.....Not being invested is the road to penury.
Few if any persons can consistently call market tops or bottoms. And what's overvalued to you may not be overvalued to someone else. The original post was made on Sept 15 2015 by landlord who had bailed out of the stock market. Was that a wise decision? The answer is NO. Here are the returns of major indices in that period to date.It is said that the long-term investor should not try to time the market and sure, had I left my funds alone for 15 years I probably would have beaten deposit rates by a descent margin. But it just doesn't make sense to me to continue investing at the top or close to the top of a 6 year bull run, especially when there are so many negative indicators, both politically and economically. Stocks are massively overpriced and there currently seems to be tremendous economic instability. Statistical history suggests that this bull market may end fairly soon, so it seems logical to wait for better value.
It is said that the long-term investor should not try to time the market and sure, had I left my funds alone for 15 years I probably would have beaten deposit rates by a descent margin. But it just doesn't make sense to me to continue investing at the top or close to the top of a 6 year bull run, especially when there are so many negative indicators, both politically and economically. Stocks are massively overpriced and there currently seems to be tremendous economic instability. Statistical history suggests that this bull market may end fairly soon, so it seems logical to wait for better value.
(a) Do you have an investment plan? (b) Does you investment plan have an asset allocation strategy designed to meet your investment objectives? (c) Does your asset allocation strategy include the asset class 'foreign developed market equities'? (d) Are you under or overweight in this asset class? Now you can answer your question.anyone think the FTSE is a good bet right now
With regards to the FTSE much depends on your proposed investment period....
If you said 2-years for example, then I would personally be very reluctant to invest in the UK given the issues around BREXIT, but if you said 20-years then that is an entirely different story and you need to take a view on whether you think the British economy will do well in the long run after it leaves the EU.
When it comes to the US, I personally am still upbeat about the S&P500 because it would appear that the US Government will be progressing with their stated policies to create economic activity within the US so should benefit US companies. Furthermore US Government strategies surrounding protectionism, trying to encourage US companies to relocate their operations back to the US from other locations and their interest rate policies need to be considered (there are a few more interest rate hikes expected in the next 12-months so there should not be any surprises, with corporates having factored these increases into their projections etc.).
The Eurozone is the one I am struggling with most, when I look into my crystal ball... at one level, corporate results are relatively good, interest rates are particularly low and the Quantitative Easing (though buying bonds) has put a lot more cash in the EU economies. However, that said, the German's obsession with inflation and concerns about Spanish and Italian debt levels cannot be ignored - both remain significant geographical and economic areas within the EU. Then you throw the likely exit of the UK from the EU into the mix and it's a toss of a coin almost with the most likely outcome being little change one way or the other over the next couple of years.
All of the above is just my own view, definitely not financial advice and sometimes sourced from a person who might be related to Mystic Megg
What happens to this graph over the next 3-5 years?
What happens to this graph over the next 3-5 years?
It's all about valuation. That person who bought in 1999 was investing at one of the worst times in history, and still he/she is in the money. Time in the market...
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?