Increased Demand for Higher Yielding Assets Fuels Stock Market Rally The weaker Dollar is triggering a huge rally in U.S. equity markets at the mid-session as
aggressive investors seek higher yielding assets.
Call to mind the saying, A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush; the conservative investors aim to keep the «bird in the hand,» while
aggressive investors seek to gain «two in the bush.»
So in the words of the famous saying, conservative investors aim to keep the «bird in the hand,» while
aggressive investors seek to gain the «two in the bush.»
Sector funds are appropriate for
aggressive investors seeking exposure within either an entire sector of the economy or a specific subsection thereof.
Not exact matches
Aggressive covered call
investors do the opposite... they
seek stocks that have options with the highest possible premiums without regard for why those premiums are so high (eg.
This is a very interesting variation for
aggressive investors who want to
seek even higher returns without much additional risk, (at least as measured by standard deviation.
The
aggressive strategy is the more equity focused version of our Moderate Countercyclical portfolio and will
seek to generate higher returns with the understanding that stocks tend to generate strong 5 and 10 year rolling returns, but also
seeks to protect the
investor from substantial downturns during periods in the business cycle when large downturns are most probable.
An
aggressive, high risk, high return
investor is said to be
seeking two in the bush.
But the big difference from regular private
investors is that they're v impatient, they're
seeking high returns, they're v
aggressive AND they have the necessary fire - power to achieve their goals.
The goal of this portfolio is to provide an
investor with an easy - to - manage and diversified portfolio of gold and gold - related investments that is both very
aggressive and profit -
seeking.
SoftBank's
aggressive approach raised many tensions at Uber and among some of the company's smaller
investors who believe that the Japanese tech giant will devalue the firm seeing how it's
seeking to purchase its privately traded shares at a significant discount.