You bought some bonds. They paid interest twice a year. You bought some stocks. They paid dividends quarterly. Together, after you invested your $87,000 worth of now-dead-Grandmama's estate, you collected a total of just under $7,000 this year in investment income. You'll be taxed at ordinary income rates on the bond interest, and at long-term gain rates on the dividend throw. These cash amounts comprise the income on the money you invested.
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Finance: What is an Income Fund?0 Views
Finance a la shmoop. What is an income fund? Well it's a fund designed to
produce income for its investors yeah shocking to hear that I bet. That's [Definition of an income fund written on a 100 dollar bill]
income, cash like bond interest and equity dividends they come in both [Different types of income pointing to a pile of cash]
managed and unmanaged forms like mutual funds and index funds yeah they both [The two types of forms are shown]
have Income Fund flavors and they exist solely to distribute cash to investors
from which you know those investors can purchase luxury items like food and heat. [Income fund distributing cash]
All right well who buys these income funds, while mostly old people generally [Old woman on the phone]
retirees people who can't take a ton of risk and who no longer work for their
cash and while they need it to come from their savings [ATM]
you know the cash to pay the rent in the food thing and those savings have been
socked away for years via hardwork harvesting stuff in the fields or [Money shoved into a sock]
driving people to the airport or you know making assistants disappear and [Bird flies into a hat and disappears into a plume of smoke]
very generally speaking income funds don't really grow at least not all that
much, many of them have target distribution levels like three four five
percent so that excess cash is sent back to the fund holders on a regular steady
basis and the funds boringly live to throw off cash another day, tada! [Guy pulls cash out of the magicians hat]
That's how it goes..
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