Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

Two ‘Safe Harbor’ Plays Right Now

Aug 1st, 2008 | By Floyd Brown | Category: Stock Market Investing

I walked into the University Place Branch of Bank of America on Saturday morning and was eyewitness to a shocking run on the bank. An unruly crowd had taken over the lobby of the branch. Every station in the normally deserted suburban banking center was full of customers.

Then I noticed a sign in the window. “Branch hours are extended today to accommodate all the customers wishing to open a High Yield 4% Certificate of Deposit.”

These customers weren’t demanding to withdraw their money; instead, they were rushing to make deposits. Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) was experiencing a reverse run as investors hurried to start investing in CDs guaranteed by good ol’ Uncle Sam at the biggest bank in America.

Fleeing other investments and the ravages of a bear market, they were trying to protect their money in FDIC insured savings products. Many of these investors may wind up worse off than when they started. “Safer” investments fail to keep up with rising inflation. But there are ways to protect your returns and limit your interest rate risk if you are investing in ultra-safe CDs.

A Glorious Bull Market Goes Bearish

From the early 1980s until 2000, America’s stock market experienced a glorious bull market. The S&P 500 climbed a steep mountainside from 100 to 1,500 points. The average investor in this market became a genius. Every broker was a maestro.

But bulls don’t last forever, and the bears finally showed up. Since 2000, returns have been negative, or flat at best, in the S&P 500, which tracks the performance of America’s 500 largest public firms. Many undisciplined investors have fared far worse. Now that same broker is transformed from a maestro to a goat.

The generation most invested in this market of the last 10 years is my own - the baby boomers. This generation, which gave America free love, Woodstock and the Internet, are scared. As a group, we haven’t saved much for retirement anyway.

Now we find ourselves preparing for retirement with a foreclosure notice in one hand and a bank CD that won’t match inflation in the other.

The Mirage of 4% CD Rates

The safety of a 4% CD is a mirage in the desert of high inflation. Consumer prices rose at an annualized rate of 7.9% in the second quarter. They had already increased at 3.1% in the first quarter of 2008. In 2007, inflation rose by 4.1%, whereas year-to-date we’re already up 5.5%.

Our parents suffered a similar fate while we were partying our way through the 1970s.Their experience tells us that instead of a CD yielding 4%, a better alternative would be stocks in sectors that can hold up in inflationary times - stocks with rich dividends.

Assets such as stocks will do a better job of holding value during high inflation. Why buy a CD at 4% when stock in companies such as:

  • General Electric (NYSE: GE) yields 4.3%.
  • US Tobacco (NYSE: UST) yields 5%.
  • Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) yields 6.8%.
  • Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW) yields 5.1%.

These yields are eye-popping by most historic measures. You can pocket these and other dividend payments until the market rebounds. These companies will pay you to hold their stock.

Investing in CDs - Consider Laddering Your CD Portfolio

If you feel compelled to flee for the safety of CDs, or if you need to hold a large portion of your portfolio in these obligations, then at least consider “laddering” your CD portfolio.

Laddering is a lot like dollar-cost averaging when you buy stocks. With laddering, you stagger the maturity dates to take advantage of rising rates.

It works like this…

  • You don’t invest all your CD money in a single maturity date.
  • Instead of putting all your money in one product, you buy several.
  • If you had $50,000 to invest, you would acquire a $10,000 one-year CD, a $10,000 two-year CD and so on until your last $10,000 buys you a five-year CD.

Each CD is like a rung on a ladder. When the one-year CD matures, you reinvest that money in a five-year CD. The cycle repeats, and gives you the ability to reinvest at better rates. Some of your money will always be less than 360 days from maturity.

Interest rates often climb in periods of inflation. Each year you will have an opportunity to grab the higher rates if they appear.

However, if you can sleep at night and still own stocks, then holding on is my recommendation. In the end, most bank CDs will leave you worse off after price inflation. Besides, I hate waiting in lines.

There are no guarantees, but history has shown that individuals brave enough to buy stocks in bear markets are better off in the long run.

Good investing,

Floyd

Source: Two ‘Safe Harbor’ Plays Right Now


AdvertisementOil at $70 a Barrel -- Gold at $500 by Christmas?

With stocks as volatile as nitroglycerin, gold should be trading above $2,000 an ounce! But the dollar insurrection has shaken up the commodities markets. Some experts now put gold's downside at $500... even $400.

What if they're right?

TFN's options strategist Andrew Snyder has developed a gold hedge strategy that could make you money on your gold position either way. Find his Special Report on the Members Only Reports section of HotStockConfidential.com. To become an instant member, click here...



More on this topic (What's this?)
CD Matured, Moved It to Savings
Best 1-Year CD Rates with FDIC
Best CD Rates at Wachovia Bank
Read more on Certificate of Deposit (CD) at Wikinvest
Tags: , , , , , ,

By Floyd Brown

Related Articles



About the Author

Floyd G. Brown is an Advisory Panelist for the Investment U and a regular contributor to The Oxford Club, began his highly successful investing career while still in high school… and made his first million before turning 30.

See All Posts by This Author



Everything you want to know about investing, but don’t trust anyone enough to ask. Founded in 1999, the goal of Investment U is to give you impartial, no-nonsense advice on how to build long-lasting wealth. Our mission is to analyze and discuss all the important financial tools at your disposal. The insights and analyses offered by Investment U delivered three times a week in our e-letter can make a dramatic difference in any investor's net worth and financial security.

See All Posts from This Publication

Leave Comment