Wednesday, April 29, 2009

RECESSION Bug on INVESTMENT

Recession everywhere, no jobs, less pay package, cost cutting, phew!!! It’s time for basics, putting a cap on your expenditure and think about some serious investments. Where to invest, well, here goes the answer:

•Bond Funds
Now is an especially good time to consider bonds, some planners say — perhaps for as much as 20% of assets. The percentage of corporations defaulting on their debt obligations is on the rise as the economy slows, the risk to investors is particularly low for investment-grade bonds. Moody's says the default rate on these products is less than 1%, compared with the 7% default rate on much riskier high-yield or junk bonds. The risk associated with investment-grade bonds is further minimized in a broad-based corporate bond fund. "If you hold an investment-grade bond fund, your exposure to defaults is pretty low," says John Puchalla, a Moody's economist. "But if you start buying individual bonds, you start raising that risk."
Investors with a greater risk tolerance — and much deeper pockets — may even want to consider buying into a junk-bond fund. Recent history has shown that junk-bond investors have earned their best returns the year after the junk-bond market bottoms out.

•Exchange-Traded Funds
For those investors itching to play the stock market again, planners say now isn't the time to try to pick hot stocks. Instead, they suggest buying shares in several exchange-traded funds, or ETFs. That way, they can participate in any early rally in stocks without being overly exposed to any single company's poor earnings performance. In the past few years, ETFs have grown in popularity with individual investors because they're cheaper and easier to invest in than traditional stock index funds.

•Money-Market Accounts and CDs

Finally, financial planners say that in a recessionary environment, investors shouldn't be ashamed to keep some extra money in an interest-bearing money-market account — especially if they're investing money they'll need fairly soon. He also suggests investors stash some money in six-month or one-year bank certificates of deposit, which on average pay a 2% higher annual yield than a money-market account. The bottom line is diversification. And that's a valuable lesson investors should keep in mind even when stocks are again heading due north.

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