Top Rated Investment Bonds
Your typical independent investor will never be able to
understand every aspect of bond investing. Research on bonds fills volumes. It
is for this reason, therefore, that you do as much research as you can prior to
investing, and if you can, take advantage of professional investors that can
manage a portfolio for you.
1. Bond Ratings
Not all stocks are created equal - some are a strong buy
whereas others are holds or sells. Bond ratings get assigned over 20 different
possible designations, from AAA (Highest Grade) to C (May Be In Default) or
worse. Also, those designations are backed by some of the most thorough
historical and technical research on the planet.
2. High
Predictability Makes A Safe Investment
Bonds always have an associated interest rate and a set
maturity date. This makes bonds more predictable. Those two factors alone makes
possible the use of an array of mathematical tools to provide predictions of
future yields and price with a confidence unmatched by any other investment.
3. AAA Bonds
The absoulte best quality of bonds are ones that are rated
AAA. They carry the smallest degree of investment risk, and thus, the least
amount of reward. Interest payments are typically protected by a large or
exceptionally stable margin and the principal is believed secure.
4. BAA Bonds
These are medium grade bonds and as such they are neither
highly protected nor yeild a very high amount of return on your investment. BAA
rated bonds are considered medium-grade obligations (i.e., they are neither
highly protected nor poorly secured). Interest payments and principal security
are thought adequate at the time the rating is made, but might prove unreliable
in the long run.
5. B Bonds
Bonds with B rating are generally considered speculative.
Interest and principal payments are not assured. In other words, invest at your
own risk. In general, bonds with higher ratings tend to have lower yields, so B
bonds can actually give you a higher return on your investment. In 1991, for
example, those who gambled on lower rated bonds reaped the highest total
returns.
6. Are Bonds Better
Than Stocks?
Even at the lowest end of the scale, bonds outpace quite a
few stocks. Of course, this is all averaged out, and some stocks do much better
than even the highest bonds. Bonds also have a large minimum investment in
capital - $5,000 dollars, and so arent for your entry-level investor.