The phrase
"bond investors" refers to individuals or entities that purchase bonds, which are financial instruments or loans issued by governments or corporations. These investors lend their money to the bond issuer in exchange for receiving regular interest payments and the repayment of the loan amount at a later date.
Full definition
As bond investors find their preferred yield levels, some equity volatility may persist.
Findings are not driven by a small set of industries, variations in oil price, or changing preferences
of bond investors caused by low interest rates regime starting with the financial crisis.
I think the biggest problem for
many bond investors is they don't know why they're invested in bonds.
The additional 4 % that equity investors earned over
bond investors did not come free, but represented payment for the increased risk that equity investing entails.
Selling prior to maturity can present a challenge for
municipal bond investors due to the fragmented and thinly traded nature of the market.
Last week I looked at some of the options available to
bond investors in a low rate world.
It's not that stock investors collectively take on more risk than the risk that is taken on
by bond investors collectively.
Bonds Corporate Bond Analysis: What to Consider Corporate
bond investors need to look beyond yield and focus on an issuer's character, capacity, collateral and conditions.
With data going back to 1986, high
yield bond investors should only anticipate a forward return that mirrors treasury bond performance with similar duration.
Just like we split up investing in the equity space,
bond investors find ways to classify their funds.
Many
Canadian bond investors are restricted by their client investment policies to investing in A or higher rated bonds.
When I became a professional
bond investor at the ripe old age of 38 in 1998, it was the opposite — almost all bonds traded at premiums, and had relatively high coupons.
Bond investors use a number of calculated quantities to help evaluate the prices they are willing to pay for bonds.
It is a fact of life that institutional investors get vastly better trade price execution than
retail bond investors, and they do so at a lower transaction cost.
Alas, for
years bond investors have been accepting rates that in many cases don't even match inflation, and this represents one of the great investment challenges of our time.
The concern is
bond investors looking to buy, or especially to sell, will face wide prices swings and higher costs to get a transaction done.
A clear understanding of what sorts of investments are consistent with improving the climate resilience of water assets will
help bond investors quickly determine the environmental credentials of water - related green bonds.
This is despite the fact that energy junk bonds recently have delivered $ 100's of millions of losses to
junk bond investors.
During that time period, in addition to the level and volatility of inflation, investors may want to watch how
bond investors react to trends in inflation.
If interest rates climb by one percentage point,
bond investors today could easily lose more to price losses than they'll collect in interest over the course of a year.
A secular bull market in fixed income assets
delivered bond investors equity - like returns with little volatility for the better part of three decades.
A secular bull market in fixed income assets delivered
bond investors equity - like returns with little volatility for the better part of three decades.
They may be able to build a portfolio around certain investment - grade municipal
bonds an investor currently owns, provided they meet the selection criteria and overall portfolio investment guidelines.
A
leveraged bond investor can lose it all with greater probability and perhaps faster, but at least has the chance of making equity - like returns in the right credit environment.
When I became a
professional bond investor at the ripe old age of 38 in 1998, it was the opposite — almost all bonds traded at premiums, and had relatively high coupons.
Though I do disagree with some points made in the book, you'll definitely be a better and more
informed bond investor after reading it.
It is important to be aware that a big jump in interest rates could be quite painful for
bond investors due to a combination of falling bond prices, inflation, and taxes.
I just think there are a few
things bond investors need to understand about longer maturity bonds, so I was pointing out the possible risks.
If fund providers could combine lower costs and diversification with the ability to set a maturity
date bond investors could better plan for the future and lower their risks.
The results reveal a bad century for
American bond investors, but also a surprising trend toward market efficiency.
Phrases with «bond investors»