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This week in Fodder, Dr Woody Brock explains that
the IT revolution of the past 20 years has driven
unmeasured productivity growth and caused inflation
and interest rates to fall, and predicts it has
another 10 to 20 years to go, which is good news for
investors. Yale's Stephen Roach warns that the US
has more to lose than China in Trump's threatened
trade conflict. We feature Michael Kitces's
presentation on better ways to rebalance portfolios
than the traditional time-based methods. Michael
Edesess highlights three new research papers that
point to possible problems in quant research on
anomalies. And we finish with another take on
exploiting anomalies by PM Capital's Paul Moore.
- All the best for another great week's continuing
education - Graham
P.S. Are you involved in any aspect of constructing
diversified, multi-manager portfolios?
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QUOTE OF THE WEEK...
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The goal of education is the advancement of
knowledge and the dissemination of truth. - John F
Kennedy
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LATEST...
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Markets
The truth about the IT Revolution
Twenty years ago, I predicted that the Digital
Revolution would cause productivity growth to
accelerate and inflation and interest rates to fall
for a very long period. We now believe this trend
will continue for at least another 10 and probably
20 years.
Dr Woody Brock, SED |
More
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Markets
America and China's codependency trap
US President Donald Trump has once again raised the
possibility of a trade conflict with China. Getting
tough on China while ignoring the consequences could
be a blunder of epic proportions.
Stephen Roach, Yale University |
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Strategies
There are
better alternatives to time-based rebalancing
Time-based rebalancing is inefficient. Research
suggests that tolerance band rebalancing strategies
minimise trading and boost portfolio returns in both
the portfolio accumulation and decumulation phase.
Michael Kitces, Nerd's Eye
View
| 1.00 CE |
More
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Investing
The trend that is ruining finance research
The "anomalies" literature is the scientific
foundation for quantitative asset management. But as
three recent papers point out, "p-hacking" is only
the beginning of anomalies research problems.
Michael Edesess, EDHEC-Risk Institute
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More
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Strategies & Investing
Exploiting anomalies is vital for higher long-term
returns
To outperform the market you have to invest in
something different. Investment returns are best
captured through the exploitation of anomalies – the
truly different mispriced opportunities.
Paul Moore, PM Capital | 0.50 CE |
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What about the cap on loyalty units?
...noting
that there is a cap on subscriptions that can
attract the loyalty units at 20,000 units or
$30,000AU, I do wonder if the potential scope for
'gaming' the offer is as significant as you have
proposed?
Carey Church,
Moneyworks NZ
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More
How the cap works
...there is a cap on larger amounts but it is based
on 10% of your current investment not $30k (20k
units). I still think that provides plenty of scope
to participate in, or "game" the Offer, given its
generosity.
Dominic McCormick |
More
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RECENTLY...
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Strategies
Retirement spending and biological age
There is a growing body of evidence suggesting that
chronological (C) age is dominated by biological (B)
age as a better proxy for longevity risk.
Practitioners must consider both ages when building
portfolios and structuring retirement spending
strategies.
Moshe Milevsky, York University | 1.00 CE |
More
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Strategies | Investing
Beating the world’s best investors
Where can practitioners take on the world’s best
investors and win? Actually, in quite a lot of
places.
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's |
More
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Investing
Magellan's "monster" listed trust - masterstroke or
misfire?
Magellan is innovating again, this time raising
money for what's been called a "monster" closed-end
listed investment trust (LIT) with features that
dramatically raise the bar for the standard model of
closed end listed investment vehicles.
Dominic McCormick |
2 comments
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Markets
The
persistence of global imbalances
The US has run chronic current-account deficits for
almost two generations. Pointing the finger at
surplus countries is getting old.
Carmen M. Reinhart, Harvard
University
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More
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Markets
Fed balance sheet fears are much ado about nothing
Investors should set aside their fears about the Fed
shrinking its balance sheet, and remember that it
provides little indication about what will happen to
longer term interest rates.
Payden & Rygel |
More
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China's economic resilience
...China's
growth may carry on for years yet, but feeding the
beast on credit must surely be a recipe for reducing
resilience, not increasing it.
James Weir,
Steward Wealth
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More
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