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EWO Forum Topics
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- General Discussion on EWO
- A 360 View of Returns (July 2008) [view article]
- International ETF Update: China, Japan, Austria [view article]
- Publicly Traded Airports: A Useful Benchmark? [view article]
- 31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios [view article]
- Green Commodities for a Complete Green Portfolio [view article]
- Screening ETFs By P/E Ratio is of Little Value to Investors [view article]
- Energy Use Per GDP Unit by Country [view article]
- iShares Austria: Exposure to Rapid Growth in Post-Communist Europe [view article]
- Calendar Year Country Fund Returns: 1997-2007+ [view article]
- Single Country Europe ETFs and Closed-End Funds [view article]
- ETFs: A Screened List [view article]
- Exchange-Traded Funds and Closed-End Funds by Asset Class, Type and Provider [view article]
Recent EWO Articles
- Eastern and Western Europe ETFs Feel the Credit Crunch
- International ETF Update: China, Japan, Austria
- A 360 View of Returns (July 2008)
- 31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios
- Green Commodities for a Complete Green Portfolio
- Emerging & Developed Markets Country Weights
- Energy Use Per GDP Unit by Country
- iShares Austria: Exposure to Rapid Growth in Post-Communist Europe
- Single Country Europe ETFs and Closed-End Funds
- Calendar Year Country Fund Returns: 1997-2007+
- Full List of Articles »
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A 360 View of Returns (July 2008) [view article]
job well done and very easy to follow ReplyInternational ETF Update: China, Japan, Austria [view article]
Every day, in IBD, there is a chart on an ETF. However, the volume on some of these issues is relatively small. Question: Is there a critical point under which it makes no sense to follow a particular ETF? A few days ago, I took a small position in FXI, which generally has large volume and, thus, small bid-ask spread. Comments? ReplyNusbaum
Publicly Traded Airports: A Useful Benchmark? [view article]
I have not looked at the LATAM airports as closely as some others but that might be shortsighted on my part. ReplyInvesting
Publicly Traded Airports: A Useful Benchmark? [view article]
Roger, did you look at all of the Mexican airport operators? PAC, ASR, and OMAB. I wrote a pitch for PAC where I saw prominent inverse correlation between oil and the stock price. So you may have to only look at smoother long term data to find a better correlation between the stock price of the airport operator and the GDP growth. ReplyA 360 View of Returns (July 2008) [view article]
Finally, a universal overview that gives the reader direction for areas to research for future investment. Great job! ReplyA 360 View of Returns (July 2008) [view article]
Thank you, very helpful. Replying
A 360 View of Returns (July 2008) [view article]
very good job Richard, it gives a sectoral - global view, I learned a lot with the summary! Challenging times Reply31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios [view article]
The data here is for the country indices and not for the ETFs. The ETFs are provided as investable proxies for the countries.The data is only available by subscription to various services which are quite expensive, in the thousands. Reply
31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios [view article]
Where can I find up-to-date country P/E (ttm) data? Also, is it possible to calculate the P/E ratio for each country's index rather than using a corresponding ETF?Thanks. Reply
Green Commodities for a Complete Green Portfolio [view article]
Forthose interested in the solar storage problem that keeps solarfrom being truly viable...a solution may be at hand..www.sciencedaily.com/r... Reply
31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios [view article]
Hopefully things will calm down in Turkey; things haven't looked good politically or socially for some time now.If you're think about taking a risk with the fund (which is performing quite well right now) here's an article that gives TUR some support-- www.greenfaucet.com/et... Reply31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios [view article]
Growth is in USD Reply31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios [view article]
Are the growth rates for PEG in USD or local currencies? Reply31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios [view article]
Are the growth rates for PEG ratio in USD or local currencies? Reply31 Country P/E and PEG Ratios [view article]
rudi,Good catch!. Sorry about that.
Germany has an estimated 2008 P/E of 10.9, not 1.9.
We have corrected the data on our site and have requested an image substitution at Seeking Alpha which will likely be done soon.
Corrected data: www.qvmgroup.com/inves...
The P/E correction dramatically changed the calculated PEG to over 20.
Germany is in an earnings growth slump in 2008 that is estimated to be only about 1/2% which with a 10+ P/E gives a PEG over 20..
We added Thailand since we were modifying the table anyway to fix the typing error you found.
Note that the PEGs in this articles are based on 2008 earnings and 2008 earnings growth. For many countries 2008 earnings and earnings growth is shaping up to be quite different than 2007 or projections for subsequent years.
The data comes from Thomson One Analytics.
Thanks again for a sharp eye.
Richard Reply