Skip to main content

Linda Leitz: Take a global view when investing – Colorado Springs Gazette

Imagine that you are given a small portfolio of stocks. In this gift, you must choose between specific stocks.

Would you choose GE or Philips? Kroger or Ahold? Hershey or Guylia? Dow or BASF?

If you’re like most consumers — as well as many financial advisers and institutional money managers — you would choose GE, Kroger, Hershey and Dow. These are familiar names, so you followed one of the common tenants of investing, which is to invest in what you know.

Given that these choices aren’t all in the same industry, you’d also be providing this hypothetical portfolio some diversification. However, there is a lack of diversification that might not be readily noticeable. GE, Kroger, Hershey, and Dow are all United States companies, while Philips, Ahold, Guylia and BASF are based outside the U.S.

While the U.S. equity market is a huge portion of the global equity market — 60% by some metrics — the holdings of individual equity portfolios in the U.S. tend to be outsized, close to 80%, according to Joy Clady, a certified financial planner.

Her research identifies several reasons for this, including patriotism, concerns about individual country risks, currency fluctuations, geographical distance and general familiarity with a particular company. The inclination to hold investments in the investor’s home country is also common outside the US. Around the world, individual investors tend to hold a majority of their investments in their home country.

Sonya Lutter, founder of EnLite (enlite.world), points out that money and financial decisions are stressful for many people, and defaulting to investments that are familiar can reduce that stress.

Wes Crill, head of Investment Strategists and vice president at Dimensional Fund Advisors, says, “Investors who are only focused on U.S. markets are missing out on a literal world of opportunity — thousands of securities worth trillions of dollars — just waiting to provide diversification benefits.”

Expanding international holdings could actually lower risk in a portfolio. Having the vast majority of your investments in one country, with the same economic pressures, currency fluctuation and political issues, concentrates risk.

The information age has made information about international investments easier to find. If you see the logic in broadening your global diversification, there are some easy ways to accomplish that.

If you tend to invest in mutual funds and exchange traded funds (ETFs), there are straightforward ways to increase your international holdings without having to do too much research and vetting. Most of the investment firms who provide mutual funds and ETFs have international options available. Adding or increasing quality holdings in those options may have the result of lowering risk without a sacrifice of long-term returns.

We all want to have investments that help us meet our long-term financial goals while allowing us to sleep at night. Quality investments outside the U.S. can be part of that strategy.

Linda Leitz is a certified financial planner. She can be reached at linda@peaceofminfin.com.

Techyrack Website stock market day trading and youtube monetization and adsense Approval

Adsense Arbitrage website traffic Get Adsense Approval Google Adsense Earnings Traffic Arbitrage YouTube Monetization YouTube Monetization, Watchtime and Subscribers Ready Monetized Autoblog



from Investing – My Blog https://ift.tt/rNWhMXZ
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

These money and investing tips can give you a smooth ride in a rough market – MarketWatch

Don’t miss these top money and investing features: Sign up here  to get MarketWatch’s best mutual funds and ETF stories emailed to you weekly! INVESTING NEWS & TRENDS How to approach rebalancing your portfolio for 2023 It’s not a good idea to rebalance your portfolio at preset intervals Read More Bonds aren’t more attractive than stocks even as yields register a 15-year high The S&P 500’s return is similar when the 10-year Treasury yield is high or low. Read More Here’s who’s been trading crypto, and how they’re doing A new study finds that most people who entered the cryptocurrency market have lost money — and that those people are young men. Read More BlackRock sees these thematic ETFs potentially outperforming in 2023 In this week’s ETF Wrap, MarketWatch spoke with BlackRock’s Jay Jacobs on investing themes he likes for 2023 as investors worry about a slowing economy and monetary tightening. Read More Three seasonal effects in the stock market begin around T...

Four months until SACSCOC visits Auburn: Four things you might not know about SACSCOC – Office of Communications and Marketing

Notice body There’s less than four months remaining until Auburn University’s accrediting body, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges, or SACSCOC, arrives for its on-site visit. As the Accreditation team prepares for the on-site phase of the reaffirmation process, we want to share four things you might not know about SACSCOC: 1. SACSCOC is self-governed by the accredited institutions SACSCOC’s Principles of Accreditation requires a model of shared governance of its member institutions and holds itself to the same standards. The Commission on Colleges is operated by the SACSCOC Board of Trustees. The 77 Board members are elected by the College Delegate Assembly, or CDA, which is comprised of one voting representative from each of the 780 SACSCOC-accredited institutions. Each representative is the president or other chief executive of their respective college or university. In other words, the election of SACSSCOC’s leadership is in the hands of its ...

Coinbase Cuts Affiliate Marketing Commission Rates for Influencers - Business Insider

Some influencers earn revenue by driving sign ups for crypto apps using affiliate links. Crypto exchange  Coinbase recently lowered how much it pays some influencers per sign up. The company blamed the change on “market conditions” in emails to influencers leaked to Insider. Crypto exchange Coinbase has lowered how much it pays some social-media influencers who drive sign ups to the platform, according to emails sent to two creators and shared with Insider. “Due to market conditions, we are reducing payouts on the program to ensure we remaining profitable,” both emails said. The two personal-finance influencers were offered different terms by Coinbase, but both were substantially lower than previous payment schemes for its affiliate program. The influencers requested anonymity in order to speak freely, but their identities are known to Insider. Here’s what Coinbase offered, according to the emails: One creator was earning as much as $40 per sign up as ...