|
#7
| |||
| |||
| On Nov 20, 8:10*am, honda.lion...[at]gmail.com wrote: - quote - > I think that calling investing for the long run "yesterday's
WHA?.... did you not notice the price action in the last 24 hours that> complacent approach" is the parlance of someone trying to time the > market, one way or another. > We disagree. If you want more validation for your approach, try > misc.invest.stocks. > > Think of this of new tactics to tack onto the > > existing fundamental or even momentum buy decisions you make. > I think "tactics" by definition are for the short term. I hope no one > serious about financial planning considers "momentum buying" to be a > strategy. proved my point? That 20/30 yr treasury bond etf EDV I had mentioned went on to gain almost 9% in the last 24 hours. So if you bought it without limit orders like I recommended 24 hours ago and maybe used a mutual fund YOU COULD HAVE DESTROYED ALL EXPECTED RETURN FOR ALMOST THE NEXT 3 YEARS by paying the inflated price. That's payback for excluding tactics from strategic investments. I AM TALKING ABOUT LONG TERM INVESTMENTS, and bringing in some sanity to the stodgy old approaches that is now possible due to etf vs mutual fund structure. But using etfs does bring in some new pitfalls, which can be mistaken for the language of a day trader, but just learns some lessons from them. New ideas for todays world - try some cruel shots at this one... bond etfs probably will be bouncing up and down as we go further. One approach is keeping 2 pools of an etf, one an accumulation pool and the other a drainage pool. With limit orders hanging over the former to buy, and over the latter to sell, you could keep about the same total amount of (turning over) shares. And say the bond share values average about the same month after month - but my scheme keeps spitting out cap gains from drainage, and lower average basis in accumulation. Single digit trading fees are nothing compared to the payback in current volatility which can give you a years equivilent returns in opportunity windows lasting a blink of a eye. |
|
#6
| |||
| |||
| dumstruck wrote: - quote - > I am giving you a reality check over and above yesterdays
I think that calling investing for the long run "yesterday's> complacent approach. complacent approach" is the parlance of someone trying to time the market, one way or another. We disagree. If you want more validation for your approach, try misc.invest.stocks. - quote - > Think of this of new tactics to tack onto the
I think "tactics" by definition are for the short term. I hope no one> existing fundamental or even momentum buy decisions you make. serious about financial planning considers "momentum buying" to be a strategy. |
|
#5
| |||
| |||
| On Nov 19, 5:38*am, honda.lion...[at]gmail.com wrote: - quote - > Stocks and ETFs alike in the last several months have seen 'prices way
No, no, no! I am giving you a reality check over and above yesterdays> below the going rates' and 'great sale prices,' only to see the prices > go lower in subsequent days or weeks. I cannot see justification for > criticizing the seller or broker. > I counsel instead seeing whether a stock or ETF is reasonably priced > based not on relativism, but on company and industry fundamentals. > Your strategies seem devoutedly short term, whereas investing in > stocks and bonds should be long term if one does not wish to gamble. complacent approach. Think of this of new tactics to tack onto the existing fundamental or even momentum buy decisions you make. You might add practically a whole year of expected return by these techniques on a volatile day. It's not that you trade for the short term, but for long term WHILE minimizing short term wastage. I have been on the wrong end of this bad-broker/unlucky-trader pitfall. As I reported here my broker was forced by nasdaq to reverse my buy of RSP which cost me 24% over its underlying SP500 assets!!!! They said they were forced to reverse all such errors over 20% that morning (thank goodness). I bought some earlier on another spike over it's underlying assets as well, and even had more modest spikes with EDV bond fund. These are not closed end funds where you expect any more than microscopic variation. So the next bond fund I bought I put in low limit numbers, some I didn't expect to be accepted for weeks if at all. They got snapped up in due course in whipsaw price movement lasting only a few moments - I don't know if it was due to error or desperation. For my own reasons I often split a single buy among 2 brokers, and one seems to give a consistantly horrible market price trades. Instead of dumping them I have turned it into advantage by being very aggressive limiting my buying or selling prices with them, and this can and does involve long term holdings. These approaches have dangers, and are not for everyone because you can lose a window of opportunity. But look at the elegant possibilities... you can rig up an auto asset allocation balance program by putting out lowball buy orders. For stock you could offer to buy 10% more shares at a price 10% below the current. Also 10% even more shares at 20% below current. I shouldn't have to pound the keyboard to show the beauty of this, which you probably do manually with less fortunate timing anyway. However there are dangers in using this approach, like for stop-loss selling in volatile times because you can lock in a terrible transitory price. But all this is much more control than throwing a buy or sell order over the transom for end of the day mutual fund sale - good grief, you may lose 10% in intraday market move in the few hours between your order and the end of the day execution! |
|
#4
| |||
| |||
| dumbstruck <dumbst...[at]gmail.com> wrote: - quote - > I really like the bond ETF route now - you can put out persistant buy
Stocks and ETFs alike in the last several months have seen 'prices way> and sell orders to "stop loss" for instance while you snooze. Just > this morning I was surprised to wake up and find somebody had bit at > my fishing lines where I offered to buy corp bond etf at a price way > below the going rate the last few weeks. Some poor souls must have > been desperate to sell or had a poor broker, so I got a great interest > rate and sale price that was only open a few moments. below the going rates' and 'great sale prices,' only to see the prices go lower in subsequent days or weeks. I cannot see justification for criticizing the seller or broker. I counsel instead seeing whether a stock or ETF is reasonably priced based not on relativism, but on company and industry fundamentals. Your strategies seem devoutedly short term, whereas investing in stocks and bonds should be long term if one does not wish to gamble. |
|
#3
| |||
| |||
| "JBradshaw" <jbradsha[at]dphilneas.nnn> writes: - quote - > I transferred a 401k from a previous employer to a personal 401k roller fund
First off, these are both muni bond funds and generally not> right before the markets started tanking in September. (I don't usually get ... > Maybe I'm confused about how these things work. Is a bond fund a good idea > right now if I'm just looking for some growth with very little risk? > Here are a couple in particular I was looking at: > FHIGX > FTABX suitable for a 401k or IRA since they pay tax-free muni bond interest (which is generally at a lower rate than comparable taxable bonds because of the tax-free status). Note that I say "generally" because there are still (a) potentially taxable cap-gains when the funds trade; (b) possible AMT; and (c) some folks might be buying them to bet on rates and spreads rather than to collect tax-free interest; Next - why did these two funds do poorly? For the most part *all* bonds which aren't US Treasuries have fared poorly over this last year. The worst hit have been some funds which had invested in sub-prime mortgage backed stuff (I mean legendarily bad performance - like the Schwab YieldPlus ultra-short bond fund which, being ultra-short, was supposed to be pretty safe - short duration meaning not so much interest rate risk - unfortunately, they took massive credit risk -- it's down - get this - almost 34% YTD. Other areas of the bond market which have done miserably have been the more credit-risky areas - high-yield (also known as "junk") bonds have done horribly - the three high-yield ETFs are down between 24 and 32% YTD. But intermediate munis are down only a few percent. While it always stinks to lose money, right now, being down only a few percent is pretty good. Right now we are still in a historically odd period where muni bonds are actually yielding more than corresponding treasuries. Which goes hand in hand with a recent underperformance of munis and/or outperformance of treasuries. Anyway, the short story is that not all bond funds are created equal. Just like the stock market, the bond market has lots of different segments - bond asset classes, as well as corporate sectors. And just like the stock markets, sometimes some sectors of the bond market do great while other sectors are stinking. And to make a long answer longer, sure, bond funds may be a great idea - but in order to know if they are a great idea for you and your portfolio, we'd have to know a lot more about you, your portfolio, which bond funds you are considering (and, again, those ones listed above are probably not the best for an IRA/401k) and why. Lastly, you said you are "looking for some growth with very little risk?". That's not what bond funds generally do. They are usually for providing (a) income and/or (b) diversification (ie. not perfectly correlated with stocks, dampen volatility). But growth? Not really, at least not by themselves. -- Plain Bread alone for e-mail, thanks. The rest gets trashed. No HTML in E-Mail! -- http://www.expita.com/nomime.html Are you posting responses that are easy for others to follow? http://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/2000/06/14/quoting |
|
#2
| |||
| |||
| On Nov 13, 5:56*am, "JBradshaw" <jbrad...[at]dphilneas.nnn> wrote: - quote - > Here are a couple in particular I was looking at:
Til now I had ignored your tickers, but then remembered a new Yahoo> FHIGX > FTABX capability where it magically translates the name even without hitting enter or anything. I hope you do realize you don't normally put tax free funds into a retirement account, although now at least temporarily you can get a good return that way due to weird circumstances that are alluded to in the article I posted. |
|
#1
| |||
| |||
| On Nov 13, 5:56*am, "JBradshaw" <jbrad...[at]dphilneas.nnn> wrote: - quote - > But doing some research on some of the available bond funds, I was surprised
There is some rhyme and reason behind the unprecedented bond fund> to see some of them have had significant losses this year. *I know bonds > have *some* risk -- but these numbers were a little surprising, especially > since I've heard bonds should be performing pretty well right now. carnage; for example see http://money.cnn.com/2008/11/11/pf/f...ymag/index.htm There are issues of default risks, return to inflation, return to appetite for risk... things that were always there but could loom larger than ever depending on how the economy lurches. You can go to some haven of safety, but note how even the ultrashorts have been whacked 6% YTD. I used to love bank loan funds which gave a tad more interest for almost zero volatility, but they got whacked 21% YTD. Treasury bond funds are now more than ever thought to be ready to lose capital value. I really like the bond ETF route now - you can put out persistant buy and sell orders to "stop loss" for instance while you snooze. Just this morning I was surprised to wake up and find somebody had bit at my fishing lines where I offered to buy corp bond etf at a price way below the going rate the last few weeks. Some poor souls must have been desperate to sell or had a poor broker, so I got a great interest rate and sale price that was only open a few moments. |
| | |||
| |||
| On Nov 13, 7:56*am, "JBradshaw" <jbrad...[at]dphilneas.nnn> wrote: - quote - > Sorry, this probably more appropriate for misc.invest.mutual-funds, but that
How do you know when and if "things have settled down a bit"?> place is out of control. > I transferred a 401k from a previous employer to a personal 401k roller fund > right before the markets started tanking in September. *(I don't usually get > lucky like that, so I figure I was due.) *So I've had money sitting on the > sideline in cash reserves while all the carnage is taking place. *I'd like > to put it to work, though, so I'm thinking of putting it into a bond fund > until things settle down a bit. > But doing some research on some of the available bond funds, I was surprised > to see some of them have had significant losses this year. *I know bonds > have *some* risk -- but these numbers were a little surprising, especially > since I've heard bonds should be performing pretty well right now. > Maybe I'm confused about how these things work. *Is a bond fund a good idea > right now if I'm just looking for some growth with very little risk? > Here are a couple in particular I was looking at: > FHIGX > FTABX If you are looking for very little risk, put your money in a money market fund. I have a lot of mine in a government income fund. But I am looking to put them into stock funds sometimes this year and early next year. If you have a 5 year investment horizon, this is a great time for stocks. |
|
#-1
| |||
| |||
| Sorry, this probably more appropriate for misc.invest.mutual-funds, but that place is out of control. I transferred a 401k from a previous employer to a personal 401k roller fund right before the markets started tanking in September. (I don't usually get lucky like that, so I figure I was due.) So I've had money sitting on the sideline in cash reserves while all the carnage is taking place. I'd like to put it to work, though, so I'm thinking of putting it into a bond fund until things settle down a bit. But doing some research on some of the available bond funds, I was surprised to see some of them have had significant losses this year. I know bonds have *some* risk -- but these numbers were a little surprising, especially since I've heard bonds should be performing pretty well right now. Maybe I'm confused about how these things work. Is a bond fund a good idea right now if I'm just looking for some growth with very little risk? Here are a couple in particular I was looking at: FHIGX FTABX |
| Tags |
| bond, funds, good, idea |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | Last Post | |
| Is now a good time to invest in Bond Funds? Jay: This is what we know: Stock markets are at a high and interest rates may have peaked or may be 25bp away from a peak. So, for a long-term investor... | Financial Planning | 3 | 07-04-2007 04:01 PM | |
| Good Bond Funds? W. Wells: I am 70 and am putting some of my portfolio into bonds. At present have 14% (Dodge&CoxIncome, Van. Intermediate Bonds,VanShort Term BondsVan Total... | Financial Planning | 7 | 02-01-2007 04:36 PM | |
| Funding your Roth IRA before your 401k, good idea or bad idea? jjlindula@hotmail.com: Hello, I have a co-worker who believes its better to fund his Roth IRA first then his 401K and I believe he should do the opposite. His reasoning... | Financial Planning | 12 | 02-17-2006 01:19 PM | |
| Good idea to have LLC taxed as S corp? Cher: In order to avoid SE tax, is it a good idea to have the LLC taxed as an S corp instead of a partnership? It seems almost all LLC's are taxed as... | Taxes | 3 | 10-24-2003 06:49 AM | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |