If you get in on a
great investing opportunityearly on, before most other
people see its full potential, it will often make you rich.
That's the opportunity that's available from
international stocksright now.
Combing the world for great investments
Global investing certainly isn't a new phenomenon. Yet
although investors have been able to buy stocks from around
the world for decades now, the availability and ease of
buying international assets has led to a surge in demand.
In response to this phenomenon, many financial
institutions have taken steps to position themselves better
on the international-investing bandwagon. Although the
approaches that these institutions are using to attract
attention differ, they all share the same goal: increasing
interest in global financial markets.
Longleaf kills a hedge
When it comes to mutual funds that specialize in
international value stocks, it's hard to find a fund with a
better long-term track record than
Longleaf Partners International (LLINX). Over
the past decade, the fund, which includes both foreign
companies as well as U.S. stocks like
Yum! Brands (NYSE: YUM) and
Dell (Nasdaq: DELL), has earned an average
annual return of nearly 7%, beating its benchmark by over
four percentage points and putting the fund among the top 4%
in the international value category.
What many found problematic with the Longleaf fund had
nothing to do with the fund or its investments. After all,
holdings like
Fairfax Financial (NYSE: FFH), Yum! Brands,
and
Ingersoll-Rand (NYSE: IR) have held up fairly
well since
last fall's big market slide.
Rather, what has held some investors back is the fund's
practice of hedging against currency exposure. When the
dollar's value changes compared to a foreign currency, the
value of foreign stocks changes in dollar terms. Most funds
simply pass on those fluctuations in their daily fund prices.
But Longleaf used hedging techniques to avoid currency
impact, choosing instead to focus on finding stocks that
would appreciate not just against the U.S. dollar but in
local-currency terms as well.
Hedging works well when the dollar is strong, but holds
back returns when the dollar is weak. That may have motivated
the fund's decision to end its hedging practices. That will
leave shareholders more vulnerable to a stronger dollar, but
if the currency's prospects prove
as bleak as many expect, then investors will benefit from
the decision.
Kicking up allocations
On a less esoteric note, institutional investors are
coming around to the idea that international stocks deserve a
bigger amount of your portfolio's assets than they've
traditionally received. Fund giant Fidelity has decided to up
the amount of international stocks it includes among some of
its
asset-allocation funds.
For instance, look at Fidelity's Freedom 2050 fund. As
part of Fidelity's target retirement series, this is the
longest-dated fund Fidelity offers. Currently, it divides
investors' money among domestic and foreign stocks, with 70%
going to domestic stock funds and 20% to international
funds. Continued... |