Panic said:As Buffet would say "if you are sure about your picks, why invest in something else?"
It's easier to be sure about your picks when you bring in your own management team to run the show!
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Panic said:As Buffet would say "if you are sure about your picks, why invest in something else?"
geoffw said:That's because the index has a lot of stocks, and only a few will go ex on a given day. You will see it if you look at the prices of individual stocks, not on the whole index.
Marty,kissfan said:Hi ya Michael.
Just wondering if you've considered Steve Navras' American fund for your O/S exposure (not sure if it is off the ground yet, but if it isn't, I don't think it is too far away).
Definately not advice, as I know very little re shares/managed funds etc, still trying to learn that.
Regards
Marty
Yes this is true. It's close to dishonest imo.That's a bit of a revelation to me that the All Ords does not includes dividends.
All the managed funds I have seen compare themselves with the index (All Ords, or asx200). I'm pretty they were comparing their growth and distributions against the index.
Most fail to match the index. That means that their performance is way below the index when you take dividends into consideration...
I'll have to double-check, but it changes the picture a bit in regards to the performance of managed funds.
Thanks,
*bump*
How are the funds Peter Spann promoted going?
Theres a new Investor Update coming (but no WA Visit)
It will be very interesting to see how the fund performs during an extended side-ways period - this should theoretically be the sweet-spot for the fund, able to generate trading profits while the market doesn't really achieve much.
I was under the impression that movement was required to generate buy/sell signals in the algorithm it uses?
Assuming this is correct, a volatile yet horizontal trendline market would be it's 'sweet spot'.