Consider someone who have $300,000 in savings. S/he wants to invest it now so as to generate a stedy stream of monthly income for long term (say, 10 years or more). His/her preference is to preserve the principal amount, and s/he is not too much worried about infletion. The question is, what are the available investment options for him/her?
I did some research and found the following instruments:
=> 1. Capital One bank's 10 year jumbo CD: It has a 5.50% APY effective April 23.
Capital One ACH the monthly interest to the checking account. According to bankrate.com's CD calculator, a $300,000 deposite grows to $512,419.01 in 10 years. So I guess the montly interest payment will be approximately $1,770.16 (am I right?). The capital is preserved if Capital One doesn't go down within the next 10 years (they are currently rated as 4-star in bankrate's website).
=> 2. Vanguard Managed Payout Distribution Focused Fund: Newly introduced on April 23 and taking investment until May 4.
This fund has the exact same goal as the investor. It preserves the initial investment and makes monthly payouts. This is a perpetual investment with no preset maturity, and the investor may make new deposit or withdraw capital (in part or full) at anytime. The fund plans to pay 7% per year interest, and it currenly pays $1,751 per month for the year 2008.
This fund looks like an excellent choice.
=> 3. Fidelity Income Replacement Funds: These funds are introduced around October 2007. They have target horizon for holding the investments. These funds use part of the invested capital for making the monthly payouts. As a result, the capital is not preserved and it goes to zero at maturity.
According to the website, a $300,000 investment for 20 years is paying $1,693 per month in the year 2008. For 10 years, it pays $2,739 in year 2008. These payouts are so atractive because of the depreciation of the initial capital.
Wall Street Journal and other websites reported these funds last year.
MSN reports that Schwab also started a group of "Monthly Income Fund" for retirees.
But the link to Schwab's website takes me to "Page Not Found" error. It could be that these funds are not taking any new investment.
That is all I can find by myself. What instrument would you chose for a similar investment plan? It seems to me that the Vangurd fund is an excellent choice. Am I misshing something? Is it a good idea to invest there? Any alternative investment/idea?
Thanks,
Tintin

