More :: Free Bond Tips ::

Bond Investing Click Here!
           All of the information about bond prices - and something regarding bond, Could find them on our content, the navigation menu and the other menu, which via analysis from many better experts transfer to be many useful articles for you.
          :: Site Map :: Home :: Bond :: Investing In Bond :: Bond Benefit :: Bond Type :: Bond Investing Market :: Point Of Bond Investing :: Explain Bond Investing :: Bond Trading Strategy :: Real Estate Investing In Bond :: Investing In Secured Bond :: Bond Essential :: Surety Bond :: Mortgage Broker Bond :: Bond Trading :: Bond Investing Information :: Safest Way In Bond :: Technical Bond Investing :: Incredible Bond Investing :: Pro Of Bond Investing :: Retail Bond Investor :: Stock Versus Bond :: Broker Bond :: Bond Bulk Discount :: Commercial Surety Bond :: Evaluate Bond Issue :: Bond Investing Business :: Online Bond Trading :: U.S. Saving Bond :: Bond Yield :: Junk Bond :: Mistake Surety Bond :: Best Rate Bond :: Saving Bond :: Bond Definition :: Higher Interest Bond :: Protect Bond Investment :: Zero Coupon Bond :: Bond 101 :: Bond Market Benefit :: Bond Portfolio :: Purchasing Bond :: Federal Bond Issue :: Bond Investing :: Saving Bond Fact :: Savings Bonds :: Savings Bond Type :: Surety Bond Benefit :: Convertible Corporate Bond :: Safely Trade Bond :: Corporate Bond Debenture ::

About resource


Stock and Bond Trading as a Conservative Investment Strategy


By Steve Selengut

When someone is accused of committing a criminal act, they are most commonly arrested and taken to jail. Before they can be released from jail while pending trial, someone must bail them out, or pay a bail bonds agency to step in and take over the process. The following paragraphs will answer some frequently asked questions about the process, thus helping the reader to better understand how it work.

It's likely that either curiosity or skepticism led you to this article, and I would agree that, for most individual investors, trading is approached in a totally speculative manner. Stock trading, in its more popular forms (Day Trading, Swing Trading, Penny Stock Speculating, etc.) includes none of the elements that a conservative investment strategy would have at its very core: Little if any attention is given to the fundamental Quality of the equities selected. Any Diversification that exists in the portfolio is determined by chance alone and is, at best, a transient result of the selection guesswork. No attempt whatever is made to develop an increasing and dependable stream of Income. But stock trading by individual investors doesn't deserve quite as bad a "rep" as it has earned. After all, its very foundation is Profit Taking, probably the most important (and possibly the most often neglected) of the activities required for successful investment portfolio management. Unfortunately for most non-professional equity traders, loss taking is a more common occurrence.

Bond, (and other Income Security) trading is generally avoided by most non-professional traders. Obviously, it takes more investment capital to establish positions in Corporate and Municipal Bonds, Real Estate, or Government Securities than it does in Equities, and the volatility that traders thrive upon is just not a standard feature of the mundane world of debt securities. Surprisingly, most investment advisors and stock brokers have not discovered that there is a more exciting approach to Income Investing that is actually safer for investors and less inflexible in the face of changing interest rate expectation scenarios. Certainly, Wall Street financial institutions pressure their representatives to push individual new issues and/or investment products, but I think that the Market Value fixation that stretches from Wall Street to Main Street is the real culprit. Income securities need to be "valued" for long-term income growth and traded with great pleasure... albeit much less frequently.

Consequently, most trading is done in an Equity only environment that, by its very nature, is too speculative for most mature (in whatever sense you choose) investors. But this is not the way it needs to be. Since stock prices are likely to remain volatile in the short run and cyclical in the long run, there will always be opportunities for profit taking. [Note that it is the combination of volatility, market accessibility, universal equity ownership, and confiscatory taxation that have made "Buy 'n Hold" a tar pit Investment strategy.] Similarly, there are no rules against taking advantage of the cyclical nature of interest rate sensitive security prices. Trading is the world's oldest form of commercial activity, and it is unfortunate that it is treated with such disrespect by our dysfunctional tax code. It is even more unfortunate that it is looked at askance by client attorneys and brokerage firm compliance officers... masters of hindsight that they are.

Trading does not have to be done quickly to be productive, and it doesn't have to focus on higher risk securities to be profitable. And perhaps most importantly, it doesn't have to avoid the interest rate sensitive income securities that are so important to the long-term success of any true investment portfolio. No matter how beaten up a speculative day trader becomes, whatever profit taking experience there has been is invaluable. Once a trader/speculator is weaned off the gambling mentality that brought him to the "shock market" in the first place, he can apply his trading skills to investing and to portfolio management. The transition from trader/speculator to trader/investor requires some education... education that cannot be obtained from product salespersons.

Step One is to gain an appreciation of the power of Asset Allocation using the principles of The Working Capital Model. Asset Allocation is the process of dividing the portfolio into two conceptual "buckets". The first of these will contain Equity Securities, whose primary purpose is to produce growth in the form of Realized Capital Gains. The other bucket will contain various securities whose primary purpose is to produce some form of regular income... dividends, interest, rents, royalties, etc. The percentage allocated to each is a function of a short list of personal facts, concerns, goals, and objectives. The cost basis of the securities, absolutely not their constantly changing Market Values, must be used in all Asset Allocation calculations. Asset

Bond Investing In Today's Volatile Markets


By Christopher W Smith
Bond investing offers almost as many options as investing in stocks. Bonds are a critical component of the diversified portfolio, and taking time to compare stocks vs bonds in terms of one's Read more...