Bond Fund A fund that mainly invests in fixed-income financial instruments such as treasury bonds and financial bonds is called a bond fund, and it is also called a "fixed-income fund" because the product income it invests in is relatively stable.
According to the proportion of investment in stocks, bond funds can be divided into pure bond funds and partial debt funds. The difference between the two is that pure debt funds do not invest in stocks, while partial debt funds can invest in a small number of stocks. The advantage of the partial debt fund is that it can flexibly allocate assets according to the trend of the stock market and share the opportunities brought by the stock market while controlling risks.
Generally speaking, bond funds do not charge subscription or subscription fees, and the redemption rate is also low.
Monetary fund is an open-end fund. According to the types of financial products invested by open-end funds, people divide open-end funds into four basic types: stock funds, hybrid funds, bond funds and monetary funds. The first two belong to the capital market, and the latter is the money market.
Monetary funds mainly invest in short-term financial products with high security, such as bonds, central bank bills and repurchase. , also known as "quasi-savings products". Their main features are "worry-free principal, convenient demand, regular income, daily income and monthly dividend".
Money funds only invest in the money market, such as short-term government bonds, repurchase, central bank bills, bank deposits, etc. And there is basically no risk. Its liquidity is second only to bank demand deposits, and its income is calculated every day. Generally, the one-month income is carried forward to the fund share, and the income is slightly higher than the one-year time deposit, and the interest is tax-free. The principal of the Monetary Fund is relatively safe, with an expected annual rate of return of 3.9%. It is suitable for liquid investment tools and a substitute for savings.