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This week, we bring you the third and final
installment of Dr Woody Brock's review of the three
key risks facing investors - this time, it's financial
market risk, and Woody concludes that while US stock market
risk has declined modestly in the last 80 years,
risk stemming from market mistakes and, possibly,
from irrationality has risen significantly. Tim Farrelly then shows that despite their critics, the ratings agencies do a wonderful job of
assessing companies. Urban Carmel then debunks the myth that indexing is a
threat to market stability (a point that Woody also
touches on). Yale's Stephen Roach looks at the
implications (and the irony) of China's new global
push. And we feature
Jeremy Lawson's excellent Markets Summit
presentation on the "dire" implications for risk
assets of the rising wave of populism.
All the
best for another week's continuing education -
Graham
P.S.
Mark your diary!
PortfolioConstruction Forum Conference 2017 "It all
adds up" - 23/24 August (Sydney). Registration
opens next week. |
QUOTE OF THE WEEK... |
"The capacity to learn is a gift; the ability
to learn is a skill; the willingness to learn is a
choice" - Brian Herbert (author) |
LATEST... |
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Markets
The dramatic decline of risk - part 3 - Financial
market risks
Overall stock market risk has declined modestly in
the last 80 years, but the nature of risk has
changed greatly. The risk stemming from market
mistakes and, possibly, from irrationality has risen
significantly.
Dr Woody Brock, SED
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White Paper
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Investing
What the ratings agencies are really good at
After the ratings failures of CDOs and other complex
instruments in the GFC, many dismiss the work of the
ratings agencies. But far from being hopeless, they
do a wonderful job of assessing companies.
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's |
Opinion
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Markets | Investing
The worry about indexing is overblown
The number of indexes has
exploded and now exceeds the number of stocks in the
US. But overall, the US stock market is still
dominated by active management. And 96% of index
products are of insignificant size.
Urban Carmel, The Fat Pitch |
Opinion
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Markets
Rethinking the Next China
China is upping the ante on its connection to an
increasingly integrated world, running against the
grain of the populist anti-globalisation backlash
that is brewing in many developed countries.
Stephen Roach, Yale University |
Opinion
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Markets | Investing
Populist discontent spells danger for markets
Governments must find a way to reconcile open
markets with more evenly distributed income growth,
or globalisation may reverse with dire implications
for risk assets.
Jeremy Lawson, Standard Life Investments | 0.50 CE |
Resources
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The winds of change are stronger than you think: Q+A
Without more transparency in terms of the form
protectionism might take, it is difficult to
pinpoint specific sectors or stocks that would
benefit from such an environment...
Ron Temple, Lazard Asset Management
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Comment
Go Short!
1. The US is not a good proxy for the rest of the
world. 2. Shorting is a fundamentally difficult
strategy. Even if an asset is massively overvalued -
and US equities are not - shorting is dangerous...
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's
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Comment
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RECENTLY... |
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Markets
The dramatic decline of risk - part 2 - geopolitical
risk
Despite increasing global political risk, the
probability of outright war is paradoxically lower
than it might have been at any previous period in
history.
Dr Woody Brock, SED
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White Paper
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Markets
Whistling past the geopolitical graveyard
In the face of proliferating geopolitical risks,
global financial markets have reached new heights.
Markets have trouble pricing "black swan" events,
the "unknown unknowns" that are unlikely, but
extremely costly.
Nouriel Roubini, Roubini Global Economics |
Opinion
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Markets
A Trump slump?
Trump's election triggered a global stock market
upswing, on confidence that he would be able to
fulfill his pledge to reignite US economic growth.
But how much is Trump really likely to be able to
get done?
Libby Cantrill, PIMCO |
Opinion
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Investing
Research Review: Factor investing
Factor investing has its
foundation in the empirical studies of EMH. Via ETFs,
we now live in a world where the possibility of
factor investing is available to almost everyone.
Three recent papers are useful in exploring further.
Prof Ron Bird, UTS |
Review
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Finology
Buy Low, Sell High sounds simple but clients need a
framework
Clients benefit from understanding the investment
journey. Having prepared responses to scenarios
improves the chance of success.
Douglas Isles, Platinum Asset Management | 0.25 CE |
2 comments |
Resources
* Rated
in the top 3 presentations by Finology Summit 2017
delegates
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What stocks are yield-based but not heavily geared?
Yield is obviously just the proportion of profits
which a company chooses to return as dividends. In
general, the higher the proportion, the more a
company is likely to be sacrificing future growth...
Martin Conlon, Schroders
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Comment
Are assets overvalued
Low interest rates will only cause over-valuation if
they are unnaturally low..
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's
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Comment
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