DIETER WERMUTH’S INVESTMENT OUTLOOK – June 2020
Asset allocation at a time of zero bond yields To stick to the standard formula of conservative investing these days – 60% stocks / 40%
Asset allocation at a time of zero bond yields To stick to the standard formula of conservative investing these days – 60% stocks / 40%
Stock markets ignore Corona – so far It is hard to believe that global stock markets have largely shrugged off the prospect that the world economy
Stock market correction will continue The coronavirus shock forces investors to change assumptions about market trends. It is not clear how long the epidemic will
Dividends beat bond yields – by a wide margin By now, the stock market boom is ten and a half years old and thus one
Bond markets: look like bubbles, smell like bubbles – are bubbles I am not aware of any economist who has ever predicted that whole yield
Sell in June and go away – a sensible strategy introductory remarks May is over, and I am late, so I had to replace the
Stocks and bonds are well supported, but increasingly expensive introductory remarks After the large correction of stock markets in the three months to the end
Almost everything is expensive For the first time in decades, the usually profitable investment strategy to diversify funds across asset classes – to do well
Strong headwinds Against a generally healthy economic backdrop there is a long list of open issues that have not only the potential to unsettle capital
Extremely expensive stocks and bonds This is an analysis about potential triggers of the next global financial crisis. I am aware of Paul Samuelson’s dictum
Buoyant economies, overvalued equities Stock markets have corrected a lot since late January, but from a longer-term perspective, the correction has been modest so far.
“Draghi put” remains in place How will central banks react to the large correction of bond and stock markets that seems to be under way
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