WisdomTree

Best Blogs of the Week #232

Two posts this week to review. Both posts discuss an investing topic; one related to timing and the other to an asset class.

InvescoAre there ‘good months’ and ‘bad months’ to invest? – In 2008, at the depth of the global financial crisis, equity investors fled for the exits, but it wasn’t until 2013 that investors put meaningful amounts of capital back into the stock market. As a result, many of them missed the market’s turnaround, which started in 2009, and bought back in after stocks had risen. (In other words, they sold low and bought higher).

WisdomTree – Global Small-Cap Dividends Crushing It in 2016 – The real question, of course, is how this happened, with a secondary issue focusing on the potential robustness of those drivers looking into the future.

WisdomeTree Attribution

Best Blogs of the Week #231

Three posts make it into this week’s industry review. I’m noticing a trend across investment-oriented blog posts: stay invested in the equity market. There’s broad consensus across PM teams within asset managers to remain in equities and that no sharp decline looms. Time will tell.

ABDizzy over Dividends – US companies that offer high dividends are very popular among equity investors today. Shares of these companies are trading near record high valuations…

PIMCOHow to Play the Brexit Blues – Although our base case is that the UK votes to remain, we devote much time to thinking about the implications of a vote to leave. Of the two competing views on this ‒ that it will be a globally systemic event or that, while important for the UK, its impact on global markets will be contained ‒ we side with the latter.

WisdomTreeIncreasing Net Buybacks with a Quality Approach –  Assuming no growth and no change in valuations going forward, an investor could expect to earn the combined dividend and net buyback yield, currently higher than the zero some prognosticators are predicting.

WisdomTree. Invested.

 

Best Blogs of the Week #228

Two posts this week, both looking at international market. Broad financial news outlets seemed highly focused on fixed income markets with prognostications related to US Treasuries and the negative rate via the BOJ. We thought to eschew posts similarly guessing at the future for two with sound viewpoints on critically important investment opportunities.

ColumbiaGlobal emerging markets: Headwinds and tailwinds– Countries that are not dependent on commodity exports are well-positioned to benefit from domestic-led growth. We are finding opportunities in places like Eastern Europe, India and Mexico. We believe for this group that macro imbalances have largely dissipated, so growth can move forward on a sustainable path.

WisdomTreeRethink Your International Allocations– But can you time those adaptive hedging moves yourself? Research we have conducted with Record Currency Management shows that it’s possible to add value over passive hedging (or unhedging) all the time. Over the last 28 years, determining when to currency hedge using a three-factor model of interest rate differentials, momentum and currency valuations has added more than 140 bps annually to the returns of a broad international hedged-equity strategy while maintaining the vast majority of the volatility reduction of strategic passive hedging.

Best Blogs of the Week #226

Posts from five different blogs in this week’s best. Some big picture (Wells Fargo), others making the case for professional money management implicitly (BlackRock), and others getting pretty technical, in the most helpful way (American Century).

American CenturyCIO Insights: Oversold Conditions Opened Select Opportunities in High-Yield – During the last five years, we’ve seen two distinct high-yield spread spikes associated with risk-off financial market trading. The first was in October 2011, during the European sovereign debt crisis, when spreads soared above 900 bps. The second was in February 2016, when spreads again approached 900 bps. These periods of spread widening were accompanied by corresponding bond price corrections. In the most recent occurrence, we believe too much worst-case scenario sentiment was priced into the high-yield market, given our analytical view that China will avoid an economic “hard landing” and the U.S. will avoid recession.

BlackRock3 themes that will shape markets this quarter – The investing takeaway of this third theme: Investors can no longer rely on a rising tide lifting all boats. Security selection is crucial as dispersion re-emerges in asset markets.

Wells FargoIn volatile times, a case for quality investing– We’ve explored how five different investment styles have performed during periods of high and low volatility throughout history: growth, momentum, value, minimum volatility, and quality.WisdomTree Chart

William BlairWhy We Remain Cautious in Emerging Market Currencies – … our analysis shows that fundamentally attractive currencies are predominantly in the emerging world and the unattractive currencies are predominantly in the developed world.

 

WisdomTreeDividend-Weighted Indexes Crush the Market in Q1 – I think there are three basic reasons why dividend stocks performed so well in the first quarter of 2016

Best Blogs of the Week #218

Only two blog posts from the past two weeks make the cut here.

BlackRockA Not So Gentle Reminder of Why You Should Own Bonds – And the recent market swings really bring this diversification discussion home. When the equity market is performing well, you may be giving up some gains by owning bonds, but you’re also building some cushion should stock markets fall.

WisdomTreeAre You Having Trouble Timing the Market? – A simple, well-known adage says that successful investing is all about “time in the market, rather than timing the market.”