Posts Tagged mutual funds
Best mutual funds and ETFs
Posted by Tetyana Matychak in Favourites, Investing on January 5th, 2010
Last year’s roller-coaster market showed why it pays to be patient with your investments. The Money 70, our recommended list of mutual funds and ETFs, will help you buy and hold your way to your long-term goals.
For the Money 70, our recommended list of mutual and exchange-traded funds, 2009 was a year of vindication. After the vast majority of the funds on our list suffered steep losses in 2008’s credit crisis, almost all rebounded strongly last year — with many posting double-digit gains. But short-term returns aren’t the point. It’s far more important for you to focus on long-term results.
This list was never intended to be a collection of hot funds. Instead, the point of the Money 70 is to give you a menu of high-quality funds and ETFs that you can use to construct a well-diversified portfolio, which in turn will help you achieve your long-term financial goals.
And over lengthy periods of time, Money 70 funds have proved worthwhile — provided you stuck with them in good times and bad. Take the case of Royce Pennsylvania Mutual. In a decade where gains were hard to come by in the U.S. stock market, this small-cap fund earned 9.5% a year vs. 3.9% for small stocks in general. Yet by moving money into and out of the fund at the worst possible times, Pennsylvania Mutual investors earned just 3.9% annually, according to Morningstar. Read the rest of this entry »
Why Treasury Needs a Plan B for Mortgages
Posted by Tetyana Matychak in Banks on December 8th, 2009
AFTER months of playing pretend, the Treasury Department conceded last week that the Home Affordable Modification Program, its plan to aid troubled homeowners by changing the terms of their mortgages, was a dud. The 10-month-old program is going nowhere, the Treasury said, because big institutions charged with implementing it are dragging their feet.
“The banks are not doing a good enough job,” said Michael S. Barr, assistant Treasury secretary for financial institutions, in an article published last Sunday in The New York Times.
After the government spent hundreds of billions of dollars bailing out banks, the Obama administration rolled out the $75 billion loan modification plan to show its support for beleaguered homeowners. But if the proof of the pudding is in the eating, homeowners are going hungry.
A stalled loan modification plan might not be worrisome if the foreclosure crisis were abating. Yet at the end of September, a record 14.4 percent of borrowers were either in foreclosure or delinquent on their mortgages, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported.
It’s time for the government to acknowledge the flaws in its program and create one that might actually succeed. Only then will the supply of homes for sale, and the pressure on prices associated with that overhang, be reduced. Read the rest of this entry »

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