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Low-Risk Ways To Invest
by Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman
Looking
to earn halfway between the return on stocks and bonds?
There are a couple of ways. The easiest:
Invest half of your money in stock index mutual funds and half in bonds, CDs or
fixed annuities. Historically, this type of investment mix has earned nearly 7.5
percent annually or about 75 percent of the return on stocks, according to
Ibbotson Associates, Chicago. On average, with this kind of investment mix, you
can expect to have one down year for every four good years. The reason: In any
given year, stocks or bonds can lose money.
An easy way to play this game is to
invest in a balanced fund, which typically has about 60 percent-40 percent or 50
percent-50 percent in stocks and bonds, respectively. Morningstar’s best-rated
balanced funds include American Funds Balanced, Dodge and Cox Balanced and
Gabelli Westwood Balanced.
Another option to consider:
You can invest in an equity-indexed annuity. Keep in mind that with any fixed
annuity, the insurance company guarantees both the rate of return and the
payout, which can be made immediately or at a future time. There is a 10 percent
IRS penalty if you withdraw before age 59 ½. Also, there may be additional
surrender charges if you cash out early.
With an equity-indexed annuity, the
interest earned on your contract may be based on the performance of a published
index.
Bryan Kane, vice president of Sun Life
Financial, Wellesley Hills, Mass., says that with an equity-indexed annuity,
your principal also is typically guaranteed. If the stock market grows at a 10
percent annual rate over the next 10 years, you might earn about 6 percent,
depending upon how your contract is worded.
There are many different types of
equity-indexed annuities, so you need to investigate exactly how they work. But
they typically pay a minimum guaranteed interest rate in case the stock market
does poorly. If the market does well, you might earn a percentage or
“participation” of the gain in the named index it tracks. For example, the
insurer might pay a 3 percent minimum guaranteed interest on 90 percent of the
premium you’ve paid in. But you could earn, say, 90 percent of the gain on the
S&P 500 index if the stock market does well.
Instead of a participation rate, the
issuer might instead opt to limit your return with a “cap,” and/or subtract a
specific amount from the published index’s gain.
There is no free lunch with
equity-indexed annuities. Critics argue that you only get a return linked to the
price gain on a stock market index. However, historically about 40 percent of
the total return on stocks is due to reinvestment of dividends. It’s possible
that there may be no reinvestment of dividends with an equity-indexed annuity.
In addition, the NASD warns on its
website (www.nasd.com/investor/alerts/indexed_annuities.html)
that not all equity-index annuities are alike. Some pay better rates than
others. Whether an index is tracked from point to point or averaged, for
example, can dramatically affect your earnings.
If the stock market does poorly you
could earn little or no interest. Plus, if you cash out of your annuity before
it matures, you could lose money.
Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman are
husband-wife personal finance columnists, journalists and authors.
They are the authors of "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Making
Money with Mutual Funds," published by Alpha Books. Their
columns appear in newspapers throughout New England and the
Southeast, as well as online. Their commentary on mutual funds and
personal finance is carried by 200 radio stations nationwide every
Sunday over Business News Network's Charles DeRose Financial Advisor
Show.
More articles by Al and Gail can be
found here.
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