Stocks and Bonds: Too Much Risk for Too Little Reward | Pros: Stocks and bonds are the original investing heavy hitters. When you buy stocks, you're buying a tiny piece of the company that issued the stock. So when you buy a Coca-Cola stock, for example, you become part-owner of the Coca-Cola company. As the value of the company grows, so does the value of your stock.
When you buy a bond, you're lending money to the company, city, state or country that issued the bond. You make money when the borrower pays you back with interest when the bond matures—usually a period of 3–15 years. Or you can sell your bond to investors who think you've gotten a better deal than they could get with today's current bonds.
Cons: Both of these options carry a ton of risk. Investing in single stocks is like putting all your retirement eggs in one basket. If something happens to the company whose stock you own, the value could drop and never recover.
The value of bonds rises and falls in the opposite direction of interest rates. So if interest rates rise after you purchase a bond, its value drops. Interest rates are incredibly low right now, and there's only one way for them to go. When rates start to rise, the value of your bonds could drop like a rock.
Mutual Fund Advantage: Dave agrees stock market investing is your best chance to build up enough savings to support you through retirement—but not with single stocks. Normal stock market cycles cause stock values to surge and plummet, and that's too much for most investors to handle emotionally.
Mutual funds allow you to own stock in hundreds of companies at once and spread out your risk. If something happens to one company in your mutual fund, your entire retirement strategy won't go down the drain. It's the best way to use the power of the stock market to build up your retirement savings. | | | | |
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