People talk about 'bonds' as if they're all one generic thing like cash. To have taken a 20% hit, these must have been fixed rate long dated bonds?What questions should I be asking about the bond fund details (i believe it's a mixture of corporate and govt bonds)?
Why am I invested in such a low returns option?What questions should I be asking about the bond fund details
Ya, that would have been my own fault. Im wondering should i jump now to equities given the talk of downturn or wait and see?Why am I invested in such a low returns option?
Timing the market is a mug's game.Ya, that would have been my own fault. Im wondering should i jump now to equities given the talk of downturn or wait and see?
My pension fund with Irish Life (work provided) is invested in a bond fund (60%) and various equity funds for the rest. While the equity funds recovered in the last year, the bond fund has lost 20pc of its value in the last 18 months or so (my pension fund is now worth a little less than the contributions). I'm 25 years off maturity so I'm aware that I should be mainly in equities.
Ya the 5 year cumulative performance is down 20%.
...
Wondering if I should transfer out of this fund now or just wait a while and see what general situation is like in a few months....Sounds like I need to move out of this fund ... given that i'm still a ways off pension maturity.
I realise I'm still in active management mode here which obviously I've made a hames of so far - it just seems like a bad time to do anything drastic given the performance of this has bottomed out and talk of slowdown?
Ya gotcha... Definitely lesson learned...
based on what you're saying.. i would say allocate 40% bonds
60% equities
40% on the basis that bonds having dropped will bounce back especially when interest rates start to drop.. we can't time that but it will happen
and so move some funds into the equities fund to get the right balance
25 years to retirement plus hopefully a good few years living off an ARF... That could well be a half a decade investment timeframe. Forget about bonds and trying to time the bond market and just get into mostly or all equities.based on what you're saying.. i would say allocate 40% bonds
60% equities
40% on the basis that bonds having dropped will bounce back especially when interest rates start to drop.. we can't time that but it will happen
and so move some funds into the equities fund to get the right balance
I've had this problem with Irish Pension funds. The "Bond Fund" is just as itchy described, i.e. a vehicle for transferring to annuities, not a vehicle to invest in Bonds. For a DIY investor who wants to choose their own risk profile (rather than relying on the Balanced portfolio), it makes it extremely difficult to work around.The purpose of this particular fund is to hold funds that you intend to use to purchase an annuity with (it’s basically a cash deposit account, after fees). It’s a component of their lifestyling investment products and as part of that, funds are transitioned into this fund as one approach’s retirement, not 25 years from retirement. If bond investment for returns are required, then purchase a balanced fund with the appropriate level of asset allocation to them.
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