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- 10 August 2008
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Business spectator had a piece the other day on the strangeness of investing in
index funds...i know a fund that buys based on something other than value.
The author of that article runs a listed fund, CAM, which has underperformed the index (and index funds) by double digits since listing... so I would take any arguments he makes about index funds with a grain of salt
Well I just purchased stw using all my savings. However I am still worried about what happens to the ETF if the comany goes broke. I've read the PDS for the fund and I don't recall seing the word trust fund anywhere. Can someone with experience please answer this question?
Thanks
Hi,
First post. I've also been accumulating STW over the past few months, attracted by the instant diversification and dividend yield. However I've just discovered that the final dividend will only be 74 cents per unit. That's only 2% and around 5 % for the year. Am I missing something because everywhere I read that the dividend yield should be around 10%!
Thanks
Hi,
First post. I've also been accumulating STW over the past few months, attracted by the instant diversification and dividend yield. However I've just discovered that the final dividend will only be 74 cents per unit. That's only 2% and around 5 % for the year. Am I missing something because everywhere I read that the dividend yield should be around 10%!
Thanks
If I was to have a holding of 2000 of these STW, is it possible to buy a put option with a strike price close to the current price with a long expiry date? to enable me to have "insurance" against a massive drop? I was checking the options market and there does not seem to be much trade in STW options. I know there is XJO but I cannot use the STW as collateral with the ACH can I?
If I was to have a holding of 2000 of these STW, is it possible to buy a put option with a strike price close to the current price with a long expiry date? to enable me to have "insurance" against a massive drop? I was checking the options market and there does not seem to be much trade in STW options. I know there is XJO but I cannot use the STW as collateral with the ACH can I?
25% in U.S. stocks, to provide a strong return during times of prosperity. For this portion of the portfolio, Browne recommends a basic S&P 500 index fund such as VFINX or FSKMX.
25% in long-term U.S. Treasury bonds, which do well during prosperity and during deflation (but which do poorly during other economic cycles).
25% in cash in order to hedge against periods of “tight money” or recession. In this case, “cash” means a money-market fund. (Note that our current recession is abnormal because money actually isn’t tight ”” interest rates are very low.)
25% in precious metals (gold, specifically) in order to provide protection during periods of inflation. Browne recommends gold bullion coins.
To those that hold STW
Whats the benefit in holding STW (ASX200) to holding something like Vanguards VAS (ASX300)?
The MER for Vanguards fund seems less and they pay dividends more frequently (quarterly as apposed to bi-annually).
Also, do you look at any alternatives to the fund such as passive index investors do with poorly correlated investments?
i.e. something such as (example only) Harry Brownes Perfect Portfolio
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