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Books
Bond Investing For Dummies
Bond Investing For Dummies
by Russell Wild
Our Price: $16.49
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Bonds Now!: Making Money in the New Fixed Income Landscape
Bonds Now!: Making Money in the New Fixed Income Landscape
by Marilyn Cohen Christopher R. Malburg Steve Forbes
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The Complete Guide to Investing in Bonds and Bond Funds: How to Earn High Rates of Returns - Safely
The Complete Guide to Investing in Bonds and Bond Funds: How to Earn High Rates of Returns - Safely
by Martha Maeda
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Bonds: The Unbeaten Path to Secure Investment Growth
Bonds: The Unbeaten Path to Secure Investment Growth
by Hildy Richelson Stan Richelson
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The Complete Practitioner's Guide to the Bond Market (McGraw-Hill Finance & Investing)
The Complete Practitioner's Guide to the Bond Market (McGraw-Hill Finance & Investing)
by Steven Dym
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Used from: $47.95



Are Junk Bonds Misnamed?

Major agencies slapped the term ‘junk bonds' on them because of the high yield returns they touted and the high default rate that actually happened. This meant that if you put your money in these junk or high yield bonds, chances are that you might not even see your principal again.

 

Then in the 80s came Michael Milken and he looked long and hard at these bonds and realized that the default rate was not really as bad as it was portrayed to be. Thus the ‘high yield' market came into being. Actually, they had been in existence for quite a while but this was when perhaps they attained a sort of respectability.

People like Milken soon had a system in place to predict what could be termed junk and the ones that weren't and they encouraged these bonds to be issued. So if an investor took a calculated risk, he stood to make millions. So what it all boils down to is that when it comes to high yield bonds, you don't just think ‘risk free' and blindly put your money in. You need to take calculated risks. This means you need to take an informed decision.

The great thing today is the easy availability of research. So it means you do not really have to waste a lot of your time on gathering that. You could also get a rating for the bond from Moody's or Standard & Poor's and they have various standards: AAA/Aaa, AA/Aa, A/A, BBB/Baa), etc.

It really is like you were buying stocks. You need to do a lot of research about the company, its financial status, etc. There are so many sites on the Internet where you could find a lot of helpful information. This could take time but you could find people who are objective and experienced to advise you.

What are the success rates and the failure rates? Well, in the early 90s, the lower rated bonds reaped high 34.5% average returns. This was followed the next year with junk bonds giving better returns. Is this relevant today? It is, because out of the total issues, high yield bonds were a third. In fact these returns look like they are competing with the returns stocks aim for.

When it comes to bonds an over 8% return would be considered good and of course 15 % would probably be manna from heaven. The trick is to do a balanced portfolio with a combination of high risk and low risk, also balancing sure returns with the possibility of killer returns. There has to be a balance of the boring and staid with the gambling, the high flying. It all depends on your potential: how much can you stick your head out when it comes to investing?



 

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Sallie Mae Sells Bonds in First Offering in 21 Months - BusinessWeek


Wilkes Barre Times-Leader

Sallie Mae Sells Bonds in First Offering in 21 Months
BusinessWeek
March 17 (Bloomberg) -- SLM Corp., the student lender known as Sallie Mae, tapped the corporate bond market for the first time in almost two ...
Sallie Mae sells bonds in first offering since June 2008Washington Post
Sallie Mae's $1.5B Deal Launches At 8.25% -SourceWall Street Journal
Sallie Mae Borrowing Itself Into a HoleSeeking Alpha (blog)
BusinessWeek
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Corporate Borrowers Reap Benefit From Sovereign Debt Crisis - BusinessWeek


Corporate Borrowers Reap Benefit From Sovereign Debt Crisis
BusinessWeek
Global corporate bond spreads have fallen from as high as 171 basis points in February, according to Bank of America's Global Broad Market Corporate Bond ...

and more »

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Not just sovereign debt, US junk bonds are also catastrophic - Christian Science Monitor


Christian Science Monitor

Not just sovereign debt, US junk bonds are also catastrophic
Christian Science Monitor
As the article later explains — for the three years 2012 through 2014 — over $700 billion in corporate junk bonds will come due, about $4.6 trillion in debt ...

and more »

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New York City to Sell BABs as Yields Fall to Five-Week Low - BusinessWeek


New York City to Sell BABs as Yields Fall to Five-Week Low
BusinessWeek
“They're still really cheap versus corporate bonds,” Dalton said. “Until they get to where they are comparable, or, I think, tighter than corporates, ...
Jobs bill expands Build America Bonds programMarketWatch

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Convertibles Beat Bonds, S&P 500 as Sales Surge: Credit Markets - BusinessWeek


Convertibles Beat Bonds, S&P 500 as Sales Surge: Credit Markets
BusinessWeek
Elsewhere in credit markets, the extra yield investors demand to own corporate bonds rather than government debt fell yesterday to 156 basis points, ...
Convertible Bonds in the Bull MarketMinyanville.com
Convertible Bond Returns Rise as Sales Double: Credit MarketsBusinessWeek

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