Ten hybrids with economic moats
Investing in groups with a sustainable competitive advantage, or “moat”, can provide extra levels of confidence.
Investing in groups with a sustainable competitive advantage, or “moat”, can provide extra levels of confidence.
Note issued by FIIG Securities closes oversubscribed at $50 million.
Long-suffering Paperlinx’s note holders know more about the complexities of hybrids than most.
The US Fed is likely to maintain or possibly increase its quantitative easing program.
Bond market is split on whether the RBA will knock another 25 basis points off the cash rate.
While there are still a few economists who think more rate cuts are coming, bond traders aren’t convinced.
Market pricing of listed inflation-linked bonds suggests price rises will slip below 2 pc in coming two years.
This strategy from fixed income specialists has returned more than 10 per cent over the last year.
Forget QE. The real “taper terror” in Australia is the sharp decline in resources spending.
Commercial print group announces four-year senior unsecured bond.
New details exposing the shoddy management of collapsed firm will anger investors.
Forget the inflation scare for now – it’s runaway deflation you should be worried about.
Give yourself a clap if you bought the asset class that returned 156 per cent.
More small caps are shying away from banks and turning to the DIY super sector for funding.
Rising inflation over the long term remains a key concern for local bond investors, but Treasury indexed bonds provide some protection.
Professional bond investors warn against passive or benchmark-hugging fixed income funds as global interest rates normalise.
When it comes to exotic investments, this new government bond is in a league of its own.
Understanding the intricacies of fixed-income securities can be confusing, so we’ve broken it down for you.
New data suggests resilience in offshore demand for Australian bonds – and therefore the $A.
BlackRock says annual loss can only be dodged with a major shift in interest rates.