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I thought you were supposed to be buy bonds and money market after retiring.
What are you supposed to do now. http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/2013/06/07/the-problem-with-bonds-and-ultra-low-interest-rates/?iid=HP_LN |
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Well, you can buy bonds rather than a bond fund, that way you don't sustain the capital loss.
Other than that, income property, reits, dividend-paying shares, foreign bonds. Diversify and hope for the best. Worst case scenario, see if you can turn some tricks in the Tenleytown Wholefoods car park. |
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Preferred ETFs
PFF, PGX, PGF High Yield ETFs PEY, and VIG, Or a basket of of High Yield Champions Or I can across this article this mornin: http://seekingalpha.com/article/1486021-own-these-world-s-leading-brands-and-never-fear-a-recession-again?source=email_the_daily_dispatch&ifp=0 |
What a jerk. Nicest adjective I could come up with. |
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Bonds are not bad.
You make an asset allocation, which includes bonds and stocks, through someone low cost like Vanguard. You ignore your portfolio. Rebalance it once or twice a year and go on with life. Very simple. |