The Wealth Enterprise Briefing
For most of the past 15 years, the case for investing outside the U.S. was a difficult one to make. American equity markets, driven by technology and the mega-cap boom, outperformed international developed markets by a wide margin. But something has been shifting, and the question now is whether it represents a durable change or a temporary detour. In the latest episode of The Wealth Enterprise Briefing, Managing Partner Michael Zeuner [https://www.wefamilyoffices.com/team/michael-zeuner/] and Senior Investment Manager Sam Sudame [https://www.wefamilyoffices.com/team/sam-sudame-cfa-caia-cfp/] examine the building blocks behind international developed market performance and what they suggest for long-term investors weighing global diversification. They discuss: * Why post-2010 underperformance of international developed equities had structural explanations, and what has changed in those underlying drivers. * How Europe's two major growth cylinders (infrastructure and defense) are setting up a different earnings picture than the one that defined the last 15 years. * Why Japan is positioned to benefit from the same AI and reindustrialization themes driving U.S. markets, and what its corporate reform story adds to the return potential. * What the composition difference between EFA and the S&P 500 reveals about how these markets complement rather than compete with each other. * Why the active management opportunity in international markets may be larger than most U.S.-focused investors appreciate. * How currency cycles factor into the return equation, and why the dollar's recent trajectory may be relevant to how international exposure is sized going forward. If you'd like to discuss how international developed markets fit within your portfolio strategy, please be in touch [https://www.wefamilyoffices.com/contact-family-offices/]. Important Information: The Wealth Enterprise Briefing contains our current opinions and commentary, which are subject to change without notice. The Briefing is distributed for informational and educational purposes only and does not consider the specific investment objective, financial situation or particular needs of any recipient. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources we believe to be reliable, but we do not guarantee its completeness or accuracy. The information in the Briefing is not a recommendation of any security, and should not be relied upon as investment, legal or tax advice. Please consult with your investment, legal and tax advisors regarding any implications of the information presented in this presentation.
87 Folgen
Kommentare
0Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert
Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der The Wealth Enterprise Briefing-Community!