Investing in real estate is much
easier than stock market investments.
Not exact matches
Cheering for a falling
stock market, even if it's beneficial because of your time horizon, is always
easier said
than done.
It has become
easier to ride the wave of asset - price inflation — the
stock market and real estate bubble —
than to create new material means of production.
This is why, in strongly uptrending
markets, we find it much
easier and more profitable to focus on the price action and technical patterns of individual leadership
stocks and ETFs, rather
than paying much attention to whether or not the charts of the S&P, Nasdaq, and Dow are «overbought» (we hate that useless term).
Choosing from among the three Canadian -
market dividend ETFs traded on the Toronto
Stock Exchange is faster,
easier and safer
than picking individual dividend
stocks.
Although it's never
easy to identify turns in the
market, it appears likely that large - cap
stocks will earn a better return (or at least smaller losses)
than small cap
stocks over the next several years.
Once you get over the bond
market's vocabulary curb, they are
easier to understand
than stocks and require about 1 / 100th the worry and nervous energy to own them.
If that isn't the case and there's no added risk, it's an
easy choice for investors: They'll realize there's a free investment lunch to be had, they'll flock to buy the
stocks involved, the share prices will be bid up and future performance will be no better
than the rest of the
market.
If you do your homework, it is pretty
easy to construct a portfolio with a P / E that is significantly lower
than the overall
market — even sticking to large or mid-cap
stocks that anyone might want to own.
Despite the common - sense idea that yields will have to reverse course at some point and head higher, the experience of the past several years has made it clear that trying to time the turn in bonds is no
easier than trying to time the
stock market.
CC - I read into that piece an implicit admission that the Canadian
market - place is dominated by bank owned brokerages pushing mutual funds (in a scale the American
market - place is not) and it is a much
easier sell to have actively managed portfolios begin to move to some passive investing products rather
than do the hard and long sale of converting actively managed portfolios to passive managed ones lock,
stock and barrel - not to mention trying to ease the minds of the gatekeepers, the IA's, who may view Vanguard's entry in a much less positive light
than the blogging community.
Clearly, calling the bottom of a
market is no
easier for the bond
market than it is for the
stock market.
That is like asking IS THERE ANY
EASIER WAY TO MAKE MONEY
THAN IN THE
STOCK MARKET?..
Forex trading is rapidly becoming more popular
than the traditional
stock market as it has a reputation for being much
easier to navigate and also more accessible.
And with dividend payouts for the broad
stock market now below 2 % and the average domestic -
stock fund's expense ratio more
than 1 %, it's
easy to see how the math can get very ugly very fast for investors in high - cost dividend - focused funds.
There are thousands of foreign
stocks that are traded daily in the various exchanges like Amex, Nasdaq, NYSE and the OTC.NYSE alone has 421 foreign
stocks listed.The OTC
market has many hundreds of foreign
stocks since the listing requirements are far more
easy than NYSE.However in recent months, many top companies of the world have...