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DXJ Forum Topics
- All Comments on DXJ
- General Discussion on DXJ
- Global P&E Ratios and Dividend Yields [view article]
- International ETF Update: Japan, China, Australia [view article]
- International Dividend ETFs [view article]
- Calendar Year Country Fund Returns: 1997-2007+ [view article]
- Single Country Asia ETFs, ETNs and Closed-End Funds [view article]
- Is This Japan Circa 1992? [view article]
- A List of Dividend ETFs [view article]
- Citigroup: Asian Markets Not Less Vulnerable To Global Credit Crunch Than In 1998 [view article]
- 26 Dividend Paying ETFs By Yield [view article]
- Japan: A lot of Idle Cash 'Gradually' Flowing into Stocks [view article]
- Morningstar: "Think Twice Before Betting On Japan Funds" [view article]
Recent DXJ Articles
- Global P&E Ratios and Dividend Yields
- International ETF Update: Japan, China, Australia
- Calendar Year Country Fund Returns: 1997-2007+
- Expiring Tax Exemptions May Increase Japan's Reputational Risk
- Is This Japan Circa 1992?
- Japan Debates Its Own Sovereign Wealth Fund
- James Grant: Japanese Stocks Are Cheaper Than Ever!
- Morgan Stanley: Be Prepared for Dual U.S./Japan Recession
- Are There Any Screaming Buys in Japan?
- Morgan Stanley's Tips on Japanese Options Strategies
- Full List of Articles »
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Global P&E Ratios and Dividend Yields [view article]
Are the P/E's in Europe low because people think the Euro is overvalued? ReplyGlobal P&E Ratios and Dividend Yields [view article]
Aberdeen Australia fund (IAF), even with the potential of a distribution drop will still be yielding about 8-9% IMO and is an excellent vehicle for participation in Asian growth. ReplyGlobal P&E Ratios and Dividend Yields [view article]
AOD with 17% interest is full of fine quality European stocks. It is a relatively new ETF and untested, but they have managed to pay excellent rates without resorting to Auction Rate Securities. ReplyInternational ETF Update: Japan, China, Australia [view article]
The biggest problem we face in this country is ignorant idiots who can't spell "bigot." ReplyInternational ETF Update: Japan, China, Australia [view article]
The biggest problem wwe face in this country is ignorant biggots like you. ReplyInternational ETF Update: Japan, China, Australia [view article]
The way to play the decline in FXI is ProShares FXP. It is my judgment that FXI is headed to $60, down from the 120-130 range during the next month. FXP is headed to $200. (FXP is 2:1 inverse of FXI)The bubble has burst in China... Europe, Asia and USA are all heading to a slowdown that popped the bubble. I expect the people are beginning to feel like Japan in 1990 when their market began declining from a high of 40,000 and went down to 10,000 over very long period before finally going back to 20,000 and now back to 13,000. The China markets are down 60% so far, but have not seen anything yet.
Can you imagine all the bad luck that China has faced this year?
Worst Blizzard in 50 years
Worst Earthquake in 54 years
Worst flooding in ___ years
Highest Fuel prices ever, Plane fares ^^^ higher
The earthquake has affected the preparations for the Olympics, reducing profit potential.
Olympics will be a huge disaster, very hot and muggy. Taxis will be tangled in huge traffic jams, tourist will hate it.
Just learned that there is a problem of Algae in waterways planned for Olympic boating events. 10,000 workers are now clearing the river.
Also learned they are expecting locust, 35,000 workers from Outer Mongolia have been hired to try to do something about the problem. How do you fix this?
I wonder if the Chinese are beginning to feel like ancient Egypt when Moses asked the Pharaoh to "Let my People Go." The Nile filled with blood, fish died and began to stink and they had to dig wells as the water was too bad to drink, then came frogs, gnats, flies, livestock died, they all got boils, hail storms, locust, total darkness for 3 days and then death of firstborn?
I WISH THIS KIND OF BAD LUCK WOULD GO ON OPEC's HEADS DUE TO THEIR CONSPIRACY TO DESTROY THE WESTERN WORLD'S ECONOMIES. I REALLY BELIEVE THAT IS THEIR GOAL.
ARABS/MUSLIMS COULD NOT DEFEAT US WITH 9/11 OR MILITARILY, BUT THEY CAN BREAK OUR ECONOMIES AND BANKRUPT THE USA. SOUND IMPOSSIBLE? THINK ABOUT WHAT WILL HAPPEN WHEN WE RAISE TAXES TO PAY FOR GLOBAL WARMING AND TO TAKE ALL THE WEALTH FROM THE RICH WHEN WE ELECT OBAMA PRESIDENT. WOW, THAT SCARES ME REALLY BAD. WE COULD NOT MAKE IT ANY EASIER FOR OPEC THAN TO ELECT HUSANE OBAMA PRESIDENT. WHAT TO DO? Reply
International ETF Update: Japan, China, Australia [view article]
thank you for the symbols of a few ETFs I did not know about. ReplyInternational Dividend ETFs [view article]
State Street has a new one - DWXIf nothing else it's interesting because it has a 25% cap on sector (financials, anyone?) and has 10% (capped) emerging market exposure. Reply
ocks
Calendar Year Country Fund Returns: 1997-2007+ [view article]
The Swiss ETF - EWL seems to always an average performer.Others like EWG,EWD are probably better bets. ReplyJackson
Single Country Asia ETFs, ETNs and Closed-End Funds [view article]
Thanks ETFlover -- we've added in the Thailand ETF.We've also added the new China NETS ETF from Northern Trust. There's an article comparing it to the other China ETFs here:
seekingalpha.com/artic... Reply
Single Country Asia ETFs, ETNs and Closed-End Funds [view article]
iShares MSCI Thailand Index Fund THD should be in Thailand Section. ReplyJackson
Single Country Asia ETFs, ETNs and Closed-End Funds [view article]
Update: we just added the NETS (Northern Trust Exchange-Traded Shares) S&P/ASX 200 Index Fund (AUS) to the list, which covers Australian stocks.Index Universe explains that "the NETS family takes a slightly different approach to country investing than the iShares – Northern Trust has opted to use locally favored indexes in many cases, while iShares, the main existing provider of country-specific ETFs, tends to use MSCI’s country indexes, which are favored by institutional investors." Reply
Editors
General Discussion on DXJ
Is this a buy or a sell? ReplyTiedeman
Is This Japan Circa 1992? [view article]
Our problems are bad, but disinflation does not actually appear to really be one of them at the moment. ReplyIs This Japan Circa 1992? [view article]
but against a basket of major trading partner currencies, you could say that is pretty close. there is no carry trade in the usd. that would be the worst trade. the best, of course, is export commodities priced in the usd. Reply