Articles tagged with Investment volatility

Year End Review and Market Timing

Equity investors around the world had a disappointing year in 2011 as thirty-seven out of forty-five markets tracked by MSCI posted negative returns. The US did well on a relative basis and was the only major market to achieve a positive total return, although the margin of victory was slim. Total return for the S&P 500 Index was 2.11%, and the positive result was a function of reinvested dividends—the index itself finished the year slightly below where it started.

Throughout the year, investors seeking clues regarding the strength of business conditions or the prospects for stock prices were confronted with ample reason to rejoice or despair. Optimists could cite the strong recovery in corporate profits and dividends, the substantial levels of cash on corporate balance sheets, low interest rates and inflation, a booming domestic energy sector, continuing strength in auto sales, and record-high share prices for leading multinationals such as Apple, IBM, and McDonald’s. Pessimists could point to persistently high unemployment, slumping home prices, tepid growth in retail sales, worrisome levels of government debt at home and abroad, and political gridlock in both Congress and various state legislatures. (more…)

Things Change….and Happy New Year!

It’s that time of again, when harried finance editors ask reporters to call investment professionals and cobble together top predictions for the coming year. These are fun to write. But for readers, they’re more entertaining a year later.

Take the late 2010 Barclays Capital Global Macro Survey of more than two thousand institutional investors. The pick for the best performing asset class in 2011 was equities (with 40% support), followed by commodities (34%) and bonds (less than 10%).1 The consensus prediction was a 15% gain in the US S&P-500 for the year to around 1,420.

As we now know, the truth turned out to be rather different. To the beginning of December and using broad indices, diversified fixed income was the best performing asset class of the year, followed by government bonds. Returns from commodities and equities were negative. The year-to-date return for the S&P-500 was close to zero. (And remember, these are the forecasts of big institutional investors.) (more…)

The Good Old Days?

“The hardest arithmetic for human beings to master,” wrote the great American working man’s philosopher Eric Hoffer, “is that which enables us to count our blessings.”

It’s a piece of wisdom worth recalling after another year that has tested the nerve of many investors and prompted questions about what current generations have done to deserve to live in such a tempestuous stage of history.

As the year winds down (if that’s the word for it!), financial markets are gripped by uncertainty over developments in the Eurozone crisis. Each day brings fresh headlines that send investors scrambling from virtual despair to tentative optimism.

While not seeking to downplay the very real anxiety generated by these events, particularly in relation to their effects on investment portfolios, it’s worth reflecting critically on our often second-hand memories of the “good old days”. (more…)

The real cost of converting to cash

During uncertain times like this cash can appear, on the surface, as a safe haven.

If you are thinking about moving some of your investments to lower risk investments, like cash, here are some points to consider before you make your final decision. (more…)

Sovereign Debt and the Equity Investor

Last week we came across an “Economic and Policy Watch” update prepared by a major investment bank that reviewed recent government proposals to address the nation’s funding crisis. Titled “It Just Gets Worse,” the report chided policymakers for actions that “look like a poor cover for loose money, rising inflation, and fiscal problems,” and warned that “government financing needs are corrupting monetary policy.” As a result of these ill-advised tactics, the bank had turned “more negative” on the outlook for financial stability and saw “little hope of improvement in the inflation/currency mix.”

Amidst the barrage of news coverage from dozens of sources probing the US debt/default/downgrade issue, such a conclusion might seem unremarkable. We found it of interest because the focus of the report was not the US Treasury but the government of Indonesia, and it appeared over a decade ago, on July 16, 2001. (more…)

Betting on Growth, or Asia vs US/Europe

The world is changing. Economic fortunes appear to be switching from east to west. China and India are transforming into powerhouses as the established economies of the US and Europe struggle. What do investors do about it?

The spectacular growth of emerging Asia in recent years, particularly in comparison to the developed economies of the West, has reignited a recurring debate about the relationship between economic growth and stock market returns.

It sounds intuitively right to most people that the best investment returns should be found in those countries with the fastest rates of economic growth. After all, shouldn’t investors receive the highest rewards in the most dynamic environments? (more…)