Europe - Stocks (General News)

Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Thu Mar 03, 2016 8:39 am

Quick double-digit gains starting soon in European stocks

by Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

European stocks now pay roughly 3% a year more than 10-year German bonds.


Source: True Wealth Systems

http://thecrux.com/sjuggerud-quick-doub ... an-stocks/
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Tue Mar 08, 2016 9:11 pm

German stocks are stuck in a downtrend… country fund EWG is down nearly 20% in the past year.
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Fri Mar 11, 2016 11:34 am

3 European Stocks to Buy After a New ECB Stimulus

Mario Draghi's stimulus effort may or may not work as intended, but it's apt to help these names

By James Brumley

Source: Investor Place

http://investorplace.com/2016/03/europe ... uI7I5x96M8
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Wed Mar 30, 2016 8:37 pm

Europe Traders Aren't Waiting Around to See If Rebound Holds

by Manisha Jha

Stoxx 600 has been trading in tight range as rally stalled
Traders have withdrawn money from Europe funds for seven weeks

While the Stoxx 600 trades at 14.7 times estimated earnings -- near a one-year low versus the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index -- many traders remain hesitant to invest in European shares.


Source: Bloomberg

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/ ... ound-holds
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Tue May 24, 2016 8:09 pm

Greek stocks surge higher… country fund GREK is up 45% in three months.
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Wed Jun 08, 2016 7:07 pm

European stocks continue to trail their U.S. peers, with outflows of $36 billion so far this year, thanks to elevated risk perception from the looming Brexit referendum.

Source: Bloomberg
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby behappyalways » Tue Jun 14, 2016 4:13 pm

Europe going down: EFA tops after turning on bearish channel resistance. Looks like a 10% downside.

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Bartons- ... 9071478335
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Sun Jun 26, 2016 3:50 pm

15 Euro Stocks That Lost Over 10% to 25% After Brexit Shock

By Paul Ausick and Chris Lange

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

http://247wallst.com/investing/2016/06/ ... z4CfZeGlaf
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Wed Jul 06, 2016 9:17 pm

Now is Probably an Excellent Time to Buy These Stocks

By Alexander Green

Source: Investment U

http://dailytradealert.com/2016/07/06/n ... se-stocks/
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Re: Europe - Stocks

Postby winston » Wed Jul 27, 2016 7:50 pm

The One Secret of the World's Greatest Investors

By Alexander Green


Only a handful of investors beat the market by a substantial margin over the long haul.

Some of them do it by pursuing growth. Others focus on value. But all of them know one big secret.

What is it? I'll give you three hints:

Lord Rothschild said, "The time to buy is when there is blood in the streets."

John Templeton, the man who almost single-handedly pioneered the field of global investing, said the best bargains can be found only "at the point of maximum pessimism."

And Warren Buffett, the most successful investor of our lifetime, said, "Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful."

The best investors have a contrarian spirit. They don't care about the consensus. They draw their own conclusions.

Contrarians understand that fear and greed cause people to push prices too high or too low. So the key is to look at market fluctuations as your friend rather than your enemy.

That way, you can profit from folly rather than participate in it.

How can you tell if something is truly a contrarian investment? There are three primary metrics…

The first is if an asset class has underperformed its long-term average return for a substantial period of time. Another is if valuation metrics show the asset is extraordinarily cheap relative to traditional assessments.

But the third metric is the clincher… When you tell your friends and family what you're buying, they have to scrunch up their faces and say, "But why would you invest in that?"

With these metrics in mind, let me suggest that now is probably an excellent time for long-term investors to buy – egad – European stocks.

On the bases of sales, earnings, book value, and dividends, European stocks were already nearly back to their 2011-2012 crisis lows before the "Brexit" vote.

Since then, they have gotten considerably cheaper.

On the day after the British vote to exit the European Union, the Vanguard FTSE Europe Fund (VGK) plunged 11.3%. That was the worst one-day return in the fund's history.

The next day, it fell another 3%.


Metric 1: The fund has way underperformed its long-term average.

Over the last century, European stocks have returned 10% a year, the same as U.S. stocks.

However, U.S. stocks have outperformed European stocks by 9.8% per year for five years running. In fact, European stocks have lost an average of 0.5% annually over the past decade, according to financial-data provider MSCI.


Metric 2: Are European stocks unequivocally cheap?

Yep. They are 20% cheaper than U.S. stocks on an earnings basis. Also, the S&P 500 currently yields 2%. European stocks yield 3.2%.


Metric 3: Are investors optimistic or pessimistic about Europe right now?

Prepare for a lot of face-scrunching. Most have very little invested there. And those who do – after experiencing a down decade – are wondering whether investing there will ever pay off.

Who says no one rings a bell at the bottom?

Of course, actual market bottoms can only be identified with the luxury of hindsight. And European stocks could certainly go lower in the near term.

But if you have any contrarian blood at all, take a half-position in a European fund like the Vanguard FTSE Europe Fund (VGK). If Old World stocks sell off substantially further, buy the other half.

True contrarians will instinctively recognize the benefit of investing this way. (Higher returns with less risk.) The rest – the great majority of investors – will not put a single penny to work here.

In a speech in 1963, securities analyst Benjamin Graham, Warren Buffett's mentor, said, "In my nearly 50 years of experience in Wall Street I've found that I know less and less about what the stock market is going to do, but I know more and more about what investors ought to do."

Indeed. If Benjamin Graham – the father of value investing – were alive today, one thing is clear: He would be buying the best European stocks.


Source: The Oxford Club
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