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All About Bonds The Classic Counterbalance to More Volatile Stock Funds Provided by Russell Investment Group The best way to cope with of a relatively secure investment with a constant flow of income, bonds and other fixed-income instruments provide a counterbalance when combined with stocks—bonds typically fluctuate less than, and at different times than, stocks. How Bonds Work This information is formally spelled out in the loan agreement with:
For example, if you buy a $1,000 bond paying 8% interest annually for 20 years, you are entitled to receive $80 every year in interest payments for the period you hold the bond. This steady, predictable stream of interest is why bonds are called fixed-income investments. A bond can be bought and sold in the open market, similar to a stock. When the bond matures, the borrower repays you the original purchase price of your bond. Prior to the bond's maturity, its market value will vary as interest rates in the economy rise or fall. For example, using the same $1,000 bond paying 8%:
Maturity and Duration
The risk of bonds varies with maturity because the possibility of gains and losses varies with the length of time interest and principal payments are exposed to market rate fluctuations. Because the value of the remaining stream of payments varies with changes in interest rates, longer maturity bonds fluctuate more than shorter maturity bonds for a given change in rates. This fluctuation is measured by duration, a more precise calculation of the "effective life" of an investment. Compared to maturity, which only deals with the date when the principal is finally repaid, duration also reflects the amount and frequency of all payments, as well as today's price. Duration is an estimate of a bond or bond fund's sensitivity to interest rate changes. Interest Rates Standard & Poor's corporate bond ratings are scaled from AAA (the highest rating) to D (the lowest rating). Bonds known as "investment grade" are generally those rated BBB or better. Below investment grade (also known as "high yield" or "junk bonds") are generally rated BB or lower. Investment grade bonds tend to be safer and generally offer lower interest rates than below-investment-grade bonds. Issuers with lower credit ratings are perceived as more risky and must offer their bonds at a higher interest rate to attract investors. Risks Generally, the higher the risk the larger the yield, or return, to the investor. For example, U.S. Treasury bonds, backed by the creditworthiness of the United States, pay lower yields than bonds issued by corporations with a less creditworthy reputation. When you accept high yields and low credit quality, you risk seeing the bond issuer default on their bond obligations. Credit rating agencies, such as Standard & Poor's or try to define bond issuers by their ability to pay their bondholders on schedule. Those most likely to make good on their obligations are rated AAA. However, rating an issuer's creditworthiness is not an exact science and rating agencies can be wrong. The biggest risk of a bond investment is if the issuer goes bankrupt, the loan may not get paid back at all. In bankruptcy cases, bank lenders have the first claim on any assets that the bankrupt company may have. But bondholders have a higher claim than stockholders, which is one reason bonds are generally less risky than stocks. When interest rates rise, bond prices generally fall. This means that bonds —particularly longer-term bonds—are highly susceptible in economic climates with rising interest rates. If your investment portfolio is heavily weighted with bonds, you could watch your nest egg shrink significantly during some periods. If rates rise and you try to sell a bond before it matures, you will find that the bond's price on the open market has fallen below what you paid for it. You would lose some of your original investment if you went ahead and sold it. Bond Funds Bring Experts on Your Team The real advantage of investing in a bond fund is that you don't have to try to choose the bonds yourself. Professionals who are trained to analyze the credit quality of bonds choose them for you. They use their analytical skills to find bond issuers who can be counted on to pay off the bonds on time, and who will pay an attractive interest rate in the meantime. However, there are risks associated with investing in a bond fund rather than in bonds themselves. An investor can lose money by selling shares that have dipped below the purchase price. And a bond fund doesn't have a definite maturity, as a bond does. Consequently, bond fund investors are vulnerable to such market risks as rising interest rates. Source: Russell Investment Group Russell Investment Group is a registered trade name of Frank Russell Company, a Washington USA corporation, which operates through subsidiaries worldwide. |
