|
|
|
|
|
by anotherman554
1094 days ago
|
|
Since 2018 U.S. stocks have returned 9.59% per year (I checked with Portfolio Visualizer) and international stocks have returns 1.83%. I don't see how that supports the idea that economies are very interconnected and investing outside the country can't produce a large return differential. We also haven't had a official recession in the U.S. over that time period, I believe, so the topic of recession seems like a red herring. |
|
Right, so there's your 8% per year upside risk. So during US recessions, do international stocks provide a differential return against US stocks that is high enough to support that 8% yearly upside risk?
(And, even if they do, now it's a matter of timing the market...)
> I don't see how that supports the idea that economies are very interconnected and investing outside the country can't produce a large return differential.
I didn't say it wouldn't provide any differential. I implied that that differential will either always be negative or positive but small enough that it's not worth moving.
Or, in other words, US or European recessions would equally tank foreign investments dependent on US or European consumers. Of course these markets would be somewhat resistant based on the strength of their own local economies, but are those economies strong enough to provide solid returns through a US or European recession? And if they are, is the differential high enough to risk the 8% yearly upside during non-recessions?