Word: indexed
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Despite the news, the Nikkei index slipped only slightly Wednesday because the Japanese Diet looked to be making some progress -- albeit slow and circuitous -- toward a critical compromise on banking reform. The ruling Liberal Democratic Party favors maintaining a fairly generous state-sponsored bank rescue plan, while opposition parties (and the West) want to let weak banks and the enterprises they support perish. Somewhere in the middle may be a viable bill, and the latest round of failures may be enough to spur even the often listless LDP to get economic reform out of the hemming-and-hawing phase...
...most unusual feature is that each fund has an index component designed to match its benchmark--the S&P 500, Russell 3000 or some other. The index portion can run as high as 80% of the fund. Manager picks make up the rest of the portfolio. The funds hold virtually no cash. This unusual approach ensures that the funds will track the market when fund managers see few bargains, but gives them room to tilt hard toward favorite stocks--and outrun the market--when greater values emerge. Of course, it's a matter of how well they pick stocks. That...
...seems illogical that a group of money sharps acting half a world away could have any effect on the seemingly bulletproof U.S. economy. But the stock market's swoon--the Dow industrial index was off some 450 points in the past two weeks--is directly linked to the deepening trouble in Asia, which represents only 30% of American exports but about 100% of American worries. Cheaper Asian goods, made possible by currency devaluations, have caused the U.S. trade deficit to balloon: America is buying more from the Pacific rim and selling less. While that's good for companies like...
Last week's turmoil on Wall Street was the latest in a summer-long slide that has knocked almost 740 points, or nearly 8%, off the Dow index since July 17, a decline that economists call a correction. (A 20% drop signals a "bear market.") But a deeper and quieter sort of stock decline has been under way much longer, particularly among smaller companies. For example, the Russell 2000 Index of small-capitalization stocks has fallen nearly 5% since January. Investors have been seeing these declines for some months in their brokerage statements. So as they survey the carnage...
...really makes it work is that the stock market goes up over time," he says. But even in a market whose average is flat for a time, wilder price gyrations lead to better overall returns. For that reason, dollar-cost averagers are better off in volatile investments, such as index funds and technology stocks...