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Should I be investing in the US stock market?

Should I be investing in the US stock market? What are the pros and cons?

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Elizabeth W

2 May 2022

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Danielle Ecuyer

INVESTOR

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over 2 years ago

Hi Elizabeth,

That is a very good question.

Although I trained as an equities analyst and worked in the institutional stock broking industry for 15 years, I am no longer a registered adviser, so my perspective comes from professional knowledge and experience running my own portfolios since 2008.

I think the hardest concept for retail investors is that don’t have to invest everywhere, so the trick is working out where and why you want to invest in different stocks, themes (sectors) or countries, and there is so much to chose from.

When it comes to investing for the longer term, we are told to diversify our exposure to different stocks or markets, and they will all have different levels of risk attached to them. This means at one end of the scale you have lower risk developed markets such as the US and Australia and higher risk, such as emerging markets. This means you potentially can make more money in the higher risk markets periodically but you can also potentially lose more money.

On balance as investors we want to benefit from stocks/countries/sectors that have favourable economic backdrops and tailwinds or what we call secular growth opportunities (think technology, decarbonisation for example). We want to invest in companies that can grow both earnings and dividends (particularly when inflation and interest rates are rising).

The reason why the US stock markets are attractive is that they are the largest in the world, capturing both US GDP growth and international GDP growth (think the major technology stocks such as Apple, Microsoft. Meta and Alphabet). They provide a much greater depth of stocks to more sectors than other countries.

The Australian share market is very small globally (around 2%) and is very heavily exposed to the financial stocks and the resource stocks (about 50% of the total value – market capitalisation). This means that Australia is a very cyclical economy (when property and mining are doing well, our economy does well). There

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