Commodity price falls good for would-be lithium and copper players
Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) are a useful way to gain long-term exposure to copper and lithium. Best of all, it’s a diversified play that helps you avoid bad stock picking!
Tony is a former managing editor of BRW, Shares, Personal Investor, Asset and CFO magazines. He specialises in small listed companies, IPOs, entrepreneurship and innovation and writes a weekly blog for The Sydney Morning Herald/The Age on small companies and entrepreneurs.
Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) are a useful way to gain long-term exposure to copper and lithium. Best of all, it’s a diversified play that helps you avoid bad stock picking!
Anyone who has heard Gerry Harvey rail against his online rivals knows the great retailer thinks analysts are crazy liking these digital darlings of the market, but Tony Featherstone says although Kogan.com and Temple & Webster have rallied in the past month, their latest earnings results suggest further gains can be sustained, albeit at a slower pace from here. I hope Gerry doesn’t read this!
Wait for a pullback before targeting online marketplace highflyers – but in the meantime, here are three emerging portal stocks to consider that could pay to play with their share prices under pressure.
My goal is to identify ETFs that have been hugely out-of-favour in the past 12 months and ideally over the last three years. Here are two ETFs that suit contrarian investors who understand the risks of investing in deeply out-of-favour sectors, who have patience and a higher risk tolerance, knowing that further short-term price volatility and losses are possible.
In a week when market negativity might be rattling investors, Tony Featherstone wisely advises to focus on company fundamentals and valuations, not market sentiment.
It’s an interesting exercise to look at sectors dominated by a stock heavyweight, and search for value in peer stocks not attracting passive capital. The A-REIT sector is a good place to start. Here are two small-cap A-REITs to consider.
Leading listed investment companies AFIC and Argo are trading at unusually large discounts to their net tangible assets (NTA).
Our commitment to the Internet, our laptops, smartphones and online shopping means providers of software behind online retailing and e-commerce look like a potentially rewarding long-term play.
I favour the Listed Investment Company (LIC) market for equity yield and here are three undervalued LICs with attractive franked yield.
With Australian bank stocks mostly fully valued, offshore banks appeal.
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