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Investment Basics
The options for investing our savings are continually
increasing, yet every single investment
vehicle can be easily categorized according to three fundamental
characteristics - safety, income
and growth
- which also correspond to types of investor objectives. While
it is possible for an investor to have more than one of these
objectives, the success of one must come at the expense of
others. Here we examine these three types of objectives, the
investments that are used to achieve them and the ways in which
investors can incorporate them in devising a strategy.
SAFETY
Perhaps there is truth to the axiom that there is no such
thing as a completely safe and secure investment. Yet we can get
close to ultimate safety for our investment funds through the
purchase of government-issued securities in stable economic
systems, or through the purchase of the highest quality corporate
bonds issued by the economy's top companies. Such securities
are arguably the best means of preserving principal
while receiving a specified rate of return.
The safest investments are usually found in the money
market and include such securities as Treasury
bills (T-bills), certificates
of deposit, commercial
paper or bankers'
acceptance slips; or in the fixed income (bond) market in
the form of municipal
and other government bonds,
and in corporate
bonds. The securities listed above are ordered according to
the typical spectrum of increasing risk
and, in turn, increasing potential yield.
To compensate for their higher risk, corporate bonds return a
greater yield than T-bills.
It is important to realize that there's an enormous range of
relative risk within the bond market: at one end are government
and high-grade corporate bonds, which are considered some of the
safest investments around. At the other end are junk
bonds, which have a lower investment
grade, perhaps possessing more risk than some of the more
speculative stocks. In other words, it's incorrect to think that
corporate bonds are always safe, but most instruments from the
money market can be considered very safe.
INCOME
However, the safest investments are also the ones that are
likely to have the lowest rate of income return, or yield.
Investors must inevitably sacrifice a degree of safety if they
want to increase their yields. This is the inverse relationship
between safety and yield: as yield increases, safety generally
goes down, and vice versa.
In order to increase their rate of investment return and take on
risk above that of money market instruments or government
bonds, investors may choose to purchase corporate bonds or preferred
shares with lower investment ratings. Investment grade bonds
rated at A or AA are slightly riskier than AAA
bonds, but presumably also offer a higher income return than
AAA bonds. Similarly, BBB rated bonds can be thought to carry
medium risk but offer less potential income than junk bonds,
which offer the highest potential bond yields available, but at
the highest possible risk. Junk bonds are the most likely to default.
Most investors, even the most conservative-minded ones, want
some level of income generation in their portfolios, even if
it's just to keep up with the economy's rate of inflation.
But maximizing income return can be an overarching principle for
a portfolio, especially for individuals who require a fixed sum
from their portfolio every month. A retired person who requires
a certain amount of money every month is well served by holding
reasonably safe assets that provide funds over and above other
income-generating assets, such as pension plans, for example.
GROWTH
OF CAPITAL
This discussion has thus far been concerned only with safety
and yield as investing objectives, and has not considered the
potential of other assets to provide a rate of return from an
increase in value, often referred to as a capital
gain. Capital gains are entirely different from yield in
that they are only realized when the security is sold for a
price that is higher than the price at which it was originally
purchased. (Selling at a lower price is referred to as a capital
loss.) Therefore, investors seeking capital gains are likely not
those who need a fixed, ongoing source of investment returns
from their portfolio, but rather those who seek the possibility
of longer-term growth.
Growth of capital is most closely associated with the purchase
of common
stock, particularly growth securities, which offer low
yields but considerable opportunity for increase in value. For
this reason, common stock generally ranks among the most
speculative of investments as their return depends on what will
happen in an unpredictable future. Blue-chip
stocks, by contrast, can potentially offer the best of all
worlds by possessing reasonable safety, modest income and
potential for growth in capital generated by long-term increases
in corporate revenues and earnings as the company matures. Yet
rarely is any common stock able to provide the near-absolute
safety and income-generation of government bonds.
It is also important to note that capital gains offer potential
tax advantages by virtue of their lower tax rate in most
jurisdictions. Funds that are garnered through common stock
offerings, for example, are often geared toward the growth plans
of small companies, a process that is extremely important for
the growth of the overall economy. In order to encourage
investments in these areas, governments choose to tax capital
gains at a lower rate than income. Such systems serve to
encourage entrepreneurship and the founding of new businesses
that help the economy grow.
SECONDARY
OBJECTIVE
Tax Minimization
An investor may pursue certain investments in order to adopt
tax minimization as part of his or her investment strategy. A
highly-paid executive, for example, may want to seek
investments with favorable tax treatment in order to lessen
his or her overall income tax burden. Making contributions to
an IRA
or other tax-sheltered retirement plan, such as a 401k,
can be an effective tax minimization strategy.
Marketability / Liquidity
Many of the investments we have discussed are reasonably illiquid,
which means they cannot be immediately sold and easily
converted into cash. Achieving a degree of liquidity,
however, requires the sacrifice of a certain level of income
or potential for capital gains.
Common stock is often considered the most liquid of
investments, since it can usually be sold within a day or two
of the decision to sell. Bonds can also be fairly marketable,
but some bonds are highly illiquid, or non-tradable,
possessing a fixed term. Similarly, money market instruments
may only be redeemable at the precise date at which the fixed
term ends. If an investor seeks liquidity, money market assets
and non-tradable bonds aren't likely to be held in his or her
portfolio.
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