…market. In the end, all of the pundit-watching, short-term moves, and second-guessing leave them no closer to their financial goals. In fact, it often leads to selling low, incurring unnecessary…
Search Results for: low-volatility funds
Fear and Greed Are Your Friends
…constant flux in the financial world. That’s fine by me, since temporary bouts of market irrationality allow patient investors to buy low and sell high.,” Buckingham says. “[Currently], the fear-greed…
Shiller Sees Housing Rising In Short Term, Unsure About Long Term
…to 12 months. But after that, he says he’s not sure, as he’s worried that an environment of housing shortages and record-low rates, which were driving prices higher, is ending….
J. Zweig: You Should Welcome Market Declines
…the absurd.” Zweig notes how money “gushed” into high-yield bond funds earlier this year, for example, even while the yields on those bonds were hitting record lows. Then in late…
Don't Limit Your Growth Opportunities
Steve Wymer, whose Fidelity Growth Company Fund is in the top 5% of funds in its Large-Cap Growth category over the past 15 years, says he doesn’t limit himself to…
Top Guru Bullish On The Great White North
Top strategist Kenneth Fisher says that hedge fund managers who’ve been fleeing Canadian stocks are making a big mistake. “A growing number of funds are betting that Canada’s commodity-based economy…
Low-P/E Stocks That Pass An Accountant's Tests
…writes. “As Forbes’ own Kenneth Fisher has said, there are no silver bullets in the stock market.” In the article, Reese looks at low-P/E stocks that also get approval from…
OSAM: How To Win In Emerging Markets
…valuation-based strategy to thrive.” While EMs come with their own unique sets of risks and often have higher volatility than developed markets, OSAM concludes that investors would be wise to…
In The Market, Boring Beats Exciting ...
…research at RavenPack, also tells Hulbert that his research shows low-volatility stocks tend to respond better to both good and bad breaking news than high-volatility stocks do. The bottom line,…
... Or Does It?
…anymore.” This could thus be a sign of a low-volatility bubble, she says, noting that academics have argued whether low-volatility outperformance is really due to volatility, or due simply to…
