QuazyQuinton
Well-known member
I'm relatively uneducated to be posting in this subforum, but I recognize that HuntTalk is the repository of all knowledge worth knowing, so here I am. My kids have a little money that I've helped them invest, and I'm always perusing the options. They currently have a small percentage of their money in a mutual fund that holds fairly conservative bonds. I was looking at a higher risk/reward bond ETF this morning and pondering how it works.
My question: I understand a bond to be essentially a loan to the issuer at a certain rate for a certain time. Short of a default, the concept is simple, and the return (interest) is predictable. I also understand that the bond can be sold to another party, and then the price and return can vary based on what makes the transaction attractive to buyer or seller. When bonds are held in a mutual fund or ETF, the complexity and variability increases even more because the fund manages many, many bonds at once. It also seems that the price of such a fund could fluctuate significantly based on investor sentiment toward the bond market as a whole. The idea of earning interest on the original bond seems like it could really be lost in the chaos. (To put it another way, if the bonds are paying interest, and there are no defaults, how does the investment lose value?) So....how much is my kids' money "invested in bonds," and how much is it "invested in sentiment toward the bond market?"
QQ
My question: I understand a bond to be essentially a loan to the issuer at a certain rate for a certain time. Short of a default, the concept is simple, and the return (interest) is predictable. I also understand that the bond can be sold to another party, and then the price and return can vary based on what makes the transaction attractive to buyer or seller. When bonds are held in a mutual fund or ETF, the complexity and variability increases even more because the fund manages many, many bonds at once. It also seems that the price of such a fund could fluctuate significantly based on investor sentiment toward the bond market as a whole. The idea of earning interest on the original bond seems like it could really be lost in the chaos. (To put it another way, if the bonds are paying interest, and there are no defaults, how does the investment lose value?) So....how much is my kids' money "invested in bonds," and how much is it "invested in sentiment toward the bond market?"