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Bearer Bonds
Bearer bonds, also known as coupon bonds are bonds in which the physical certificate is held by the owner rather than being a registered security like bonds are today.
Read →Bond Basics
This article will give you the ability to go out and purchase a bond on your own.
Read →US Treasuries Series I Bonds
US Treasury Series I bonds are inflation indexed savings bonds and provide a good alternative for protecting the value of your capital in rising interest rate environments. The Bureau of the Public Debt is the only seller of these bonds so you are unlikely to learn about them through your bank or broker.eries I bonds are issued by the U.S. Treasury at face value and have a maximum duration of 30 years. These bonds can be sold any time after five years without penalty, and between one and five years after purchase with a loss of the most recent three months interest. Series I bonds are now issued in both paper and electronic format. Whereas the Treasury previous limited annual purchases by a single individual to as much as $60,000 per calendar year, new rules limited purchases to $5,000 in each format, for a total of only $10,000 per calendar year. The interest rate on Series I bonds is reset biannually - in each May and November - and is composed of two parts.
Read →Auction Rate Securities
Update - July 16, 2008 - While many auction rate security instruments have been retired, returning principal to investors, these instruments are now viewed as highly inappropriate for non-institutional investors. The ARS market has experienced severe difficulty, making front-page news on the Wall Street Journal. Many investors have been unable to liquidate their positions, and yields are highly volatile. Until the market sees greater stabilization and transparency, we recommend staying away from Auction Rate Securities.
Read →Treasury Inflation Protected Securities
The United States Treasury currently offers a special kind of security, called a Treasury Inflation-Protected Security (TIPS), whose principal amount is adjusted for inflation. The Treasury Department regularly auctions TIPS with 5-year, 10-year and 20-year maturity. The Treasury introduced these instruments in 1997, based on the premise that the issuance of TIPS would reduce interest costs to the Treasury over the long term and would increase the different types of investors that buy their debt instruments. Although TIPS do bear a significant risk of loss and are therefore no a cash equivalent, they have been very popular among certain classes of investors looking to hedge their interest rate and inflation exposure.
Read →Private Activity and Taxable Municipal Bonds
Taxable and Private Activity Municipal bonds are munis which are not totally tax-exempt.
Read →Pre-Refunded Municipal Bonds
Pre-refunded municipal bonds offer short-term investors the ability to take advantage of the tax advantages of municipal bonds while gaining higher tax equivalent yields and avoiding some of the risks of downgrade or even default that municipal bonds inherently carry.
Read →Open-Ended Municipal Bond Funds
Open-ended tax-free money market funds are generally composed of pools of municipal bonds and produce income that is exempt from federal tax, and exempt at the state and local tax levels to residents of the issuing state of the underlying bonds.
Read →Municipal Bonds And The Alternative Minimum Tax
Municipal Bonds are known to be tax advanaged vehicles for investing money, but that tax advantage sometimes does not extend to individuals subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT).
Read →Municipal Bond ETFs
Municipal Bond ETFs offer another way to invest in the muni market besides purchasing the bonds outright or investing in a municipal bond fund.
Read →Closed-End Municipal Bond Funds
Closed-ended tax-free municipal bonds funds are generally composed of pools of municipal bonds and produce income that is exempt from federal tax, and exempt at the state and local tax levels to residents of the issuing state of the underlying bonds.
Read →How to Buy New Municipal Bond Issues
Investors who want to buy new issues of municipal bonds can do so through a process called the Retail Order Period. In the Retail Order Period, municipalities set aside a portion of their bond offering for retail consumers and... Read →Brazil, Venezuela and Mexico have a vast amount of oil. Alaska has a few drops left as well. But on the left half of the world, oil has been known, explored and produced for years in some places and yet recently found in other places.
Read →Alaska and Texas have been known for oil for quite some time, however there are other areas in foreign countries that have their own great deposits.
Read →Toyota, the first mover of the green vehicle revolution, is researching magnesium batteries to replace lithium-ion. Where can one buy magnesium?
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