Yes, long - term, stock returns should likely far exceed
your net currency returns.
Not exact matches
That was particularly dramatic in 2015, when US and international equities posted only modest
returns in their native
currencies but
netted close to 20 % for Canadians on the strength of the
currency appreciation.
«What should matter most for international investors are the real (
net of the foreign country's inflation)
currency returns and not nominal
returns.»
We see little reason to expect a sustained long - term trend to
net returns from exchange rate movements for the widely diversified set of
currencies associated with the Fund's equity holdings.
They focus on
net fund alphas, meaning after - fee
returns in excess of the risk - free rate, adjusted for exposures to three kinds of risk factors well known at the start of the sample period: (1) traditional equity market, bond market and credit factors; (2) dynamic stock size, stock value, stock momentum and
currency carry factors; and, (3) a volatility factor specified as monthly
returns from buying one - month, at ‐ the ‐ money S&P 500 Index calls and puts and holding to expiration.