Gripes over lack of wage growth in the US are misplaced as most investors have failed to differentiate average wages from total wages. Brian Wesbury from First Trust Advisors explains the difference.
Although markets have come a long way from their crisis lows, markets feel as schizophrenic as ever, with investors agitated by rate rises and political concerns, says Jamie Hooper, manager of the AXA Framlington UK Growth fund.
Chris Kitchenham, director at Walker Crips Stockbrokers, explains why he prefers closed ended funds for accessing frontier markets
The market is pricing disinflation in to longer-dated government bonds, and rather than causing concern, this trend will be positive for markets, argues John Stopford, co-head of Investec Asset Management's multi-asset team.
For several years investors have looked at energy stocks through the spectrum of the US shale gas revolution. But the ISIS insurgency threatening Iraq is providing a reminder that oil security is a real concern, explains Guinness Global Energy manager...
Shareholders are pushing for corporate investment to spur topline growth. But poorly invested cash could pose a risk to markets, explains Neuberger Berman US manager Charles Kantor.
Investors concerned that Japan's economic revival has run out of steam should look to the emergence of corporate capex and wage rises for hope, explains SuMi Trust's Genzo Kimura.
Sectors are less relevant than they used to be as wealth managers focus on client goals, Rayner Spencer Mills' Geoff Mills tells Laura Dew.
India's new prime minister is "bold and decisive", but investors should not underestimate the deep rooted problems the economy faces, explains Roderick Snell, manager of the Baillie Gifford Pacific fund.