Two things are certain about 2009:
- the economic downturn will hold its grip on business for at least a good part of the year; and
- a new administration will take the helm in Washington intent on ending the slump.
So for farsighted investors with above-average tolerances for risk, TheStreet.com Ratings parsed its database for stock funds worth a look in 2009. The nine funds on the pair of accompanying tables represent traditional defensive equity investments for uncertain economic times and some possible beneficiaries from the efforts of Barack Obama and Federal Reserve Chief Ben Bernanke to get the economy back into gear.
All of the stock funds in the two tables at the end of this column have overall grades in the "A" or "B" ranges from TheStreet.com Ratings, which earn them "buy" recommendations.
An above-average yield traditionally provided insulation from excessive price erosion. But in these days of near-zero returns on many fixed-income instruments, the monthly payments that provide a 6.5% yield for First American Equity Income (FFEIX Quote) should prove particularly appealing. ...
Recent Comments
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,471.50 | 1,106.41 | 2,190.31 | 35.40 |
Oil *
71.66
|
|
UP
65.67
|
UP
4.06
|
DOWN
0.55
|
UP
0.58
|
10 Yr
3.54%
SPDR Gold
109.32
|
|
+0.63%
|
+0.37%
|
-0.03%
|
+1.67%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |


Connect with TheStreet