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- Farming as a Path to Financial Planning (Part 2) - Editor, 21 January 2008 - No Comments yet
- Brazil Revisited as a Top Stock Investment Destination (Part 1) - Editor, 18 January 2008 - No Comments yet
- Brazil Revisited as a Top Stock Investment Destination (Part 2) - Editor, 18 January 2008 - No Comments yet
- What International Politics Means for Stock Investment (Part 1) - Editor, 17 January 2008 - No Comments yet
- What International Politics Means for Stock Investment (Part 2) - Editor, 17 January 2008 - No Comments yet
- Has the Vietnam Stock Market Come of Age? (Part 1) - Editor, 16 January 2008 - No Comments yet
- Has the Vietnam Stock Market Come of Age? (Part 2) - Editor, 16 January 2008 - No Comments yet
Farming as a Path to Financial Planning (Part 1)
Farming is an inherited vocation in many parts of the world, but it need not be so in the United States. Anyone may grow crops, or manage farms on owned or rented land. You can do any of this on a small patch of land, or have stocks in plantations that stretch further than the eye can see! Grains, fruits, flowers, raw material for clothing, and all colors and textures of meat and other dairy products, are amongst the virtually unending choices of what you may grow.
International stock investment is the Mantra of financial planning today. Private equity and large banks have made more money in emerging markets than in their home bases during the recent past. It is time for retail stock investors to follow, though this is a major challenge for the traditional stock market circuit. The classic stock exchange structure has been oriented towards domestic and national stock investors, yielding space gradually to foreign financial institutions and to sources of private equity. This is set to change, with stock investing taking international hues in the modern era.
Brazil Revisited as a Top Stock Investment Destination (Part 1)
European Support for Brazilian Stocks
Historical links between modern Brazil and Europe are well established facts, but Spain and Portugal have been special in their financial investments and infrastructural support for the Brazilian economy and the stock market in local times. Therefore, the global appreciation of the Euro has important long term implications for Brazil’s stock exchange development. The benefits are mutual since the European Union can take heart from the fact that Brazil is now the 11th largest economy in the world, the third biggest west of Greenwich, besides the leader of all South America. The country’s real is also an appropriate and reliable currency for stock investment from other parts of the world.
A US Presidential campaign brings stock market and governance links to the fore. Patterns of campaign donations provide glaring evidence of how a stock exchange is driven. Candidates make promises about policies they will implement on winning, and investors can use these leads to predict future stock price trends. Other countries and forms of governance also have their own links between stock market sentiment and politics.
What International Politics Means for Stock Investment (Part 1)
Spatial Strength for the Top Stock Picks
What can we learn from corporations that succeed consistently in all kinds of political environments? Protection of proprietary know-how in home countries, excellence in liaison, decentralization of marketing, and strategic sourcing, are the four pillars of sustained success in global business. Companies that ignore these sources of strategic strength are likely to flounder in unfamiliar business conditions, and will be failures when foreign governments change abruptly.
Do Vietnamese stocks deserve your attention? This engaging country lacks the gargantuan sizes of India and China, but its average 8% GDP growth deserves careful consideration. Cheap labor and a sound agricultural base have always attracted envious foreign attention in Vietnam, so it could be time to divert some part of portfolios to the local stock exchange. It has been many months since this web site last reflected on the positives of the Vietnam stock market, and the recent instability of some first world markets indicates that it may be time to consider Vietnamese stocks afresh.
Has the Vietnam Stock Market Come of Age? (Part 1)
Discordant Notes for Private Equity
It would be unrealistic to indulge in unqualified optimism in the promotion of Vietnamese stock investment. Bureaucracy and the political establishment in Hanoi have not moved as decisively as in New Delhi or Beijing, so the country persists with business practices that would make global stock investors uncomfortable.
Recent Videos
- Video: Insight, Outlook For Recession Concerns & Equity Strategy; Impact Of Crude Prices On Equities; Impact Of Commodities Slump - Friday 5 September 2008, 7:11 am
- Video: Insight, Outlook For U.S. Economy; Annual Ambrosetti Workshop; The Global Stocks Slide - Friday 5 September 2008, 6:43 am
- Video: McCain Vows To Change Washington; Tropical Storm Hanna Heads To U.S. - Friday 5 September 2008, 6:21 am
- Video: Insight, Outlook For Currency Strategy - Friday 5 September 2008, 6:12 am
- Video: EDF Closer To Buying British Energy; Brown Signals;Tata Considering Steel Asset; U.S. Faces Flat Growth - Friday 5 September 2008, 6:07 am
Recent Articles
- Google’s Chrome Aims for Share of Internet Browser Market - Editor, Wednesday 3 September 2008
- Markets in Financial Instruments Directive - Editor, Tuesday 2 September 2008
- LSE Faces Increasing Competition in Pan-European Market - Editor, Monday 1 September 2008
- When Does a Dead Cat Bounce? - Editor, Friday 29 August 2008
- Increase in De-listings and Decrease in IPOs Cuts into Revenue of U.S. Exchanges - Editor, Thursday 28 August 2008
Recent Comments
- 29 April 2008, 03:23 am: By Dhan - Take This Financial Planning Gift Horse...
- 25 April 2008, 12:58 am: By asiaconsult - The ‘No Comment’ Clue to Mortgage...
- 24 April 2008, 02:21 am: By Investa - How Your Financial Planning Can Benefit...
- 23 April 2008, 04:56 am: By Mint - A Stock on Which You Can Bank










