Possibly more than ever before, smart stock investing requires a clear and wide forward view. If you don't have an undeniable road map for where your chosen companies are headed, you must dig deeper and you need to do it right now. Specifically, if the companies that you have chosen to invest in don't have a declared international focus, you must be certain of why that is and if it's appropriate.
Barring some unforeseen worldwide economic crash, which is in fact extremely possible, the fact sheet on investing these days is headed with the word global. If your portfolio is not thoroughly salted with companies that do business on a worldwide scale, then your portfolio is scheduled to wither and wane over the next three to five years. Global diversity is essential right now, and will continue to be a requirement from here on out.
It's my opinion that one of the most important criteria these days for successful portfolio building is to create a portfolio footprint that covers at least three different countries. If you have the funds to spread out and you're a fan of diversity, just for safety I suggest that you base your portfolio across five to seven countries. I would suggest the following research focuses as a sample to get your global thinking started.
Consider China for heavy manufacturing, machinery, electronics manufacturing, and a range of consumer goods. I'd be shy of putting any money over there at the moment, however, because to me their stock market is currently overinflated in value.
Consider France, Italy, and the U.K. for high-end consumer goods, fashion, medical research, pharmaceutical, and specialized personal products for beauty, home, and health.
Watch Japan, Korea, and Hong Kong for cutting-edge electronics, automobiles, automotive parts, technology development, miniaturization, data systems, computers, specialized manufacturing, tools, and equipment.
Textile, fabric, and garments are involved over the entire globe. Fashion, trending, and new developments will always carry you through those sectors.
Pay attention to India for overall explosive growth.
Keep a close watch on the latest developments with the former Soviet Union. Something very big will be breaking loose with them very soon in regard to their participation in the global marketplace. I personally would remain very stringent with any involvement in Russian interests because, remember that they are after all, still communist.
Those are some leads I would suggest to get you going on a global portfolio profile. To me, the best situations right now are American-owned companies with heavy involvement abroad. Keeping some money invested in warehousing, transportation, and logistics can provide a substantial base to work from, and holding some interest in the import/export wholesalers can help to keep your portfolio stable while hopefully growing.
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-08-2007 @ 1:02PM
Steve said...
I think it is amazing the value of Chinese stocks on the Shangai exchange, compared to Hong Kong. There is a 200 to 300% difference in P/E ratios.
Global Trading Platforms are also important in acessing these markets.
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