Tune in today to watch the latest Closing Bell podcast with Murray Dawes. We discuss gold, oil, real estate…plus a stock to watch. Tune in now!
Explore Small Cap Opportunities on the ASX
Of the approximately 2,000 companies listed on ASX, just over 1,400 – or 70% – are below $200 million in market capitalisation. 867 of these 1,400 stocks have a market capitalisation below $50 million.
But while small caps comprise the majority of the ASX, it is the bigger names that get most of the market’s attention. Names like BHP Billiton, Telstra, Commonwealth Bank, Woolworths, Wesfarmers – the list is long.
These big companies are popular with most investors. And, in a good year, they can see strong gains, sometimes between 20% or 30%.
But what the average investor doesn’t realise is that some of the most exciting, interesting, and world-leading stocks with potential for large returns are frequently found more often in the small cap sector
The famous yield curve: buy or sell signal? You decide…
Here’s a warning:
My colleague Greg Canavan thinks we’re in a budding bear market.
I don’t.
In fact, I see a lot of reasons why markets can keep climbing the fabled wall of worry.
Today’s Fat Tail Daily will explain, in part, as to why.
How Australians voted for a great wealth redistribution
Australians recently voted back a stronger ALP government. Amidst the excitement that this could bring more cohesion and stability, do Australians know what they actually voted for? Are they prepared for what’s to come?
The share market bears have no answer to this…
I came across a handy bit of info from Wilson Asset Management yesterday.
Wilson says that there’s strong demand for Chinese assets despite the recent volatility and trade tensions.
Why do we care?
There could be profit in this.
The method in Trump’s tariff madness
Trump is pursuing a twenty-first-century version of what was originally known as the American System. A system that made America great in the first place.
The first place to look thanks to the US/China truce
My colleague Greg Canavan, a true contrarian, is positioning in a spread of energy companies to take advantage of the very investor disinterest and lack of supply growth I just described.
We know, too, that one of Warren Buffett’s last moves was to load up on American energy.
Personally, I prefer something more durable and permanent…