Last Year's Deadbeats Do Best As Stocks Stall

Investments traditionally considered safe bets such as utilities, gold and government bonds were supposed to flop in 2014 as investors started to pour money into higher-risk, higher-growth stocks that would benefit from a pickup in the economy. Investors buy utilities when they are worried about stock market volatility or the outlook for economic growth. Typically, utility stocks rise less than others when the overall market is climbing, but they fall less when prices are down. The dividend yield, a measure of a company's dividend compared with its stock price, is 3.6 percent for utility companies in the S&P 500. The U.S.

Topics:  investors   typically   s&p   the u.s   japanese   federal reserve   u.s    mike mcglone   etf   securities   treasury   december   prices   kathy jones   charles   schwab   fed   stocks   start   utility   utilities   companies   bonds   gold   economic   growth   year   economy   market   dividend   

 

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