EPI: My Pick from All India Focused Funds [View article]
I agree with the first commenter. As a holder of IFN, I have enjoyed the distribution payouts which I reinvest. Will EPI pay-through company dividends, or will the 'managers' use the money to increase the NAV and, thus, their 'management fees'? Comparing the % mgt fee is not in itself a complete comparison, you must also include info regarding distributions.
I am not a fan of mutual funds, and I use country-based closed-end funds only to get exposure to countries where it is difficult to buy shares directly. I want dividends paid through, not retained by the 'manager'.
I just don't get the pessimism. I invested in IFN two years and, of course, have watched the stock price yo-yo up and down. But since I am not a 'growth investor', rather a dividend investor, I have been pleased with the $4.89 and $14.63 per share distributions that I have received the past two years, respectively. So, something which I bought on average for $50 per share has returned to me $19.52 per share, or a return of 39% on my original purchase price. Reinvesting the distributions have purchased an additional 51 shares. What investment in the USA gives such similar returns?
India has a growing domestic economy that is less tied to exporting than other countries (e.g., China) which should insulate it a bit more from the world markets. Yes there is political risk, but where isn't there any?
India Update: Markets Barely In the Positive [View article]
Listen to the blogger who says to short the Indian market. Dump your shares; run for the exits; get out!
That way, guys like me, with patience, can go about our quiet ways, building wealth slowly, surely, on the back of rising domestic demand within India.
EPI: My Pick from All India Focused Funds [View article]
I am not a fan of mutual funds, and I use country-based closed-end funds only to get exposure to countries where it is difficult to buy shares directly. I want dividends paid through, not retained by the 'manager'.
Mumbai Terrorism Clouds Templeton's 'Buy India' Call [View article]
India has a growing domestic economy that is less tied to exporting than other countries (e.g., China) which should insulate it a bit more from the world markets. Yes there is political risk, but where isn't there any?
What am I missing?
Teak
India Update: Markets Barely In the Positive [View article]
That way, guys like me, with patience, can go about our quiet ways, building wealth slowly, surely, on the back of rising domestic demand within India.
Teak