What are fixed income investments? A guide for European investors

Woman reading a book to learn about fixed income investments.

Fixed income investments are one of the most widely held asset classes, and the name itself is part of the appeal. It suggests stability: a defined return, paid on a schedule, with capital returned at the end. For investors who have only ever kept money in a savings account, that promise of predictability is what draws them toward bonds, loan-backed securities, and other instruments that fall under the fixed income umbrella.

But the word “fixed” can be misleading. What is fixed is the structure of the cash flows, the coupon rate, the payment schedule, the maturity date. Whether those payments arrive as expected depends on the issuer’s ability to honor them. A government bond and a high-yield corporate bond both promise regular income, but the creditworthiness behind those promises sits at opposite ends of the spectrum.

Questions worth asking about fixed income investing

→ What are the basics of fixed income investment?

→ How do different fixed income options compare on yield and risk?

→ When does fixed income make more sense than equities? 

→ What fixed income investment options are available in Europe?

This is a marketing communication and in no way should be viewed as investment research, investment advice, or recommendation to invest. The value of your investment can go up as well as down. Past performance of financial instruments does not guarantee future returns. Investing in financial instruments involves risk; before investing, consider your knowledge, experience, financial situation, and investment objectives.

In this guide to fixed income investments

  • What fixed income investments are
  • Fixed income investment options compared
  • What might make one fixed income investment stronger than another
  • Fixed income vs stocks
  • Frequently asked questions

What are fixed income investments?

A fixed income investment is any instrument where the investor lends capital in exchange for regular interest payments and the return of principal at a defined maturity date. The “fixed” in the name refers to the income schedule, not necessarily the rate itself, since some instruments carry floating rates that adjust with the market.

The most familiar fixed income examples include: 

  • Government bonds
  • Corporate bonds
  • Bank deposits
  • Loan-backed securities
  • Bond ETFs
  • Money market funds (MMFs)



What unites them is the contractual nature of the return. Unlike equities, where returns depend on company performance and market sentiment,
fixed income instruments lay out the terms upfront. The investor knows what to expect, provided the issuer meets its obligations.

Take a look at how fixed income returns work, including yield, coupon structures, and what drives performance:

Fixed income returns | How to earn steady and regular income

Fixed income investment options, compared

Fixed income investment options share a common structure, but the similarities end there. What an investor actually experiences in terms of yield, risk, liquidity, and accessibility hinges entirely on the instrument.

 

Government bonds

Corporate bonds

Bond ETFs

Loan-backed securities

Savings accounts / Money market funds

Minimum investment

Varies, often 

€1,000+

Varies, often 

€1,000+ (traditional) / From €50 on

investment platforms

Price of 1 ETF share

From €50 on investment platforms

No minimum (savings) / varies (MMFs)

Liquidity

High (secondary market)

Moderate (depends on issuer)

High (exchange-

traded)

Moderate 

(secondary market)

High (on demand or short notice)

Credit risk

Low (stable governments)

Moderate to high

Spread across holdings

Moderate to high

Low (deposit guarantee up to €100,000)

Interest rate sensitivity

High (especially long-term)

Moderate to high

Varies by duration

Lower (often shorter term)

Low

Accessibility in Europe

Via broker or bank

Via broker, bank, or investment platform

Via any stock broker

Via regulated investment platforms

Via any bank


Government bonds

Issued by national governments to fund public spending. In Europe, bonds from countries like Germany (Bunds) and France (OATs) are considered among the safest fixed income instruments available, backed by the taxing power of stable economies. 

Yields can sit below what corporate bonds or loan-backed securities offer, because investors accept a lower return for a lower probability of default.

Corporate bonds

Issued by companies to raise capital for operations, expansion, or refinancing. The range of issuers, maturities, and structures makes corporate bonds one of the most diverse segments within fixed income investing. This breadth gives investors more flexibility to match their income goals and risk tolerance than almost any other fixed income category.

Investment-grade corporate bonds deliver moderate yields with lower default risk. High yield bonds pay higher coupons but carry greater credit risk.

Bond ETFs

A bond ETF packages dozens or hundreds of individual bonds into a single fund that trades on an exchange, similar to the way a stock ETF does. As one of the easiest entry points into fixed income investing: one purchase delivers instant diversification across issuers, maturities, and credit profiles. 

The compromise is that bond ETFs do not have a fixed maturity date. Underlying bonds mature and are replaced over time, so income distributions and portfolio composition shift continuously.

Loan-backed securities

Notes backed by underlying consumer or business loans, originated by lending companies. These instruments provide higher yields than most traditional fixed income options, reflecting the credit risk of the underlying borrowers. On regulated platforms, investors can invest in loans with low minimums and access a secondary market to sell or buy, subject to demand.

Savings accounts and money market funds

The entry point most investors are already familiar with. Savings accounts in the EU are protected by the Deposit Guarantee Scheme up to €100,000 per depositor per institution, making them among the lowest-risk fixed income investment options available. 

Money market funds go a step further, investing in short-term, high-quality debt to give slightly higher yields with near-immediate liquidity. Where both fall short is over longer time horizons. Returns have historically struggled to outpace inflation, which means purchasing power can reduce even as the nominal balance grows.

 

Understanding fixed income investment options

There is no single best fixed income investment. What works is driven by the investor’s income needs, time horizon, and tolerance for credit risk. Regardless of the asset class, asking them in the right order makes the comparison easier.

Yield vs risk

Yield and credit risk move together in fixed income investing. A government bond and a high-yield corporate bond both pay coupons on a schedule, but the gap in what they pay also shows the gap in level of risk. Higher-yielding instruments compensate investors for a greater probability that the issuer may not meet its obligations. 

Compensation is visible in the credit rating before any capital is committed, which makes it a starting point for evaluating any fixed income investment, not a hidden cost discovered later.

Liquidity vs return

Savings accounts and money market funds offer near-instant access to capital, but the yields are lower. Bonds with longer maturities or less liquid secondary markets pay more, compensating investors for locking up their capital. The question is whether the investor can afford to have capital tied up for 1, 3, or 5 years.

Access vs complexity

Some fixed income investment options are easier to access than others. Savings accounts require nothing more than a bank account. Government bonds can be purchased through most brokers. Corporate bonds and loan-backed securities may require a specialized platform, but those platforms have also lowered minimum investments to levels that would have been unthinkable a decade ago.

Diversification

The most balanced fixed income allocations tend to combine several types. Government bonds for stability. Corporate bonds for yield. Loan-backed securities for exposure outside traditional bond markets. Bond ETFs for breadth. The mix varies based on the investor’s income needs, time horizon, and tolerance for credit risk.

Building a fixed income allocation

A closer look at how to structure maturities and spread risk across instruments:

Fixed income strategies | Structuring a bond allocation

Fixed income vs stocks

Regardless of the instrument, evaluating a few specific dimensions can help narrow down which fixed income investment options are worth a closer look.

 

Fixed income

Stocks

Return source

Coupons / interest payments

Capital appreciation + dividends

Income predictability

High (defined schedule)

Low (dividends are discretionary)

Price volatility

Lower (especially short-term bonds)

Higher

Capital protection

Principal returned at maturity (if held)

No guaranteed return of capital

Inflation sensitivity

Can erode real returns if rates are fixed

Equities may outpace inflation over long periods

Role in a portfolio

Income, stability, capital preservation

Growth, long-term wealth building


When
fixed income investments might make more sense

  • Investors who prioritize regular income over capital growth
  • Shorter time horizons or a specific financial goal approaching
  • Portfolios where reducing volatility is a priority
  • Lower risk tolerance or a preference for scheduled, regular cash flows


When equities might make more sense

  • Longer time horizons with room to absorb short-term price swings
  • A focus on capital appreciation over regular income
  • Investors building wealth over decades rather than drawing from it now
  • Portfolios that can tolerate higher volatility in exchange for higher long-term growth potential


The case for both

Most portfolios include some combination of both. Fixed income provides the floor, with regular income and capital preservation. Equities provide the growth engine. The split depends on the investor’s age, goals, income needs, and risk tolerance, and it adjusts over time as circumstances change.

How bonds fit alongside other asset classes

A deep dive into bond performance, diversification, and when to adjust the balance:

Investing in bonds | Performance, diversification, and knowing when to act

Exploring fixed income investments on Mintos

Mintos is a regulated investment platform licensed by Latvijas Banka that gives European retail investors access to multiple fixed income investment options.

✓ Start from €50: Invest in bonds and loans with a low minimum investment 

✓ Multiple asset classes: Build a fixed income allocation across bonds, loans, and more

✓ Choose your approach: Hand-pick individual instruments or use automated portfolios if suitable

✓ Flexible access: Sell on the Secondary Market at any time, subject to demand

Developed by the Mintos Content Team, making investment knowledge accessible for everyday investors across Europe.

Frequently asked questions

What is fixed income investing in simple terms?

Fixed income investing means putting money into instruments that pay a set return on a defined schedule. “Fixed” refers to the income structure, not a guarantee that returns are risk-free.

There is no single answer, as it determined by risk tolerance, time horizon, and income needs. Starting with a mix of lower-risk instruments and gradually exploring higher-yield options is one way to build confidence.

Interest rates operate differently depending on the instrument. In all cases, the overall interest rate environment shapes what investors can expect. When central bank rates rise, newly issued instruments tend to pay more, and when they fall, yields across the board compress.

Whether fixed income investments are attractive comes down to the current interest rate environment, inflation, and an investor’s individual goals. When rates are elevated, newly issued bonds generally bring higher coupons, which can make fixed income more appealing. When rates are low, yields may not keep pace with inflation. The decision is personal and is influenced by what role fixed income plays within the broader portfolio.

Fixed income instruments pay a defined return on a set schedule and return principal at maturity. Stocks provide no guaranteed return; their value varies based on company performance and market conditions. Fixed income provides income predictability and capital preservation. Stocks provide growth potential over longer time horizons.