Ok so bonds are bad what should someone in retirement invest in

Anonymous
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
Anonymous
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.
Anonymous
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
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: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.
What a jerk. Nicest adjective I could come up with.
Anonymous
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.
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