Retirement planning 101: Seven questions you need to answer

4. Which mix of bonds do you prefer?

John Gress/Reuters/File
Traders work in the 10-Year Treasury Bill Options Pit at the CME Group in Chicago in this 2010 file photo. Although bonds are traditionally less volatile than stocks, their prices do rise and fall depending on the direction of interest rates.

Bonds and other fixed-income investments generally aren't exciting, but that's exactly the point. They're supposed to be relatively safe, providing a steady stream of income with less price volatility than stocks.
  
But be warned: Bond prices do fluctuate, and some relatively sharp swings could be on the horizon. Bond prices generally shift in relation to interest rates and to changing perceptions of the economy. The period since 1980, with a long downturn in interest rates, relatively tame inflation, and a financial crisis that scared people toward safer investments, has been good for bonds.
  
Bond prices will go down, finance experts say, when perceived economic growth or inflation strengthen enough to push interest rates higher. The trend in interest rates will determine the yield (income payments) on newly issued bonds, of course. But when interest rates change, the prices of existing bonds also shift so that their yields reflect the going rate of interest. When interest rates rise, bond prices fall and hence their yield goes up.
  
That doesn't mean bonds are riskier than stocks, which fell much harder than bonds during the financial crisis.
  
Fixed-income investments are many and varied. You can buy broad-based bond mutual funds, or narrower mutual funds that invest only in corporate bonds or only in US government bonds. Funds that invest in municipal bonds (and bonds issued by state governments) are generally exempt from federal taxes – a benefit that’s meaningful for money invested outside of a tax-sheltered retirement account.
  
US government bonds are considered to have very low risk of default, while many corporate bonds have a higher (albeit small) risk of default.
 
Some savers prefer bond mutual funds for their simplicity. Others prefer to buy a "ladder" of individual bonds with varying maturity dates. You buy new bonds as older ones mature and the principal is returned.
 
With either approach, one type of bond to consider as part of the mix is the category called "inflation protected." These, offered by the government, pay interest and shield you from the risk that the value of your principal will be eroded by inflation. One of these options called Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, and another is Series I (that's letter "i") savings bonds.
 
Check out the “Treasury Direct” program online if you want to buy bonds straight from the federal government.
 

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