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In
Fodder this week, Harvard Professor Carmen Reinhart
offers two reasons why sovereign debt crises are now
rarer than history would suggest. Dr Woody
Brock clears up confusion around what the Phillips
Curve means - and why it's important investors
understand it. AB Global's Stuart Rae looks at how
our propensity to behavioural biases creates
opportunity to generate alpha. Stewart Investors'
Amanda McCluskey argues that ensuring your
investment process incorporates sustainability
factors adds up to better outcomes. And the Forum's
Will Jackson reviews two academic papers on our
personal values and professional ethics.
- All the best for another great week's continuing
education - Graham
P.S.
Registration opens next week for
Markets Summit 2018 "Changing Gears" (13 Feb)
and
Finology Summit 2018 "Where investing meets
investors" (14 Feb)
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QUOTE OF THE WEEK...
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The
beautiful thing about learning is that no one can
take it away - BB King
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LATEST...
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Markets
The curious case of the missing defaults
For the past two
centuries, a "double bust" (in commodities and
capital flows) has led to a spike in sovereign
defaults. Yet they have risen only modestly since
the peak in commodity prices and global capital
flows around 2011.
Carmen M. Reinhart, Harvard University |
More
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Markets
Phillips Curve confusion
During the past three months, a salient topic of
debate has been whether the so-called Phillips Curve
is relevant in today's disinflationary environment.
The debate is important to investors.
Woody Brock,
SED |
More
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Markets | Finology
The Cocaine Brain and other biases
Human beings are subject to behavioural biases,
which negatively affect their ability to make
rational choices. These behavioural biases create
market inefficiencies that active investment
managers can exploit to generate alpha.
Stuart Rae, AB Global |
More
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Strategies | Investing
E + S + G factors all add up to better performance
Ensuring your
investment process has the flexibility to
incorporate sustainability factors all adds up to
improved longer term portfolio performance outcomes.
Amanda McCluskey, Stewart Investors | 0.50
CE
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More
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Philosophy
Research Review: Personal values and professionalism
What influence do personal values have on our
behaviour, as individuals? And how do those values
interact with professional standards and ethics?
Will Jackson, Portfolio Construction Forum | 1.50 CE |
More
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Good Summary
...Framing the household balance sheet as a
consideration of 'possibilities' is interesting.
Taking today's balance sheet and examining it
against future liabilities, specifically the
probability of satisfying each liability is the
least practiced element of retirement planning...
Brent Bevan, Commonwealth Bank of Australia
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More
China madernity??
What a load of codswallop!!!
Craig Offenhauser, Charter Pacific Securities
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More
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RECENTLY...
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Markets | Finology
The moral identity of economic man
Two recent books indicate that a quiet revolution is
challenging the foundations of economics, promising
radical changes in how we view many aspects of
organisations, public policy, and even social life.
Ricardo Hausmann,
Harvard Kennedy School |
1 comment
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More
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Strategies
The optimal shape of retirement planning
A recent
research paper that likens the three main retirement
planning approaches to shapes provides an
interesting way to think about three different
retirement planning approaches. In the end, the best
option may incorporate all three.
Michael Kitces, Nerd's Eye View
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1 comment
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More
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Strategies | Investing
Research Review: More on portfolio construction
A recent paper that addresses one of the most
pressing issues facing the financial community - how
to construct long-term investment portfolios to best
fit the needs of those saving for retirement -
questions the appropriateness of many commonly used
techniques.
Ron Bird, University of Technology Sydney | 1.00 CE |
More
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Strategies
Backgrounder: The rise of impact investing
As some institutional investors build internal
impact investing capabilities, the inclusion of
impact investments in portfolios may be on the cusp
of becoming mainstream.
Will Jackson, Portfolio Construction Forum |
More
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Strategies
Managing carbon exposure is essential for better
risk-adjusted returns
Managing carbon
risk within portfolios is increasingly a decision
integral to risk management and the pursuit of
superior long-term risk-adjusted returns.
Domenico Giuliano, Magellan Asset Management | 0.50
CE
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More
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Positive but maybe a little too rosy?
... I'm not sure how many fund
researchers or advisers would refer to -0.3% pa and
mostly certainly not -0.6% pa excess returns for 10
years as falling into the category of 'superb job'.
Brent Bevan, Commonwealth Bank of Australia
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More
Plenty of disruption and growth
Tim, great to see further proof that active
management is alive...
Jonas Daly, Bennelong Funds Management
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More
Nice positive stuff, Tim
I tend to think this SPIVA report (which
accounts for survivorship bias) has actually
introduced some survivorship bias in this piece of analysis...
Michael Furey, Delta Research & Advisory
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More
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