Whiskers, I had BBI for a while. Sold it when the SP wasn't going up.Good Question!
My Mother is retired and has about 1/3rd of her portfolio, in banks.
I've been scrounging around some research for my mother (ASPECTHUNTLY - Etrade) and noticed, BBI - Babcock & Brown Infrastructure and ENV - Envestra, both > 12% dividend yield and HDF - Hastings Diversified Utilities > 10%, current and estimated.
I don't know much about these, in fact only heard of BBI, cos I focus mainly on small cap mining stocks... the other end of the volatility spectrum.
My Mother has no other income so tax won't be a problem.
Any Experience with these, anyone?
Safe as a bank, but give it time
WEEKEND FORUM: Tim Blue | April 12, 2008
WITH bears roaring on equity markets, share brokers failing and banks' bad debt mounting, Weekend Forum thought it timely to take a critical look at the banking sector.
Banks have been an investor's favourite, but no longer, with valuations savagely marked down as credit concerns rise and funding costs tick up. Yet the low share prices look tempting.
We sought the views of four experts on the banking sector, posing the question: is it time for a personal investor to start buying the banks again?
Our respondents are Mark Topy, a banking analyst in Melbourne with share brokers Patersons Securities; Angus Geddes, managing director of Fat Prophets Funds Management; Roger Montgomery, a director of Clime Asset Management; and Brett Le Mesurier, banking analyst at stock broker Wilson HTM.
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News coverage on this topic here:
Personally I am going to pump in the cash into Westpac & BoQ slowly and steadily so I don't hog it all at one price incase Westpac goes down to $17 and BoQ to $11.
Bank of Queensland and Commonwealth are the best and safest. I sold mine a yeat ago and bought back Commonwealth recently when the got to $28.
Any reason why BOQ over, say, SGB which has better value (according to some experts), and better dividends, to mention a couple of criteria retirees would be, perchance, interested in?
Hi
I've been retired for a few years and we have about 25% of our portfolio with the banks.
Then you're hurting, and there's more pain to come. The credit crunch and deleveraging of the US economy are generating astronomical losses that will hurt banks worldwide, and ours are not immune.
The financials sector is toxic and we definitely haven't seen the bottom yet. Check the XXJ if you don't believe me.
Rick62
The obvious truth is that no-one knows what the bottom could be for Aust. banks, but if you are a long term investor / retiree with an income stream from investments and a cash stash to tide you over for the next couple of years, it is purely an academic exercise. Even if banks go another 15-20% next week / month which some of the prophets so gleefully suggest, they will be back, which is more than can be said for a great many other ASX romances encouraged by "experts"
Thank you Prophet Davo8. I have no reason to disbelieve you although others disagree with your general advice.R
when you hear people like dave08 mention all the gloom, its time to buy imo, slowly and steadily
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