With Bond Funds, Keep It Simple

Bonds are crucial for diversifying your portfolio, but it can be dangerous to invest in a fund full of stuff only a rocket scientist can understand.

When it comes to bond funds, observes Bill Kohli, manager of Putnam Diversified Income Trust, "there is value in the complexity." That is to say, the more unusual the securities that Kohli and his team of analysts buy for their fund, the better it is supposed to perform.

If only the results bore him out. Kohli's fund, which Morningstar calls a "multisector bond fund but which could easily be called a black-box income fund," is struggling. Over the past year through May 16, Putnam Diversified Income (PDINX) produced a total return of -0.2%. That trailed the Lehman Brothers U.S. Aggregate index by 7.4 percentage points. The fund outpaced the Lehman index over the past five years, to the tune of 1.9 percentage points per year, but trailed it over the past ten, by an average of 1.4 points per year.

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Jeffrey R. Kosnett
Senior Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Kosnett is the editor of Kiplinger's Investing for Income and writes the "Cash in Hand" column for Kiplinger's Personal Finance. He is an income-investing expert who covers bonds, real estate investment trusts, oil and gas income deals, dividend stocks and anything else that pays interest and dividends. He joined Kiplinger in 1981 after six years in newspapers, including the Baltimore Sun. He is a 1976 journalism graduate from the Medill School at Northwestern University and completed an executive program at the Carnegie-Mellon University business school in 1978.