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| Coupon Rate |
The coupon rate of a bond, note, or other fixed-income
security indicates the amount of interest that a particular bond pays out. More
specifically, the coupon rate represents the annual interest rate expressed as a
percentage of the bond’s face value, or principal. The term is synonymous with
a bond's nominal interest rate.
The term “coupon” derives from the days when bonds came as
actual physical certificates with bond coupons attached. Fixed-income investors
would then clip these coupons from the certificates and would redeem them for
cash at their local bank.
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Income Security
of the Month
Our "Income Security of the Month" for July 2008 invests in
a fast-growing overseas market that doesn't get much exposure in the
mainstream financial press. And although it typically makes enormous
annual dividend payments -- it has paid an average dividend of 24.9%
per year over the past five years -- this fund is perhaps most
appealing for its total return potential. Specifically, the fund has
delivered total returns of +263.9% since 2003, and
it ranks in the top 10% of its category over the past decade.
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Top
10 Stocks for 2008!
Since we began publishing this report back in 2003, the picks we've
featured have consistently beaten the broader market -- delivering average
gains of +21.3% per year and outperforming the S&P by a nearly
2-to-1 margin. Act now to reserve your copy of our newest report -- Top
Ten Stocks for 2008. |
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