Not so fast
FASTER economic growth means higher returns for investors. That is a big part of the rationale for investing in emerging markets.
The problem with this argument is that it is not true. Research by the London Business School looked at 17 countries over 108 years. The countries with the slowest-growing economies (as measured by GDP growth over five-year periods) returned 8% a year; the markets in the fastest-growing economies, by contrast, returned just 5% a year.
When a broader group of 53 economies, including many emerging markets, were examined, the tortoises beat the hares by a wider margin—12% to 6-7%. James Montier of Société Générale found that the slowest-growing emerging markets have delivered higher returns than the fastest growers over the past 20 years.
NAR: Pending Home Sales Increase 3.4% in March; Up 0.1% Year-over-year
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From the NAR: Pending Home Sales Ascended 3.4% in March
*Pending home sales in March climbed 3.4%*, according to the National
Association of REALTORS®. The...
3 hours ago
2 comments:
Should be good for the US no? This banana republic is going to have slower growth for sometime me thinks.
The extrapolator in me did wonder what zero growth would do.
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