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[转贴] 利用欧洲债务危机赚钱的四个方法

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发表于 2010-5-2 07:46 PM | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式


万维读者网记者唯一编译报道:CNBC刊登的文章说,大危机总是带来好机会,欧洲现在的债务危机也不例外。一些投资者已经利用希腊和其他国家的债务危机大笔赚钱了。

经过一天的大跌,现在美国和欧洲股市都反弹了,政府债券趋于稳定,原材料价格也有好转。一句话,金融市场对这场危机从美国转到世界其他国家的形势已经做出了相应的调整。

纽约Ticonderoga Securities的资深市场专家John Stoltzfus说:目前这个市场,作为投资者一定要认识到问题还是存在的,但是同时也要看到随着经济的好转,机会还是很多的。

他说希腊危机的危害还是存在的,如果不承认这一点是愚蠢的,但是对投资者来讲市场的潜力还是巨大。

专家说,投资者可以从四个方面在危机中赚钱:

1. 买进美国股票:虽然在星期二希腊和葡萄牙的债券被降级时,美国股市大跌了一天,但是星期三西班牙债券被降级一事对股市就没有产生什么影响。

可见,在这个世界其他地区出现危机的时候,投资者已经认准了美国市场。

BTIG市场策略专家Mike O’Rourke说:投资者仍然要继续投资,继续买股票和债券,但是他们不会买世界其他地区的股票和债券,而是买美国的。为了避免这次危机的影响,投资者应该退出欧洲股市,买进美国股票。

他看好美国的保健,科技和工业股票。

2. 投资欧洲跨国公司的股票:虽然受希腊影响欧洲的金融市场会波动较大,但是一些跨国公司仍然会表现不错,特别是在发展中国家做生意的公司。

在这次经济危机中,欧洲公司也象美国公司一样采取降低成本,增大生产力的措施。这些公司是值得投资的。

Stoltzfus说,欧洲人在发展中国家做生意已经有500年的历史,今天那些跨国公司的情况都不错,在下一个季度里这些公司的股票将是很吸引人的。

3. 不投资于原材料:自二月中以来石油价格一直在80 美元上下的小区间里徘徊。伦敦Capital Economics经济学家John Higgins说,“一些人以为经纪复苏后原材料会回到2004-2007年的强加水平,但是我认为石油价格将降到60美元的价位”。他还说铜会降到每吨 5000美元,与现价比将是下降24%。

他还说,原材料价格下降对消费者是一件好事,但是对于金融市场会是一件比较震动的大事,而且对于俄国,拉丁美洲国家将是一个坏消息。

4. 买债券,但是不买欧元:本星期欧洲的危机将使欧元对很多其他国家的货币贬值。Barclays Wealth的债券分析员Elizabeth Fell说,我们看到投资者将大量资金投入美国债券和美元,因此美国的债券在上升。

虽然Barclays在密切注意希腊的危机走向,Elizabeth说:也不能把整个欧洲地区都抛弃掉,在德国和法国有一些大公司盈利不错,而且会继续盈利。投资者在欧洲投资只要小心谨慎就好。
 楼主| 发表于 2010-5-2 07:49 PM | 显示全部楼层
Tackling the Debt Crisis: Four Ways To Make Money

MARKET, STOCK MARKET, GREECE, DEBT CRISIS, SPAIN, PORTUGAL, EUROPEAN UNION, EURO, INVESTMENT STRATEGY, DOLLAR
Posted By: Jeff Cox | CNBC.com
CNBC.com
| 29 Apr 2010 | 01:03 PM ET

No good crisis comes without good opportunities, and the events unfolding with European debt are no exception.

Investors already have been aggressive in showing how they might profit from difficulties in Greece and other nations that are being crushed by low-quality debt.

US and European equity markets have rebounded after a massive knee-jerk selloff, government bonds steadied, and commodities offered a mixed bag. In short, financial markets adjusted to a world in which the focus has switched from the breakdown in the US to widely varied situations around the rest of the globe.

"It's a market where you've got considerable risk remaining from what created the problem as well as considerable opportunity coming from the economic improvement," says John Stoltzfus, senior market strategist at Ticonderoga Securities in New York.

"The risk of contagion remains in this market," he adds. "We would be foolish not to acknowledge that. It's just that the offsets remain substantial and we can't help but think it's the formidable offsets that are worthy of consideration from investors."

Four ideas, then, from market pros about dealing with the European debt crisis.

1) Yes to US equities

Stocks got hammered earlier in the week as news intensified about credit downgrades in Portugal and Greece, but then largely shrugged off a downgrade Wednesday of Spain's credit.

Investors seem to have decided that US assets are the place to be as credit problems play out overseas.

"Investors are going to see a flight to quality," says Mike O'Rourke, chief market strategist at BTIG in New York. "They still want to be investing, they still want stocks and bonds. But they're going to invest in US stocks and bonds rather than assets in other parts of the world. By shifting your European exposure to the US, it's a good way to be defensive about that crisis."

O'Rourke thinks the reaction may not be immediate but should be broad-based. He favors health care, technology and industrials, and says investors who want to hedge should look at shorting overpriced consumer discretionary stocks.

Investors can take some money off the table now, but shouldn't overdo it, says Paul Zemksy, head of asset allocation at ING Investment Management in New York.

"We're not running for the hills and selling stocks or selling high-yields or putting clients into cash," he says. "It's equally risky to be out of the equity market given how strong the fundamentals are as it is to be overweight, because Greece might do something bad and you have to sell off."

2) Yes to European Multinationals

Though the European markets may wobble as they adjust to whatever final form emerges for Greece's rescue package, individual companies there nevertheless should do well, particularly those that do business in emerging markets.

During the collapse of the financial system, European countries took much the same route as their US counterparts: Cutting costs through reductions in employment and increasing productivity.

Those companies who excelled at the process will be the best places to invest, Stoltzfus says.

"Investors should look for companies that have their domiciles in Europe but do a lot of business in emerging markets," he says. "Europeans have been doing business in emerging markets for 500 years, and today multinationals are very well-positioned. In the quarter to come, those are likely to look very attractive."

3) No to Commodities

Oil prices have been trading in a tight range above $80 since mid-February. But at least one analyst thinks the Greek crisis "could also be the catalyst for a long overdue correction" in a market that has come under suspicion for ignoring demand and economic fundamentals.

"Many participants in these markets seem to assume that the world economy is returning to the strong growth that fueled the commodity price boom from 2004 to 2007 as if nothing has happened in the meantime," John Higgins, senior market economist with Capital Economics in London, wrote in a note to clients.

Higgins thinks oil will slide back to $60 a barrel while copper will fall to $5,000 per ton, which would be a drop of about 24 percent.

"While good news for consumers, a collapse in commodity prices would be another shock for financial markets," Higgins said. "It would be bad news for many emerging economies, particularly Russia and Latin America."

4) Yes to Bonds (No to Euro)

The week's events did little to shake the notion that the euro is likely to be the favorite whipping boy among the world's currencies.

Investors have solidified their positions against the European currency, but believe some government debt as well as investment-grade corporate debt will be in fashion as protection against any fallout that does come from Europe.

"In a flight to quality, risk is being reprocessed in the marketplace as we see investors filing into US Treasurys and the strengthening of the US dollar," says Elizabeth Fell, fixed income strategist at Barclays Wealth in New York. "Anyone holding a fixed income instrument in the US had a little rally."

Fell says Barclays is watching the Greece situation carefully but is sticking with its strategy of being overweight equities and keeping a strong fixed-income component with a bias toward developed countries rather than emerging markets.

"The whole European zone shouldn't be thrown out. There are a lot of powerful companies in Germany and France that are profitable and will continue to be profitable," she says. "People should be careful."
© 2010 CNBC.com

URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/36849702/
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发表于 2010-5-2 08:29 PM | 显示全部楼层
thanks

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发表于 2010-5-2 08:53 PM | 显示全部楼层
Thanks!
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a little out of date
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发表于 2010-5-2 08:55 PM | 显示全部楼层
be careful
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ding
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ding
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发表于 2010-5-19 09:21 PM | 显示全部楼层
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