The Toronto Star's great bar graph in early May of this year showed quite dramatically that over the past several decades, single - family home ownership was better than owning most stocks or
bonds over the same period of time.
Not exact matches
This rate compares favorably with the 10 - year U.S. Treasury
bond return
of 5.18 percent per year
over the
same time period.
This compares to an average default rate for corporate
bonds of 11.17 %
over that
same time period.
Over the
same time period, the Russell 2000 ® Index produced a correlation
of +0.92 with Russell 1000 ® Index and -0.06 with the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate
Bond Index.
Taryn Simon's Birds
of the West Indies serves as a meticulous and mesmerizing meditation on materialism, masculinity and geopolitical movements
over the course
of the last fifty years, via the vehicles, weapons, and women that have featured in
Bond films during the
same period of time.
A whole life contract
over that
same period of time will generate a 4.3 % (approximately — don't kill me here) rate
of return and does not share any taxable treatment that is shared with the treasury
bond.
Can you please prepare an analysis for me that shows the true cost
of this cash value insurance policy
over 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 years versus buying term life and investing the difference in long term
bonds over those
same time periods?