In previous columns, we have highlighted ways to seek out yield amid historically low U.S. interest rates: fixed income instruments like corporate bonds with yields above the inflation rate, as well as high-dividend yielding stocks.
There is also the option of investing in emerging markets, for instance through an exchange traded fund such as iShares MSCI All-Country Asia Ex-Japan Index Fund (symbol: AAXJ), considered a proxy for investing in China.
At this point, the risks of inflation are also important too for bond investors to consider, according to a recent paper by Fidelity's Dirk Hofschire and George Fischer.
The economy could turn out to be in mild "stagflation" - a situation in which the economy and incomes muddle along at a slow rate, while inflation grows at a faster pace, but not as virulently as in the 1970s.
A stagflationary environment points investors toward inflation-resistant categories of bonds, such as leveraged loans, real estate bonds, or TIPS.
Avoiding the United States altogether, the Loomis Sayles Bond fund (LSBRX) invests in non-U.S. emerging market debt with above-average yields. The iShares Global Inflation-Linked Bond Fund (GTIP) aims to beat higher inflation around the world, not just in the U.S.
Precious metals are another potential haven if you think inflation will be higher than the Fed's target rate.
But precious metals are not for the faint of heart; late last month, gold rose to $1,713 an ounce, up nearly $45, or 3 percent, in one day. Gold ounces have been risen from $1,347 to almost $1,900 over the last year. On Monday it closed at $1,722 an ounce.