HYT
BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund
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Discovered Communications within the US Litigation Against Citadel & Robinhood in the days surrounding the January Buy Freeze, where brokers shut off buying and tanked target stocks. The judge declared there was not enough evidence to move to discovery, and ruled manipulation is legal under TOS
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That beign said, I did buy some at $.61 and will probably keep it just to see what happens, but I'm for sure buying more HYT as soon as it dips lower again
I think QIMC moved so aggressively because they're constantly releasing PR so its price seems to be based on hype and hope. There's another white hydrogen project happening right now (HYT) that's actually further along in the commercialization process. QIMC is still working on drill targeting and execution, HYT started drilling in April 2025 and plans on production testing this year. I don't think they have anyone working on PR at all so they're very much so under the radar... which could be by design to focus more on credibility when they do produce results rather than building hype beforehand. There were two articles posted about their progress on TipRanks on 1/28 and 1/29. In the 1/28 article they have their average trading volume as 1,085,152, sentiment signal as strong sell, and market cap at A$33.35M. On 1/29 it changed to trading volume 1,959,387, signal sell, and market cap A$44.24M. I think the market is very slowly beginning to catch on. This is absolutely worth looking into if you're interested in white hydrogen projects!
For people who don't have the time to actively manage, I'm avoiding index ETFs and related investments. Instead, back in November, I referenced some bond funds for "parking cash". HYT, HYZD and EMHY were the top 3. If you do have time to actually pay attention, see my latest Buffett post: [http://crowdwisers.com/Curators/Esekla/invest.html](http://crowdwisers.com/Curators/Esekla/invest.html)
Those are considerably more risky , SCHJ holds investment grade bonds Those hold Junk bonds, they will be much more correlated with the stock market , HYT also hold foreign bonds . They are still probably "safer" then equities but it depends on how much risk you want
HYT is yielding 9.79% and SCYB 7.18%.
Etfs, bonds, mutual funds... Here are my favs: JEPI JEPQ TLTW FAGIX PDI LTC OXLC ARCC KBWD HYT I believe these are all monthly. There are more but I'm tired. Have fun!
I agree that having it sit in my checking account for the next three years isn't the most exciting strategy. Your suggestions are quite interesting. I'll explore the idea of a CD ladder to potentially grow my coins while keeping them accessible. The concept of using a high-yield fund like HYT to generate dividends to cover future interest payments is also clever and worth investigating further. Thanks for sharing your wisdom/experience and for the delightful breakfast burrito idea. It sounds like a tasty way to add some spice to the day! Maybe I'll have some tomorrow. Btw, it probably isn't as much money as you think it is, as my mortgage is not that much.
First, because I don't understand the differences between the Euro and US jurisdictions and investing atmosphere, my comments may be of limited utility to you. Conventional wisdom would say to not put housing capital in stocks on your 3 year time horizon. I ignored CW when I had a divorce settlement that would be my housing capital. I put it in ETFs (VOO, MOAT, VYM) and individual stocks (mostly a DOW5 approach). That mostly worked out for me. My situation has since changed, but had I needed to deploy housing capital to purchase a home, I would have cashed out, been liable for income taxes, and had the downpayment for the house. The ETFs did better than my DOW 5 efforts. Only you can decide how tightly you will stick to conventional wisdom. If I understand you correctly, you're sitting on more cash than I would be. However, I relate to the focus on what might happen with that adjustable rate mortgage. I'd want that money ready to help me adjust when the time comes, but I'd want to doing more than sitting in my checking account for the next three years. Would a CD ladder set you to have more growth but also have an established stream of cash to cover the increased interest payment in the future? Another approach might be to calculate the worst case increase in your payment, then put enough of your cash in a high yield fund to generate dividends to cover that increase in payment. I hold a Blackrock fund (HYT) as an example. I had a breakfast burrito made from leftover rice and blackbeans -- it was spicy with more than just garlic.
HYT now paying a juicy 9% yield https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/HYT?p=HYT&.tsrc=fin-srch
AAPL 52%, TSLA 16%, IGD 2.8%, HYT 2%, EOI 2% Those last three are funds with high dividends, but two are performing terribly. I inherited this portfolio and aan in the process of rebalancing.
haha, i have a small holding of HYT, with a long enough time horizon the yield makes up for the price reduction. also, everyone is an expert with “a long enough time horizon!”
i’m a long term acolyte of HYT for my “secondary” emergency funds. definitely a bit of a gamble to i like the way it acted through the years i’ve sat on it.
$HYT 🤣this made me laugh
I don't like normal bonds either. However, I do own some CEFs with good (and long) histories. They drawdown hard due to the leverage used, so it is just because the funds are good that I own them. PTY, HYT, and a couple other CEFs that are equities/bonds mixtures. Some are 8-9% with solid dividend histories, so in fact drawdowns can be good. I don't use margin myself but I am okay with professional bond managers doing it. Bond market is deep and wide, I trust them to manage it better than I could. Used to, you could get risk free or very low risk bonds yielding 5% when the market was returning like 7%. They made a lot more sense then. Due to the actions of the federal reserve... they don't *want* you owning bonds right now.
I noticed robinhood stopped letting me buy into HYT, very strange. I can only close out my positions but the stock is no longer supported on RH. Why? 🤔
Corporate bonds exist too. PTY, HYT. Nice funds.