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 Friday 28 November 2014

The independent professional development service for investment portfolio construction practitioners

G'day

I'm feeling the pressure in writing my Fodder introduction this week. Our first two opinions are focused on Japan (don't tune out yet!) because - and this is also the risk I'm taking - in my view, many practitioners tend to tune out about Japan, unaware of the very material relevance of its massive QE program to portfolios. So here's my pitch! The authors alone should be enough to entice you to read these two pieces: GaveKal's Louis-Vincent Gave and well connected US-based financial commentator, John Mauldin Louis explains the investment relevance of the seemingly odd timing of Abe calling an election now. John Mauldin explains why Japan's QE will last for many years, and just why we should definitely care. To cut to the chase: "This is not Zimbabwe or Argentina printing money - Japan is important to the global economy. What they do affects everything... This is central banks at war."

On a related - and much brighter note - we also highlight Linda Jacobson's top-10 rated Conference 2014 presentation on the growing geopolitical risks in Asia (mostly China v Japan) and why they're not necessarily bad for Australia and the region. And then, Mohamed El-Erian explains why the recent US dollar rally is a good first step in helping the global economy rebalance.

Finally, for many years, I've been arguing against the widespread use of (in my view, misleading) point-to-point returns to report fund performance. Russell Investment's Don Ezra does an excellent job of

showing exactly why its the wrong approach - and he offers his three favourite measures to evaluate active managers. They're simple and powerful... and, at 70, Don can claim more experience than most!
P.S. Mark your diary: Markets Summit 17 Feb 2015. Registration opens soon!

LATEST...

Japan's election and the yen
By calling an election now, Abe is betting that a further big fall in the yen - and a consequent further rise in the Nikkei - is no certainty. He may well be right.
Louis-Vincent Gave, GaveKal
Opinion

Bad yen falling
Japan is not going to stop QE next year or the year after or the year after that. This is not Zimbabwe printing money. Japan is important - what they do affects everything.
John Mauldin, Mauldin Economics
Opinion

Conference 2014 Top 10
Geopolitical risks are growing in East Asia
An emboldened China has taken a tough approach to its periphery. But this doesn't necessarily spell doom and gloom for Australia and the region.
Linda Jakobson, University of Sydney/Lowy Institute
Resources

The return of the dollar
The US dollar rally could contribute to the "rebalancing" that has long eluded the world economy. But that is far from guaranteed given the related risks of financial instability.
Mohamed El-Erian, Allianz
Opinion

Insights for evaluating active management
Statistics rarely tell the story clearly. With trial and error, I found that looking at three dimensions of performance assisted my interpretation.
Don Ezra, Russell Investments
White paper

Member comments
The Yin & Yang

Hi Guys, it's my first Post. I retired some 5 years ago - yes mid GFC, and have a couple of observations... Comment

RECENTLY...

China A shares emerging from the bear?
Despite strong returns, it's still hard for investors to think positively about China A shares. The key is to envisage what the world will look like in 10 to 15 years.
Dominic McCormick, Select Asset Management
Opinion

Now that you can, should you buy Shanghai?
The world's biggest inaccessible stock market is finally open to foreigners. Those with strong convictions about the rise of the Chinese consumer may want to take a hard look.
Thomas Gatley, GaveKal
Opinion

The Yin and Yang of retirement income philosophies
This white paper serves up a retirement income planning "buffet" - reviewing the two main opposing philosophies and the range of strategies that span the divide.
Angela Ashton, PortfolioConstruction Forum
1 comment Research

Are low-volatility stocks overcrowded?
Ten years ago, hardly anyone talked about low-volatility investing. Now there's growing concern it is becoming an overcrowded trade. There are four arguments against this.
David Blitz & Pim van Vliet, Robeco
White Paper

Conference 2014 Top 10
The power of R³
It is given that we all are wired to act foolishly sometimes, so how can we be better "choice architects" and "decision reassurers" for ourselves and our clients?
Dr David Lazenby, ScenarioNow Inc
Resources

Member comments
Efficient and safe retirement drawdowns
So I guess simply using the annual (or other periodic) draw downs to also rebalance should work, and efficiently?  Comment
Low beta anomaly - mispricing or risk?

I agree with the author of this article totally. Volatility is just an indication of unknown risk or uncertainty... Comment
Slick LICs

Do you remember when Platinum Capital (PMC) traded at a 20-25% premium to NAV? Back then, people made similar arguments as to why it was structural... Comment

PLUS...

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