I think anyone who believes they can outrun this deflation by having their money 'leave town' is going to be in for a rude surprise. Collapsing money supply and collapsing consumption are going to radically change the relative value of commodities producers.
"Where it's at" doesn't mean investable. As he says, you need some stocks to buy. His Templeton EM fund has about 7% in frontier markets from the last published numbers - not enough to make a difference. His dedicated frontier markets fund is worth a not very staggering $13 million. Vietnam, Nigeria, Egypt and Qatar are his biggest holdings.
There are investments out there but liquidity is an issue. Staying away from hot money is another one.
Frontier Markets are still an ETF play for the retail investor (imo), there are a couple about, my main worry with any of them is lack of liquidity. But it also comes down to your definition of Emerging & Frontier. Lots of people talk about Middle East as being frontier, but I woiuld be more happy with money parked there than South Africa right now (example)
On Sep 25 05:41 AM chap08 wrote:
> "Where it's at" doesn't mean investable. As he says, you need some > stocks to buy. His Templeton EM fund has about 7% in frontier markets > from the last published numbers - not enough to make a difference. > His dedicated frontier markets fund is worth a not very staggering > $13 million. Vietnam, Nigeria, Egypt and Qatar are his biggest holdings. > > > There are investments out there but liquidity is an issue. Staying > away from hot money is another one.
Hey Jamup--that's the goal of this leftist-elitist de-development crowd. They ache to turn the United States into a 3rd world cess-pool. And by golly they're well on their way.
Trying to learn holdings of FRN, went to ETFConnect. The site has disappeared and does not answer questions in its new format. BRING BACK ETFConnect!!!!
This article has 8 comments:
There are investments out there but liquidity is an issue. Staying away from hot money is another one.
But it also comes down to your definition of Emerging & Frontier. Lots of people talk about Middle East as being frontier, but I woiuld be more happy with money parked there than South Africa right now (example)
On Sep 25 05:41 AM chap08 wrote:
> "Where it's at" doesn't mean investable. As he says, you need some
> stocks to buy. His Templeton EM fund has about 7% in frontier markets
> from the last published numbers - not enough to make a difference.
> His dedicated frontier markets fund is worth a not very staggering
> $13 million. Vietnam, Nigeria, Egypt and Qatar are his biggest holdings.
>
>
> There are investments out there but liquidity is an issue. Staying
> away from hot money is another one.
Fundamentals are improving, that's the real good news