Friday, October 24, 2014

MarketWatch: Why China's Money Managers Lag

By SIMON CONSTABLE
Do Chinese money managers have what it takes to do the job?
If you count the ability to pick stocks and generate good returns for clients, then unfortunately most don’t, according to a forthcoming study obtained by MarketWatch.
What’s really needed to outperform for clients is either an MBA degree or a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation, says the report by Prof. Yi Fang of Jilin University, China and Prof. Haiping Wang of York University, Canada. See original story here.
Photo by Brian Matangelo on Unsplash

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

MarketWatch: Stock Investors Should Be Cheering a Drop In Oil Prices

By SIMON CONSTABLE
The bear market in crude oil prices should have stock investors elated, not disappointed. What’s more, there’s still time to make money.
Prices for Brent UK:LCOX4 the European benchmark, have tanked more than 20% from $115 a barrel on June 19 to less than $91 today, according to data from FactSet.
Cast off any ideas that the slump in the oil market is a reflection of slowing global growth. Apparently, that doesn’t matter.
How do I know? Last month I met with Professor Ben Jacobsen, head of financial markets at Edinburgh University Business School. He gave me a copy of a paper that he and two other economists wrote on the oil market. They based their research on close to three decades of market data. It was published in the Journal of Financial Economics in 2008 and authored by Gerben Driesprong and Benjamin Maat as well as Jacobsen. Read more here.

Monday, October 6, 2014

WSJ: Why Your Mutual Fund Will Fail, and Index Funds Rule

By SIMON CONSTABLE
The market volatility of recent days illustrates why that old mutual-fund disclaimer—“past performance is not indicative of future returns”—is more promise than warning. It’s also why most people should stick to dollar-cost averaging in index funds.
Dollar-cost averaging is simply the practice of investing a fixed amount on a regular schedule, regardless of where prices go. It’s essentially what you do in a 401(k) plan. Following this method, you tend to buy fewer shares when prices are high and more when prices are low, and are less prone to panic selling when prices dip. See original story here.
Photo by Mahdi Bafande on Unsplash

Sunday, October 5, 2014

WSJ: What Is Momentum Investing

By SIMON CONSTABLE 

You may hear money managers talk about momentum investing. But what exactly does it mean?

In strictest terms, a momentum investor buys stocks that have been going up in value and sells those that have been falling, says Vineer Bhansali, manager of Pimco Trends Managed Futures Strategy fund. He makes investment decisions based at least partly on momentum across asset classes, not just stocks. See original story here.

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