Fixed Income Portfolio Help

eytonxav

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Joined
Sep 25, 2003
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I just received my pension lump and will be investing most of it ($943K) in fixed income instruments. I have already addressed the equity side by rolling over my 401K. I will not need to tap "hopefully" for another 5 yrs when I will be 59.5, however, if I don't get enough P/T work, it might be necessary to 72T in another 2 yrs. I was looking at doing something like this, but I'm struggling with allocating this to maximize returns now, but still have some flexibility to take advantage if/when rates move up in the next 12-18 months:

Collateralized Mortgage obligations: currently offering 5.5% with time frames before getting called of ~ 3-7 yrs, although if interest rates move up, I suspect you could get locked into the 5.5% for longer periods. I was going to put $300K here.

Multi-step 10 yr note: pays 4.25% for 3 yrs, 5% for 2 yrs, 6% for 2 yrs, 7% for 2 yrs, and 8% for 1 yr. I was going to put $200K here.

CD/Bond Ladder:
1 yr BBB corp bond @ 2.7% $100K
2 yr Jumbo CD @ 2.75% $100K
3 yr Jumbo CD @ 3.49% $100K
alternatively, could put some or all of the ladder money in an Eaton Vance 1 yr class C that pays 4.25%, with a 1% early withdrawal penalty, however the share price has some risk if rates go up.

Preferred Stock paying ~ 7-7.5% $50K

TIPS $50K

and then the last $43K either over to equity side or maybe a high yield fund.


I think most of these instruments have very low risk, except for the preferred stock, high yield fund and the Eaton Vance note.

I would appreciate any suggestions on how to allocate the $s or if anyone has alternative suggestions to achieve optimum yield/flexibility in a rising rate market.

Thanks,

Doug
 
Congrats on your pension distribution and your decision to move quickly into prudent investments.

A lot of my money is in short-term cash equivalents, so I'll just comment on a couple of yours.

I wouldn't bother with the BBB corp bond. You can get the same yield and the same credit risk without the 1-yr lockup by using something like a Ford money market account (www.fordcredit.com). Or, consider a short-term corp bond fund. You should get a slightly higher yield to offset the risk to principal, but it's probably a wash in the end (unless your BBB defaults, of course).

And check out the CD rates here:

http://www.penfed.org/rates/certrates.asp

Finally, even though I am a super chicken when it comes to the stock market, I've got a 10-15% equity exposure just to mitigate my envy over the wonderful returns everybody else experiences.

And given the rapidly falling dollar, you might consider a little hedge. I took a small position in gold as my doomsday money -- just enough to buy guns, food, and a ticket out of here :)
 
Wabmester, Thanks for the info, those PenFed rates are excellent!!! Since I'm a vet, should be able to qualify, I will call them today.

Thx,

Doug
 
penfed rates are too high, what is up? How can they offer such rates?

Wayne
 
Their rates are always very competitive, but they do change them monthly, and this is the highest I've seen them in a while.

I don't know much about credit unions, but I assume they can only loan out as much as they take in, so if their loan demand is high (and profitable), then they'd need to attract more deposits.

I have both a HELOC and CD's there, and currently they pay me more than I pay them, so it is a bit scary, but the deposits are insured....
 
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