[Ghinsberg Report] Finaly a Safe Investment in all this Chaos?

Day 1,168, 05:45 Published in USA USA by Ghinsberg Invest
Since Organizations will disappear, all of my future articles will be published in my newly started Citizen paper Ghinsberg Times.

First of all I will tell you a few words about what a bond exactly is. A bond is simply a loan issued by a government. The bonds (or pieces of debt) pay a yield just like a share on a regular basis, however these dividends can also come in national currency.

Bonds are considered safer and therefore often pay a lower yield. You are also pretty much guaranteed to get the initial deposit back. On the other hand, the price of a bond doesn't raise as much. The trade-off as you see is that you get a guaranteed dividend and payback of the investment, but the price often doesn't raise just like a stock. They can, but that’s a quite complex relation.



Today, investors with spare cash have pretty much nowhere to invest them if they don’t want the high risk associated with MM trading or the hassle of running a Company. Especially Since ERX went bankrupt, passive investments have pretty much disappeared.

Now, however the eSwedish Treasury issues a new round of Bonds, this time a slitghly more generous various and once again with a currency hedge. This means that if the SEK loses 10% value against the Gold, the payout in SEK rise with 10%. However, there is one limitation, the hedge only applies down to 0.012G per SEK, however this is a very low number and we estimate the probability of such a drop from small to very small.

[/b]These are the basics;[/b] each STBc share cost 10 Gold, have a maturity of only 14 days and yield 5%. Considering you will be repaid only after 14 days 5% yield is actually really good, especially since you do not stand the risk of loosing money if the currency depreciates.


Here is how it works.

1. You buy one STBc worth 10G.
2. After 14 days you will receive your investment back in SEK + 5 % interest.


Best Regards
Yossi Ghinsberg
Ghinsberg Group

Homepage