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Fodder kicks off with Tim Farrelly taking aim at the
assertion that Australian banks have a huge
vulnerability to a downturn in the residential
property market.
Yale's Stephen Roach then serves central banks a
bouquet (for getting on with normalisation) and
brickbat (for the time they're planning to take). Ellerston
Capital's Brett Gillespie explains how not to lose
money while QE winds down. Michael Furey
asks whether you know the impacts of the risk
characteristics of your multi-manager portfolios,
and explains how to guard against
overdiversification. And finally, we feature the top
10-rated Strategies Conference presentation by
Fidelity International's Kate Howitt on the six
characteristics of world class companies.
- All the best for another great week's continuing
education - Graham
P.S. CE accreditation for Strategies Conference 2017 is available in
your
Forum
MyCE record. If you weren't there, you
can still "attend" online and earn CE hours - go to
http://ow.ly/DZLN30flhud) |
QUOTE OF THE WEEK...
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It is what we think we know already that often
prevents us from learning. - Claude Bernard
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LATEST...
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Markets
A perfect storm... in a teacup
Despite all the talk, the fact that Australian banks
loan books are heavily concentrated in low risk
residential mortgages should be a source of comfort,
not fear.
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's |
More
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Markets
The courage to normalise monetary policy
The Fed will not achieve balance-sheet normalisation
until 2022-2023 at earliest. With more than $6tn of
excess liquidity still sloshing around global
financial markets, that's asking for trouble.
Stephen Roach, Yale University |
More
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Markets
Protecting the medium-term view
As
inflation re-emerges and central banks wind down
their QE programs, yields will rise substantially.
The key is not to lose money while medium-term ideas
play out.
Brett Gillespie, Ellerston Capital
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More
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Investing
It all adds up... well, sometimes it doesn't
Do you know the impacts of the risk characteristics
of your multi-manager portfolio? Better portfolio
construction occurs when you don't diversify the
risk you are trying to capture. Beware the benchmark
hugger - it might be you?
Michael Furey, Delta Research & Advisory |
More
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Investing
World class companies run their own race
Six key
factors differentiate exceptional companies from
their peers. These all add up to a business that
generates exceptional returns for extended periods
of time.
Kate
Howitt,
Fidelity International
| 0.25 CE |
More
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Default LifeStage Super
Some excellent material to consider here. It also
throws some doubt on how many of the default super
LifeStage funds are currently being allocated.
Steve Blizard, Roxburgh Securities
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More
The value of land ?
... Has anyone read any useful reports or an
analysis of how land value has increased over time?
Mark Hayden, Hayden Financial Services |
More
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RECENTLY...
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Philosophy | Markets
Democratic politics & market economics are the axis
of value
Public policy matters to performance at every level.
Yet modern politics faces a crisis of ideas,
relevance and trust. The trick is to let markets do
their work.
Ruth Richardson, RRNZ | 0.50 CE |
More
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Markets
The mystery of the missing inflation
Since mid 2016, the global economy has been in a
period of moderate expansion, with the growth rate
accelerating gradually. What has not picked up, at
least in the advanced economies, is inflation. The
question is why.
Nouriel Roubini, Roubini Global Economics |
More
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Markets
Is the
Fed behind the curve?
Many observers conclude that the Fed is behind the
curve because a central bank supposedly should not
persist with a negative real policy rate at full
employment. That is correct - but the question
remains "how much?"
Dr Robert Gay, Fenwick Advisers
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More
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Strategies
The ASX200 is too concentrated - reduce weights!
Simply observing the concentration inherent in the
index and reducing Australian Equity weights is
throwing the proverbial baby out with the bathwater.
It’s nuts and you can clearly see it’s nuts.
Tim Farrelly, farrelly's |
More
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Investing | Finology
Research Review: Red is bad, green is good
Two recent studies provide evidence that issues
unrelated to the fundamental operation of a firm
impact their market valuation.
Prof
Ron Bird, University of Technology Sydney | 1.00 CE |
More
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A few disagreements
...If we use those results to try and predict the
future and it doesn't work out then it is not the
method's fault but the interpreter's, because if its
not clear by now that the past doesn't equal the
future when it comes to performance...
Michael Furey, Delta Research & Advisory
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More
Reply
...I have many times criticized the conclusions that
finance research leaps to based on a
misinterpretation of its mathematics, or shoddy
mathematics, or misunderstanding of its own
mathematics -- but never the mathematical methods
themselves...
Michael Edesess, Compendium Finance & EDHEC-Risk
Institute |
More
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