Topic: How To Invest

Dear Pat: I have been a satisfied follower for more years than I care to remember, before you started on your own. My portfolio consists only of shares you have recommended, fairly well diversified as you advise and mostly above average and average ratings. However, I am tempted by a mortgage investment corporation I heard about. It pays on a quarterly basis and yields 8%. Can you tell me if you recommend these investments? Looking forward to hearing your opinion.

Article Excerpt

“Mortgage Investment Corporations,” or MICs, invest in pools of mortgages, and distribute most of their profits to their shareholders. Some MICs yield 8% or 9% or more annually. They sound like conservative investments, because they invest in mortgages rather than stocks. But mortgages vary widely in their investment quality and risk levels. MICs can earn high profits because they take on riskier mortgages. Some try to expand their profits by employing leverage – borrowing money to buy additional mortgages. This expands risk all the more. Conservative mortgage lenders, such as banks, mainly invest in first mortgages on commercial, industrial and/or residential properties. MICs, on the other hand, may offer mortgage financing to real-estate developers who are renovating existing properties or building new ones. Real-estate development is generally more profitable than real-estate investment when it succeeds, but it is inherently riskier and more speculative. The term to maturity on most MICs’ mortgages runs from six months to two years. Interest rates are higher…