|
Fodder
starts with Nouriel Roubini arguing that Trump's
policies are a key risk to the nascent global pick
up in economic activity. Dr Bob Gay explains why Fed
officials believe they can engineer a graceful exit
from their experiment with asset purchases.
Invesco's Stephen Anness and Andy Hall have written
a terrific paper on the art of contrarian thinking
of all types, including as it applies to investing.
Prof Ron Bird reviews two new papers on factor
investing - one on the little researched "quality"
factor, and the other on a new approach to momentum
investing. And finally, we feature the top-10 rated
presentation by PIMCO's Joachim Fels at Markets
Summit 2017 on why investors should aim for capital
preservation until policy uncertainty lifts.
-
All the best
for another great week's continuing education -
Graham
P.S.
Last call for Masterclass NZ 2017 (22 June)
- we have room for just 12 more senior, experienced
portfolio construction practitioners committed to
continuous learning and having their portfolio
construction beliefs challenged.
Register today! |
QUOTE OF THE WEEK... |
Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember.
Involve me and I learn. - Benjamin Franklin |
LATEST... |
|
Markets
The global recovery's downside risks
In the next year, a more robust and persistent
global recovery will depend largely on whether
policymakers avoid mistakes that could derail it.
Nouriel Roubini, Roubini Global Economics |
Opinion
|
|
Markets
Capping QE
Fed officials must take the long view and hence tend
to believe they can engineer a graceful exit. Their
plan is somewhat akin to 'cap and trade' schemes for
weaning the world of pollutants.
Dr
Robert Gay, Fenwick Advisers |
Opinion
|
|
Markets
Into the unknown: Ignore left tail risks at your
peril
The world has now fully arrived in the radically
uncertain, "stable but not secure" predicament. The
only certainty is that the tails of the distribution
of potential macro outcomes have become fatter.
Joachim Fels, PIMCO | 0.25 CE |
Webcast
* Rated
in the top 10 presentations by Markets Summit 2017
delegates
|
|
Investing
Research Review: Quality and momentum investing
Unlike other commonly used factors, very little
research has been undertaken on the quality factor -
which makes a newly released paper very interesting.
Another new paper extends the usual momentum factor
into "returns signal momentum".
Prof Ron Bird, UTS |
Review
|
|
Philosophy | Investing
Daring to be different - the benefits of contrarian
investing
Literature from a variety of disciplines help
highlight the qualities behind truly creative,
contrarian thinking - qualities which can be applied
to modern portfolio management.
Stephen Anness & Andy Hall, Invesco Perpetual
|
White Paper
|
|
Are assets overvalued?
Hi
Tim Are interest rates unnaturally low? If I
represent the yes argument I then hypothesize that
economies (& employment) are “propped up” by these
rates...
Mark Hayden, Hayden Financial Services
|
Comment
Asset allocation critical
Asset
allocation is all about picking where the value lies
in the asset hierarchy...
Chris Farley, Farley Financial
|
Comment
|
RECENTLY... |
|
Finology
Revealing a client's true preferences
Game theory, econometrics and distributed computing
power can reveal a client's true preferences for
risk, loss, uncertainty, time and goals – with
scientific precision and in terms that clients can
understand.
Shachar Kariv, University of California, Berkeley | 0.50 CE |
Opinion
|
|
Investing
The Hunger Bonds
Investing often creates moral dilemmas over goals.
Should decent people put their money in
emerging-market bond funds?
Ricardo Hausmann, Harvard Kennedy School
|
Opinion
|
|
Markets
Siegel v Shiller on equity valuations
Wharton's Jeremy Siegel and
Yale's Robert Shiller squared off in a recent
presentation about the outlook for equity returns.
Robert Huebscher, Advisor Perspectives |
Opinion
|
|
Markets | Investing
Beware expensive factors
Investors should keep a close eye on relative
valuations. Recent data suggests that momentum and
value are trading cheaply in many markets, with low
beta substantially over-priced.
Rob Arnott, Research Affiliates |
Opinion
|
|
Strategies | Investing
The upside of less downside - how defence can win in
Au equities
When equity markets fall - as they frequently do -
the financial and emotional impacts can be lasting.
By focusing on reducing downside, investors can have
a smoother ride and still achieve the returns they
seek.
Roy Maslen & Hamish Fitzsimons, AB Global |
White Paper
|
|
Ratings uncertainty
...It
is somewhat easier to assess the risk of companies
where a given set of variables is known with some
certainty...
Chris Farley, Farley Financial
|
Comment
Populism
This is nothing new... Democracies do not always
elect the best or most suitable people, but they
always represent the view of the majority.
Peter Hecht
|
Comment
Not always the majority
...By
definition, Trump does not represent the view of the
majority of US voters. He represents the views of
the 46% who voted for him...
Deirdre Keown, PortfolioConstruction Forum |
Comment
|
|
Keep up to
date - follow us @PortfolioForum
There's no need to wait until our weekly Forum
Fodder email to know what's new with
PortfolioConstruction Forum.
Just follow us on
Twitter to hear as soon as we release new articles
on
PortfolioConstruction.com.au and when
registration opens for our onstage programs.
|
|
Connect with me on LinkedIn
We also let my LinkedIn network know as soon as we
release new articles on
PortfolioConstruction.com.au
and when registration opens for our live programs.
If LinkedIn is more your thing than Twitter,
I'd
welcome you connecting. And of course, I'd welcome
having a offline direct conversation with you any
time.
|