International Markets On Sale
In case you haven’t noticed, international markets are having a good summer sale right now. In just three months, Vanguard FTSE All World ex US Index Fund (VFWIX or VEU) is down 20% while the S&P 500 is only down by 11%.
The sale on emerging markets is even better. Vanguard Emerging Markets Index Fund (VEIEX or VWO) is marked down by 24% in the last 3 months.
As usual, because I’m now low on international funds, I got myself some good treats from this sale. I hope there are bigger sales in the fall and the Christmas shopping season.
Software picked, likely related posts:
- Is It a Buying Opportunity Yet?
- Subprime Induced Correction Is Over
- Friday Reading: Low Inflation for 10 Years?
Comments
3 Comments on International Markets On Sale
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arvind on August 20, 2008
But is the logic “The market will eventually have to come back up” always a good one? For instance, that logic would have backfired if we had bet on Nasdaq when it was down 20% from its late 90s highs or on Asian markets when they started to go down and eventually crashed.
I am wondering if something like the “Matt Blackman” trading strategy should be used to see if indeed there is a high probability the market will eventuall come back up?
The strategy specified in Wikipedia is “Matt Blackman has examined a trading strategy using P/E ratio involving staying out of the market when P/E’s 2 year SMA falls below 5 year SMA. It resulted in capturing 91% of the gain by staying in the market for only 42% of the time.”
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indexfundfan on August 20, 2008
The fall in EAFE has kept me busy with tax-loss harvesting. I now have enough losses to offset my income for the next several years (assuming I do not have capital gains). This is one ‘benefit’ of a bear market. LOL.
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TFB on August 20, 2008
arvind – I don’t know where the market is going. I don’t subscribe to any “system” which attempts to forecast where the market is going either. Because I have to buy something, I buy whatever I’m low on. See previous post Rebalance With New Cash.
indexfundfan – If only they remove that $3,000/year limit on income offset!
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