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Strategies & Market Trends : Heinz Blasnik- Views You Can Use -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GraceZ who wrote (912)5/8/2003 3:26:24 AM
From: EL KABONG!!!  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4907
 
Hi Grace,

I don't know which bond fund(s) you have in your 401(k)s, but the folks I know are pretty much limited to a Fidelity fund or maybe a Vanguard fund. The figures I can remember were for Fidelity Ginny Mae Fund which Y-T-D was yielding < 1% (as of about late April) and Fidelity Government Bonds which was also yielding < 1% Y-T-D, in the same time frame. These people can't just shop around for a better yield on bond funds. They're locked into whatever their employer offers under the auspices of a qualified 401(k) plan. Maybe Pimco pays higher, I don't know, but these people can't get Pimco in their plan. Of course, the same argument is also true for the equities funds. They're locked into whatever the plan offers. If they're in a Fidelity plan, then they can't get say a Vanguard fund, or vice-versa. Short of changing employers, there's not too much an individual can do. (Yes, I know they can withdraw from the 401(k) plan and then exercise a roll-over into something else, but if they do that, then they forfeit the employer's matching funds.)

Now, had these people been in bonds way back in the year 2000, they might have realized some hefty gains in their bond funds. But they weren't. They were 100% in equities. So to jump into bonds now is just a tad too late to enjoy any gains realized in 2001 or even 2002, but they could probably get in now, before any big reversals in bonds, just in time to be fleeced once again. <g>

KJC



To: GraceZ who wrote (912)5/8/2003 8:01:49 AM
From: Wyätt Gwyön  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4907
 
<<The bond funds are returning relatively feeble yields >>

I must be in a very special bond fund considering it has returned double digit returns for the last three years and most of what they hold is US government bonds


you are confusing yield with total return. perhaps you didn't know that total return for bonds is comprised of yield plus capital gain or loss. minus the expense ratio in the case of bond funds.