right now are only for people who are going to > buy and hold a long time. This is because I think we're > still at pretty low interest rates and I concur with your > concern about NAVs of such funds falling. in her NAV. BUT . . . if the OP holds on to the fund for the long term, and reinvests the dividends, the risk to principal is acceptable. As with mutual funds that invest in equities, the best approach is to use dollar cost averaging and buy shares on a regular basis. - quote - > I don't think you can go wrong with this fund (assuming
Again the secret is to hold the fund for the long term and to ignore> we're talking holding it a long time and reinvesting of > dividends). fluctuations in the NAV. If the OP is not willing to do this, she should stick to a municipal money market fund. Of course, the yield on such a fund would be lower. - quote - > Watch out for fund minimums and annual fees. I didn't check
With $20K, it shouldn't be a problem meeting the minimum account size. I> those. agree that it's important to shop around for a fund with low expenses. When your yield is only three percent or so, even a few basis points makes a difference. |
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#1
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| You may want to consider a floating rate bond fund in this raising rate environment. The Hartford, Eaton Vance for 2 have good funds. "ellen miller" <e.miller[at]us.kodak.com> wrote in message news:XcHNf.80$g91.16[at]tornado.ohiordc.rr.com... - quote - > hi all, > i recently inherited $20K. All of my retirement is in 401k's and > ROTH IRA's and I'm set to max out both again this year. i'm diversified > (small caps, s&p 500, international and a few REITs). > i was thinking about buying a municipal bond fund since this money won't > be going into a tax-free account. > fidelity has one for ohio (my home state) that over the last 10yrs has > earned at least 7% on average. > with interest rates being hiked - i think the nav will probably fall. > i've got a good friend in real estate who's a mortgage lender. his > company buys a report that has done a very good job of predicting > interest rate hikes & cuts. > they think we're due for at least one or two more hikes and that > at the end of the year (or early 2007) they'll begin cutting > again. > do muni bond funds hold up well in this sort of interest rate environment? > I understand that no one can predict the future and read the mind of the > Federal Reserve but I would be interested to hear what others think. > -Ellen |
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| I am assuming you have also considered paying down a mortgage; have no credit card debt; have an emergency fund; and that your Ohio and federal taxes would take a chunk out of any income (gains, distributions, etc.) from a mutual fund. If so, then based on general allocation guidelines I agree having a high grade bond position in your portfolio is a good idea. IMO, intermediate term or longer high grade bond funds right now are only for people who are going to buy and hold a long time. This is because I think we're still at pretty low interest rates and concur with your concern about NAVs of such funds falling. On the other hand, the chart below might give a little more perspective: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?t=my&s...=m&q=l&c=fohfx FOHFX has wider swings because, as you have probably observed, it has a longer duration and average maturity. I don't think you can go wrong with this fund (assuming we're talking holding it a long time and reinvesting of dividends), unless you want to explore other Ohio municipal bond funds with possibly lower expense ratios. I see Vanguard offers VOHIX, with a much lower expense ratio, for example. (Dunno if you're already with Fidelity and so using Vanguard is convenient to you. VOHIX has a shorter duration and average maturity, which should be to your advantage in a rising interest rate environment. Vanguard also has an Ohio money market fund with the same tax benefits that is worth considering, again in view of the possibility rates are still on the low side now. You could split between the two bond funds. Watch out for fund minimums and annual fees. I didn't check those. The web sites at Fidelity.com, Vanguard.com, and finance.yahoo.com are worth learning how to navigate a little, to assist your research, if you don't use them already. |
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#-1
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| hi all, i recently inherited $20K. All of my retirement is in 401k's and ROTH IRA's and I'm set to max out both again this year. i'm diversified (small caps, s&p 500, international and a few REITs). i was thinking about buying a municipal bond fund since this money won't be going into a tax-free account. fidelity has one for ohio (my home state) that over the last 10yrs has earned at least 7% on average. with interest rates being hiked - i think the nav will probably fall. i've got a good friend in real estate who's a mortgage lender. his company buys a report that has done a very good job of predicting interest rate hikes & cuts. they think we're due for at least one or two more hikes and that at the end of the year (or early 2007) they'll begin cutting again. do muni bond funds hold up well in this sort of interest rate environment? I understand that no one can predict the future and read the mind of the Federal Reserve but I would be interested to hear what others think. -Ellen |
| Tags |
| bond, funds, muni |
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