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Larry Swedroe, the author of The Only Guide to a Winning Investment Strategy You'll Ever Need, has collaborated with Joe H. Hempen to manufacture an up-to-date book on how to invest in today's bond market that covers a range of issues pertinent to any bond capitalist today including: bond-speak, the risks of fixed income investing, mortgage-backed securities, and municipal bonds. The Only Guide to a Winning Bond Strategy You'll Ever Need is a no-nonsense handbook with all the info necessary to design and invent your fixed income portfolio. In this day and age of shaky stocks and economic unpredictability, The Only Guide to a Winning Bond Strategy You'll Ever Need is a indispensable tool for any capitalist looking to safeguard their money.
From Publishers WeeklyAwkwardly organized and unduly complicated, this book provides a recitation of everything Swedroe and Hempen—co-principals of Buckingham Asset Management—know when it comes to bonds, which is a lot. The problem is that their book isn't pitched to a specific sufficient audience. Sophisticated investors may not mind the authors' heavy reliance on bondspeak and analytical jargon, but they will wonder why so a heap of pages are devoted to explaining Series EE Savings Bonds. And novices will be grateful for the broad glossary, but they'll be frustrated by the book's lack of explanatory diagrams and it is tendency to talk when it comes to conceptions before the right way introducing or defining them. The actual system discussion alluded to in the title is addressed only in the book's 25-page, penultimate chapter, where Swedroe and Hempen explain how to use frequent proficiencies like laddering to invent a fixed-income portfolio. If only the preceding 10 chapters had been as succinctly written. (Mar.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Review "One of the outstanding untold tragedies of modern finance is the mayhem wreaked upon an unsuspecting public in the bond markets. Whether you're a little capitalist or an institutional player, the odds are that not only have you been savaged by this machine, but that you don't even know it. Few humans recognise fixed income investing as well as Larry Swedroe; "The Only Guide to a Winning Bond Investment Strategy You'll Ever Need" will steer you through these dangerous waters in safety and comfort." --Bill Bernstein, author of The Four Pillars of Investing, The Intelligent Asset Allocator, and The Birth of Plenty"There's an ol' saying in personal finance and investing: 'You build wealth in stocks, and you preserve it in bonds." Well, here's a book that offers the best of both worlds! These guys show you how bonds may not only preserve your wealth, they may help you build wealth too!" --Paul B. Farrell, JD, PhD, columnist, CBS MarketWatch, author of The Millionaire Code, Lazy Person's Guide to Investing, The Winning Portfolio, and others "A bond book for our time. Clearly, given that most financial observers believe the equity premium is going to decline over the foreseeable future making bonds a comparatively better investment, we need to get started focusing more on bonds as an investment vehicle. This book provides an splendid roadmap of the bond markets and bonds as a personal investment." --Edward R. Wolfe, Ph. D., Professor of Finance, and Director of the Financial Planning Program, Western Kentucky University "A MUCH NEEDED BOND BOOK. In The Only Guide to a Winning Bond Strategy You'll Ever Need, the writers cover the very complex issue of bonds in outstanding detail. This book is a must-read for any individual who's thinking of laying out capital in bonds and actually wants to comprehend what they're all about. Readers will likewise gain clear or deep perception into how the bond market works. I feel each bond capitalist could gain from reading this book; I recognise I did. This book unquestionably will have to be a share of each bond investor's library." --Mel Lindauer, Forum Leader, Morningstar's Vanguard Diehards Forum and co-author, The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing "This in an outstanding manner clear and well-organized book covers just when it comes to everything the typical capitalist needs to know with regards to bonds and other fixed income securities. A real pleasure to read." --Kenneth R. French, Carl E. and Catherine M. Heidt Professor of Finance at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth "Bonds and other types of fixed income investments are very complex and difficult to understand. Larry Swedroe and Joseph Hempen have collaborated in a book regarding bonds and fixed income investments that even I may understand. In their easy-to-read manner, they take us through the respective fixed-income investments and tell us how and why each security may or may not be suitable for our portfolio. The Only Guide to a Winning Bond Strategy You'll Ever Need is destined to become a bond book classic." --Taylor Larimore, Dean of the Morningstar Vanguard Diehard Forum, co-author of BogleheadsGuide to Investing "At a heap of point -- perchance soon -- the Federal Reserve will stop raising interest rates, a decision that is bound to add to the allure of bonds, because bond prices rise as rates fall. To cater to the potential growing demand for information, Larry E. Swedroe and Joseph H. Hempen, principals at Buckingham Asset Management, an investment firm based in St. Louis, have put together an magnificent primer: "The Only Guide to a Winning Bond Strategy You'll Ever Need" (Truman Talley, $25.95)....they cover the bases exceedingly well. Even better, they lay out a system for investing in bonds that will make sense for most people: -Buy bonds with the most eminent ratings, or invest in bond mutual funds that do. -Buy bonds with short to intermediate maturities. "Holding summations with a maturity of with regards to one to two years is the prudent scheme for those investors wishing to maximize the risk-reward relationship," the writers write. -Avoid buying hybrid securities -- like convertible bonds and preferent stocks -- because their risks outweigh their potential rewards. -Don't undertake to time the market. "Buy and hold" is the safest approach, as with stocks." --The New York Times, Sunday Business Section, 3/5/06 "Coming up with a bond scheme takes time, but it's time well spent. Because the same instruments that are sold as safe and secure hedges versus trouble may bite you if you're keeping the faulty kind in the wrong way and interest rates turn. A couple of St. Louis financial advisers, Larry Swedroe and Joseph Hempen, have written a straightforward book to address all of those choices. The Only Guide To A Winning Bond Strategy You'll Ever Need, to be published in March by St. Martin's Press, may sound a bit hyperbolic. But it's noteworthy because at least one of the authors, Swedroe, has a reputation as an exponent of the "you can't beat the market" doctrine and the inexpensive stock index-fund laying out capital that distinctively goes with it. He specifically tells clients that they shouldn't try to beat the market, but rather will have to hold diversified portfolios of low-cost stock funds for years and years. So it's worth seeing how such a doctrine would translate to bonds. ...[It] is likewise informative and direct when it comes to making bond investment choices." --Linda Stern (Freelance writer), published on Reuters.com and in Jackson News-Tribune "You develop wealth with stocks; you preserve it with bonds. Those of us on the defective side of 50 are starting to pay more attention to an asset class that just doesn't get the respect it merits: fixed income. A few weeks back, we noted the recent publication of a Canadian-focused primer on bonds: Hank Cunningham's In Your Best Interest. I noted such books are rare equated to the glut of material on the more glamorous subject of stocks and equity funds. Barely was the ink arid on that column when another bond book came through the transom, from an author I've read and valued for a great deal of time: Larry Swedroe. Swedroe is one of those indexing evangelists who has made the case for indexing equities in such prior books as What Wall Street Doesn't Want You to Know and The Only Guide to a Winning Investment Strategy You'll Ever Need. (St.Martin's Press, New York, 2001 and 2005). I guess Larry's that much closer to retirement now because he's regarding to release his fifth investment book and it's concentered on bonds. He has teamed up with collaborator Joseph Hempen to write The Only Guide to a Winning Bond Strategy You'll Ever Need. The publication date is March 7. Judging from the endorsement the book got from personal finance writer Jane Bryant Quinn -- "The bond book for our times" -- this one is destined for strong sales. Unlike Cunningham's book, Swedroe's is aimed at American investors. Thus, sure chapters -- like the one on tax-exempt municipal bonds -- aren't of much relevance to Canadian investors. (More's the pity). Swedroe lists three reasons to include bonds in portfolios: for liquidity to meet unexpected expenses; to reduce portfolio risk; and to invent streams of income to meet ongoing expenses. He then lists the rules of prudent fixed-income investing: buy only investment-grade bonds ranked AA or better; keep away from long-term bonds by restricting yourself to bonds with maturities that are short- to intermediate-term; keep away from attempting to guess interest rates or find mispriced securities; keep out of the way of hybrid securities such as preferent stocks or convertible bonds; and invest only in low-cost vehicles. You'll note both the special and significant stress on low costs and the point regarding avoiding market timing reinforces Swedroe's long-established indexing bona fides. Like Cunningham, Swedroe is critical of how brokerage houses price bonds and disclose broker compensation. Swedroe thinks investors will have to refrain from buying person bonds from banks or brokerage firms because of huge invisible mark-ups and because brokers trade largely what they have in inventory and wish to dispose of. Swedroe devotes the early chapters to an overview of how the bond market works and the risks that attend it. He scrutinizes how bonds are priced for retail investors and surveys the dominant species inhabiting the fixed income landscape: government bonds, corporates, global bonds, mortgage-backed securities, cash market funds, certificates of deposit (we call these GICs in Canada), and inflation-indexed securities. The latter include U.S. specific iBonds and TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protected Securities), versions of which are called real return bonds in Canada. But the key chapter is the penultimate eleventh one, which explains how to design and manufacture a fixed-income portfolio. Here Swedroe looks at the pros and cons of owning bonds through mutual funds or exchange-traded funds, keeping person securities directly or owning bonds in separately managed accounts. Like Cunningham, Swedroe devotes significant time to laddering bonds with dissimilar maturities. This he describe as "a prudent tactical approach to portfolio construction" that both cuts costs and lets investors remainder price peril and reinvestment risk. He likewise looks at tax efficacy and asset emplacement (as opposed to asset allocation) and describes the importance of getting a financial advisor to craft an Investment Policy Statement (IPS). He proposes investors give rise to a distinguished Fixed-Income IPS that focuses on investment vehicles, intermediate maturities, minimum worthy of acceptance or satisfactory credit ratings and greatest or most complete or best possible part to any one type of debt instrument. In a canned "interview" the publishers include in a press kit, Swedroe says he wrote the book because "fixed income is a neglected investment tool." As I'd brought up when I reviewed Cunningham's book, Swedroe says "there are hundreds of books out there on stocks, far less available on fixed income." Too some investors overlook the asset class. That's a fault because "it's an necessary percentage of a hea...
Most helpful client reviews 52 of 54 persons found the following review helpful.
Don't effort into the bond market without this book... By Thomas Duff I always thought that investing in bonds would be a beauteous basic activity... You see an interest rate, you buy the bond, you get the payments. Wrong! I've been set straight by the book The Only Guide to a Winning Bond Strategy You'll Ever Need : The Way Smart Money Preserves Wealth Today by Larry E. Swedroe and Joseph H. Hempen.
Contents: Introduction; Bondspeak; The Risks of Fixed-Income Investing; The Buying and Selling of Individual Bonds; How the Fixed-Income Markets Really Work; The Securities of the U.S. Treasury, Government Agencies, and Government-Sponsored Enterprises; The World of Short-Term Fixed-Income Securities; The World of Corporate Fixed-Income Securities; The World of International Fixed-Income Securities; The World of Mortgage-Backed Securities; The World of Municipal Bonds; How to Design and Construct Your Fixed-Income Portfolio; Summary; Afterword; Appendices; Notes; Glossary; Acknowledgments; Index
While not an expert capitalist by any means, I thought I understood the fundamental principle when it comes to bonds. I figured that buying a bond meant that you looked at the rating on how strong the company is, chose something that was investment grade, and then buy the security that provides the interest rate that you want to achieve. The reality is far, far different. I didn't realize there's genuinely eight risks you have to manage when buying bonds: interest rate risks, credit risk, reinvestment risk, inflation risk, event risk, tax risk, liquidity risk, and agency risk. I didn't understand that the lack of transparency in the broker market means that you may get badly burned on a bond buy and end up losing your stated interest rate *and* your principal. And of course, there are a myriad number of products, each with gains and risks, and you may effortlessly end up buying something that was designed to be "sold", not designed to be "invested". Swedroe and Hempen do a great occupation in outlining these things and a lot of more in a comparatively clear way. I say "relatively" because there is a reasonable amount of math and financial conceptions staged here that you *do* need to perceive and think about. This book would never be mistaken for a "Bonds for Dummies" title, but for severe investors looking to exhaustively understand the subject matter without delving into all the minutiae of formulas and calculations, you'd have a hard time topping this offering.
I'd unquestionably commend this book to any individual who is severe in their financial investments and takes personal obligation for them. While you may be at the stage of life where equities are more essential to you than bonds, there's info here that will grant you to round out your financial education and acumen, and it's a buy that will remunerate for itself numerous times over. 33 of 34 persons found the following review helpful.
Not to be missed By Barnard D. Sherman The strength of this book is in combining indepth coverage of the published exploration with practical, effortlessly applicable advice. The writers recognise all the academic studies, explain them in a way that we nonspecialists may understand, and digest them into a clear, very usable strategy. Both writers have years of real-world, top-level bond selling experience, which also makes their counsel exceptionally useful; but the coverage of research, for me, is what sets the book apart. If you know not one thing at all regarding bonds, I wouldn't inevitably begin with it (I think it assumes you are not an sheer beginner); but once you have a sense of the basics, this book is necessary reading, on the shortest short list. 26 of 27 people found the following review helpful.
Bonds made clear By J. Malpeli This book strikes an unusually nice remainder among comprehensive treatment of the subject and a style understandable by the intermediate investor. Swedroe and Hempen's comprehensible statement of the pitfalls of the secondary bond market is specially valuable, and the counsel on Treasury Inflation Protected Securities more than remunerated for my copy. It's a outstanding supplement to Swedroe's primary book ("The Only Guide to a Winning Investment Strategy You'll Ever Need"), which lays out Modern Portfolio Theory, but does not go into dissimilar types of bonds or the mechanics of the bond market in any depth. While Swedroe's advocacy of Modern Portfolio Theory comes across, I doubt that any reader would grasp this theory from the book on bonds. The book ends with short, informative appendices on callable bonds and TIPS, plus a glossary that's specially priceless because of the arcane terminology applied in the bond market. See all 26 client reviews... |
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