What are securities?
Annuities
The best way to invest for retirement is through retirement accounts
Individual securities
Diversification
Asset allocation
Limited partnerships
Derivative securities (options, futures)
Contractual obligations (bonds) or certificates of ownership (stocks)
Generally highly liquid
Insurance products that are similar to bonds or stock mutual funds
Offer tax-deferred growth in earnings
Tend to be expensive relative to ordinary mutual funds
Consider using annuities only after contributing the maximum deductible amount to retirement accounts
See "Bond and Fixed Income Investing for Everyone" for details about fixed annuities
See "Stock Investing for Everyone" for details about variable annuities
See "Retirement Planning for Everyone" for details
Generally, don't buy individual stocks or bonds
Higher risk without higher overall returns
Best to invest through mutual funds
See "Mutual Fund Investing for Everyone" or "Stock Investing for Everyone"
Diversify across asset classes
Diversify within asset classes
Diversify over time
See "Mutual Fund Investing for Everyone" for details
You need to select different asset classes for different goals
Diversify your holdings to reduce risk and increase returns
See "Mutual Fund Investing for Everyone", "Retirement Planning for Everyone" and "Bond and Fixed Income Investing for Everyone" for details
Used to be popular as tax shelters
Tax Reform Act of 1986 greatly reduces attractiveness of limited partnerships
Usually illiquid
Sold with high commissions -- typicaly 8 percent
Will complicate your taxes
May increase likelihood of tax audit
Useful as a form of insurance for large companies or financial institutions
Can be useful for income tax purposes
Provide high degree of leverage
Very poor as investments
Perhaps 75 percent of derivative speculators lose money
The typical futures player quits within one year
Commissions are very high
Downside is limited, but speculators lose 100 percent of their invest when their derivative expires out of the money
Very few stock investors lose 100 percent of their investment on a regular basis