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Fodder
starts with a new paper from Dr Bob Gay on why, as
the Fed weans itself from past discretionary actions
and shifts back towards its usual rules-based
framework for decision-making, they are no longer
relevant. Harvard University Prof Dani
Rodrik
explains why this G20 meeting will be the most
interesting for years. Michael Edesess
analyses whether it's true that
studies of
"investor return" vs "investment return" prove the
conventional wisdom that individuals underperform
the investments they invest in.
And finally, we feature two
video presentations from recent Forum programs. In
the first, Standard Life Investments' Andrew
Milligan explains where investment opportunities lie
in a "low"
growth world. And in the second, Invesco's Jeff
Reemer explains why bonds are "the walking dead".
-
All the best
for another great week's continuing education -
Graham
P.S.
Register now for PortfolioConstruction Forum
Strategies Conference 2017 (23-24 August) - It all
adds up! |
QUOTE OF THE WEEK... |
The important thing is not to stop questioning. -
Albert Einstein |
LATEST... |
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Markets
Policy rules versus discretion
The use of discretion in setting monetary policy has
had a somewhat checkered history. Ironically, the
debate about rules versus discretion is just heating
up as the FOMC sets a steady course for unwinding
its extraordinary policy measures.
Dr Robert Gay, Fenwick Advisers |
More
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Markets
The G20's misguided globalism
This
year's G20 summit in Hamburg promises to be among
the more interesting in recent years. The knee-jerk
globalism that suffuses G20 meetings feeds into the
populists' narrative.
Dani Rodrik, Harvard University |
More
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Finology
What do we know about investor irrationality?
It has become conventional wisdom that
underperformance is due to the irrational investment
behavior of individuals. It is time to question
whether the conventional wisdom has even a scintilla
of meaning.
Michael Edesess, EDHEC-Risk Institute |
More
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Markets
Cycles in a low growth world
In a low
growth, low inflation, low interest rate and low
yield environment, a cyclical economic upturn
presents opportunities in asset classes such as
equities and real estate.
Andrew Milligan, Standard Life Investments |
More
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Markets | Investing
Bonds are the "walking dead" - time to rotate into
loans
Bond investors have enjoyed a multi-decade bull run
in yields, fuelled by unsustainable post-GFC
stimulus, but "the times they are a-changing".
Jeffrey Reemer, Invesco |
More
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The changing world
The economic world has not changed - it is like
gravity. The current outcome (e.g. low interest rates)
has changed because the relative inputs are
different...
Michael Chamberlain, MCA NZ
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More
Demographics seem to be the key
I
suspect that you are right and that slowing
demographics are behind the slowing of growth and
low interest rates...
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's
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More
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RECENTLY... |
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Markets
Interest rates are artificially low?
Yes, rates are unusually low. But to describe that
as unnatural shows a lack of understanding about how
the world works and a refusal to accept that maybe
the world has changed.
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's |
9 comments
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More
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Markets
Another lesson from Japan
We ignore history at great peril. The latest
disappointment for inflation-targeting central banks
is really not a surprise after all.
Stephen Roach, Yale University |
More
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Strategies | Finology
Buying happiness and satisfaction with greater cash
reserves
The classic view of cash in the world of investing
is that it's something to minimise. But a recent
study found that we're just not content without a
healthy allocation to cash.
Michael Kitces, Nerd's Eye View |
More
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Markets
Politics and stock returns
Analysis of five international stock markets shows no
correlation between stock returns and the political
party in power.
Rob Arnott, Research Affilates |
More
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Markets | Strategies
Trump the game changer - the only certainty now is
uncertainty
2017 will present many risks and opportunities, as
the winds of change sweep through the global economy
and markets. Geopolitics will dominate. The only
certainty for 2017 is uncertainty.
Stephen Halmarick, CFSGAM | 0.25 CE |
3 comments
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More
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Are assets overvalued?
...Surely, if interest rates are low, it is because
future growth expectations are also low, begging the
question, why would you pay more for equities (a
growth asset) in such a low growth environment?
James Waggett, Waggett Wealth Advice
|
More
Does low growth mean low returns from growth assets?
Not
necessarily. Since the GFC, the Australian economy
has grown faster than that of the US but EPS have
grown much more slowly in Australia than in the
US...
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's
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More
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