Sentences with phrase «more dangerous investment»

The awkward release of BTG makes it a much more dangerous investment than Bitcoin Cash.
I also pointed out why I believe the risk profile on bonds is currently upside down, arguing that for one of the few times in history they may actually be more dangerous an investment than equities.

Not exact matches

While not obvious on the surface, there has been a fundamental sea - change in the investment community that has made the incremental Unicorn investment a substantially more dangerous and complicated practice.
At the time the former seemed a more dangerous risk than the latter — although even then massive overinvestment was China's true vulnerability — but I think by now there is a rapidly developing consensus that investment, and the unsustainable concomitant increase in debt, is China's biggest problem.
A financial adviser or analyst can help you to select appropriate options for investing and, more importantly, to steer you away from dangerous investments.
In my opinion, this recommendation is a dangerous one, because the recommended fund has a different and far more risker investment philosophy than the original fund.
In theory, even if the above factors are in place, you need to be aware that share dealing and working with a stockbroker is a risky business and is more dangerous than purchasing shares through investment funds such as investment trusts.
While splurging can be dangerous, spending extra on the right items or cause is more of an investment.
I'm not generally a fan of insurance companies investing in anything more dangerous than investment grade bonds.
I'm certainly not advocating diving straight into stocks, sectors & markets you know nothing about, but clinging rigidly to your comfort zone may be just as / if not more dangerous for your health — being the best sailor on a ship ain't much use if it's sinking fast in the middle of the Atlantic... Stocks change, valuations change, markets change, economies change — to avoid risk, and to seek opportunity, you need to change also... The more flexible & varied your investment approach — in terms of perspective & analysis — the more you'll stack the deck in your favour.
With these risky investments, anyone can invest, which makes it more dangerous.
Anyway, I might disagree with your whole thesis, regardless — emerging markets are no more dangerous than developed markets: Yes, people always fearfully imagine losing 100 % of their investment in an emerging market — and v rarely that can happen — but they prefer to ignore the fact that in the credit crisis, on their own doorstep, they lost all their home equity, 50 % of their stock portfolio, and the rest was confiscated in taxes & unsustainable future tax / entitleement / debt burdens...
Leaving long - term damage in their wake, storms such as «Super Storm» Sandy in 2012 have rendered some coastal areas more dangerous and less desirable, lowering property values and reigniting intense debate about restoration, new building and investment in the regions.
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