At many points in time, many of today's hot markets didn't fit all these stipulations yet over time,
they did yield returns.
Not exact matches
«
Do you really want to take a 2.5 % annual
return for 40 years, if you're thinking about current bond
yields?
«Often companies have some buffer and bloat they can reduce, and there are initiatives that probably don't
yield as much
return but they're still on the budget line.
Lancaster says many entrepreneurs are surprised to find that bigger versions of their businesses don't necessarily
yield bigger
returns.
While credit risk might seem like a bad idea with the U.S. economy still weak and the rest of the world looking equally uncertain, high -
yield bonds
do offer bigger
returns than government and investment - grade bonds.
These benefits would (i) largely go to developers and contractors for infrastructure projects like new pipelines that would happen even without new incentives and so be highly regressive; (ii) raise costs by failing to reach the tax - free pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and international investors who are the most plausible sources of incremental infrastructure finance; (iii) not encourage at all the highest
return maintenance projects like fixing potholes that
do not
yield a pecuniary
return for investors; and (iv) by offering credits at an unprecedented 82 percent rate, invite all kinds of tax shelter abuse.
Even if we don't see outsized price increases in commodities, from a total
return perspective, commodity
returns will benefit from a change to positive roll
yields based on the reshaping and structuring of the fundamental market in commodities.
The backup in
yield has
returned some value to the category, even though we don't expect much in the way of inflation.
«Small investors don't always have access to active management with a higher
yield and a higher total
return,» said Gross, who is co-chief investment officer at PIMCO.
Over the long term the nominal
return on a duration - managed bond portfolio (or bond index — the duration on those doesn't change very much) converges on the starting
yield.
These benefits would (i) largely go to developers and contractors for infrastructure projects like new pipelines that would happen even without new incentives and so be highly regressive; (ii) raise costs by failing to reach the tax - free pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and international investors that are the most plausible sources of incremental infrastructure finance; (iii) not encourage at all the highest
return maintenance projects like fixing potholes that
do not
yield a pecuniary
return for investors; and (iv) by offering credits at an unprecedented 82 per cent rate, invite all kinds of tax - shelter abuse.
ZIRP and NIRP policies are forcing investors out of cash and near - zero or negative
yielding «havens» and into slightly higher
yielding investments in which the potential rate of
return does not even remotely reflect the degree of risk being taken.
Holding a lower
yielding stock with a higher growth rate will at some point provide higher
returns assuming the growth rates don't change.
If you first grow and then rebalance to more
yield returning investments, you will have to realize your gains at some point along the way... I assume ideally you would prefer to
do that in a slow and steady process after retirement, but when you deal with growth stocks you might also want to protect your gains by setting stop losses which could then create a huge taxable event on some random Friday morning...
Expected
returns can be compared with 10 - year
yields if one wishes to
do so, but that comparison doesn't change the expected
return you just calculated, based on the observed price.
Market
returns are beyond our control, but having an answer to all environments, even if that answer doesn't immediately
yield positive
returns, is a very liberating feeling.
While high
yield didn't experience a 2008 - style meltdown this year, it
did struggle, experiencing negative
returns and more volatility.
The indicated rates of
return for each money market fund is an annualized historical
yield based on the seven - day period ended as indicated and annualized in the case of effective
yield by compounding the seven day
return and
does not represent an actual one year
return.
A recent study by Wes Gray and Jack Vogel, Dissecting Shareholder
Yield, makes the stunning claim that dividend yield doesn't predict future returns, but more complete measures of shareholder yield might hold some pro
Yield, makes the stunning claim that dividend
yield doesn't predict future returns, but more complete measures of shareholder yield might hold some pro
yield doesn't predict future
returns, but more complete measures of shareholder
yield might hold some pro
yield might hold some promise.
However, this shareholder
yield backtest
did not exhibit a smooth increase in average excess
returns from the 1st quintile to the 5th quintile.
Bond markets are certainly displaying a lot of enthusiasm at the moment — and it doesn't matter which bonds one looks at, as the famous «hunt for
yield» continues to obliterate interest
returns across the board like a steamroller.
Borrowing from the Hippocratic oath «First,
do no harm», the key for someone who is willing to sacrifice the prospect of higher
return for assurance of safety, is to focus solely on legitimate high
yield returns and ignore the higher risk options available.
Higher risk (higher
yield) bonds tend to be closely correlated with equities which means that such bonds
do not really dampen volatility or smooth out
returns over time when combined with equities in a portfolio.
I
do think there is merit in looking at general rates (we likely won't
return to the rate environment of the early 1980's for example), but I wouldn't be getting excited about stock prices at these levels for the sole reason that bond
yields are really low.
Given assumed actuarial
return assumptions of the moment, that could be true, but certainly not at current nominal Treasury
yield levels that don't even come close to these assumed
return levels.
Although longer - term bonds offer higher
yields, they don't necessarily offer enough of a
return premium to justify the higher risk when compared to short - term bonds.
However, if I were to try and
do some sort of risk adjusted
return analysis — my gut tells me the high
yield property is better.
10As the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and
do not
return to it without watering the earth and making it bud and flourish, so that it
yields seed for the sower and bread for the eater, 11so is my word that goes out from my mouth: It will not
return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it.
But now the increasing demand in the market for both the green and dried article is attracting the attention of farmers who have an eye for crops that
do not fail and that
yield good
returns.
Adding Milner if Theo
does feature upfront would
yield a similiar
return to Sanchez in work rate, professionalism, and quality.
For Fowler that
return did not
yield silverware, with Robbie failing to make the matchday squad for the 2007 Champions League Final.
People are surely right to be worried about the prospect of Chamakh; the guy is 25 and
did nothing of note up till last season and even that only
yielded a 13 goal
return.
The senior member subsequently flagged the contribution when Kasowitz notified the office of his involvement in the Trump case and instructed the campaign to
return it, and the office concluded its probe after two years because it
did not
yield enough evidence to support a criminal prosecution.
The big cats could
return to
do the job they once
did in Brazil's grassland — hunt a growing population of wild pig relatives, called peccaries, that decimates crop
yields
Only within the last 10,000 years, after the ice age ended and relatively moist conditions
returned to the arctic,
did nutritious forbs
yield to less nourishing plants such as graminoids and woody shrubs.
Check KPIs
Done correctly, meditation will quickly
yield tangible results — particularly if you've
returned from a Vipassana course and are attempting to recreate the technique at home.
Compromise means everybody
yields some of what's important to them in
return for getting (or keeping) another part that would be jeopardized if they didn't also
yield.
I don't know what the
return would have
yielded if the thirty day promotion lowered the pricing to 99 cents.
It appears we are experiencing a small gold rush as savvy technology investors bet that the digital transition in education will
yield significant
returns to those
doing the disrupting.
However, for bonds to provide a similar level of
return as they
did during the last equity bear market described above,
yields would have to fall to approximately minus 2 %.
It is important to note that the nominal
yield does not estimate
return accurately unless the current bond price is the same as its par value.
Conversely, don't save your college or retirement money in safe, but low
yielding money market funds when college or retirement are many years away; you will likely be missing out on many years of fat
returns and your savings will even lose buying power from the erosion of inflation.
So what the investor may be realizing right now — So, first of all, if you are investing in an international bond fund and you're realizing negative
returns, it doesn't necessarily have to be because there's negative
yields.
Duration and
yield curve
did not materially impact
returns.
So it's important to make those distinctions with clients that just because they're locking in a negative
yield, they're investing in a negative -
yielding security, it doesn't mean they have to realize a negative
return.
The stock
did reach a high of $ 14.55 during the period, which would have
yielded a much nicer
return.
Don't use
yield to maturity as a perfect measure of your
returns.
I like the concept of the unconstrained strategy; indeed, it is what I am
doing for clients, but it is of the first variety, try to make money for clients in all markets, and not just be a wild man in search of
yield or total
return.
More importantly, this is providing an example of how bonds often are not correlated with stocks (they don't move up and down together), thus giving us the diversification benefits of including the fixed - income asset class in our portfolios, while providing a higher
yield and higher expected
return than cash.
Real
return bonds
do keep pace with inflation but
yield almost nothing before taxes even.