Investors should stick with high-yield in the face of Greek crisis
Investors should keep faith with high-yield as the European bond market braces for choppy times ahead, according to some fixed income experts.
Investors should keep faith with high-yield as the European bond market braces for choppy times ahead, according to some fixed income experts.
Investors need to moderate their return expectations from European equity markets due to high valuations, according to JP Morgan Asset Management.
Wasatch Partner’s Roger Edgley, manager of the St James’s Place Emerging Markets Equity Fund, picks apart the reasons behind the Shanghai Stock Connect index’s rapid rise.
Picking up consumer-orientated companies is the best way for investors to capitalise on emerging market GDP growth, says Franklin Templeton Investments’ Mark Mobius.
With the United States’ equities bull-run into its sixth year and valuations looking pretty much up to the brim, investor sentiment has steadily shifted more in favour of European stocks – but should investors really make big cuts to their US allocation?
Multi-faceted companies are the best way for investors in UK consumer spending to negotiate the backdrop of falling goods prices, according to Smith & Williamson’s Tineke Frikkee.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s research team believes markets are getting oversold on renewed concerns of a ‘Greek accident’ and bond market volatility.
HSBC’s decision to reduce client facing staff in the UK and focus in on Asia as an area of future growth, could be followed by similar actions by other overseas banks warns 7IM’s Justin Urquhart Stewart.
The European Central Bank’s quantitative easing programme needs to ‘kick-start domestic demand’ now according to UBS Asset Management.
The impact of a stronger dollar on growth and job creation in the US seemed a significant part of the reason behind the International Monetary Fund’s warning to the US Federal Reserve it should delay raising rates until next year.
Hermes Investment Management’s chief economist Neil Williams has warned that a United Kingdom exit from the eurozone could prompt the return of Bank of England quantitative easing.
The European ETF industry could be worth up to $3bn within the next five years, according to Seven Investment Management’s Peter Sleep.