Market
turmoil this week was caused in large part by President Trump’s additional
tariff announcement, followed quickly by China’s announcement that it was
officially terminating all purchases of US agricultural products. The loss of sales to China was called
“devastating”, “crippling”, and “a very big deal” by agricultural experts. So how big is the Chinese market for US ag
exports? Big, but surprisingly not the
biggest, or even second biggest – it is (or was!) the fourth largest market for
US ag exports last year, as shown in this chart from CNBC.
Womack Weekly Commentary September 18, 2017 The Markets “In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice, in practice there is.” Yogi Berra was talking about baseball, but the concept also applies to diversification, according to the GMO White Paper, The S&P 500: Just Say No . From the title, you might think the authors – Matt Kadnar and James Montier – don’t like U.S. stocks. They do: “Being a U.S. equity investor over the past several years has felt glorious. The S&P 500 has trounced the competition provided by other major developed and emerging equity markets. Over the last 7 years, the S&P is up 173 percent (15 percent annualized in nominal terms) versus MSCI EAFE (in USD terms), which is up 71 percent (8 percent annualized), and poor MSCI Emerging, which is up only 30 percent (4 percent annualized). Every dollar invested in the S&P has compounded into $2.72 versus MSCI EAFE’s $1.70 and MSCI Emerging’s $1.30.” The au
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