Sentences with phrase «get decent yield»

REITs can raise capital in the public market and leverage funds, which lets them lend at a reasonable rate and still get a decent yield, Korologos says.
With the CHIM, you probably wouldn't need to sell shares to get a decent yield and retirement paycheck; so when you pass away, there's a better chance that you'd still have around your original million bucks intact.
With the TFSA (Tax Free Savings Account created by the government, it will be easier to get a decent yield without being taxed on it.
Many people have bought into this space because it's one of the only places to get decent yield, but she points out that a number of companies only offer corporate debt because of market demand.
Objective I want alternatives to being in CDs even though I can get decent yields on 3 - year ones.

Not exact matches

If it just keeps paying out all of its earnings, shareholders will get a return equal to the earnings yield (inverse of the PE) of 6 % plus inflation, or a decent total of around 8 %.
I'm not sure what your yield is, but I find that I have to at least double the recipe to get any decent amount of muffins (10).
It's also crucial to note that TLT pays a yield of about 4 %, so investors still get a decent return when the market price goes nowhere.
It still has a decent yield after the cut and it should help them get back on track this year.
The preferred stocks reflect a part of the credit market that hasn't gotten whacked too bad, offering a decent yield for the junior debt on healthy companies risk.
As rates rise and investors can realize a decent return in legitimate high yield investments like CDs and money markets, many expect investors to get out of the risk trade and back into fixed FDIC - protected instruments.
You can usually get a pretty decent yield on these CDs.
If treasury rates in the United States weren't at one to two but were six or eight, we could make a good case for perhaps there's times when you would want to make profits from falling interest rates but right now I think what our investors are looking for is to have a decent yield and be protected from their fear of rising interest rates, so until we get out of this context, I think that it's unlikely that we will deviate much from a two or three year duration portfolio.
But when the current yield is a paltry 0.7 %, it takes a lot of growth to even get to a decent yield on cost.
6) The credit cycle has gotten long in the tooth, and securities that offer a decent yield versus risks undertaken have become few.
The sell - off in U.S. and Canadian bonds has raised yields due within 10 years to levels at which investors can finally get decent returns, according to Moore, who co-manages more than $ 50 billion in Canadian and U.S. fixed income for Fidelity.
It's cheap (taking the midpoint of its guidance it's on less than 5.5 x earnings), it has got a strong balance sheet (net debt / EBITDA was 0.8 x at end - 2010), it has a stable business model (it is the biggest distributor of fruit and vegetables in Europe, with a reach that enables it to supply multiples across different countries), it has a decent dividend yield (circa 4.5 %) and it is spitting out cash (free cash flow for the twelve months ended 30 June 2011 amounted to $ 29.0 m — that's nearly a quarter of the group's market cap).
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