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Investment Consulting: "Nobody Knows Anything"!

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 private private,

 Sunday, March 8, 2015

WHENEVER one writes about the failure of active managers to beat the index, someone is bound to pop up online and argue that people don't pick fund managers at...


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5 comments on article "Investment Consulting: "Nobody Knows Anything"!"

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 Shelley Rock, MD with an interest in Professional investing and trading

 Monday, March 9, 2015



You have to understand fundamental analysis yourself to make a well informed decision on a fund manager http://j.mp/AtForexCentral


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 Steven Caban, Insurance Agency Manager

 Monday, March 9, 2015



Seems like gambling on a consultant is almost as bad as gambling on a stock. Doesn't a "consultant" need to have experience managing a fund himself?


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 Doug Allen, Hedge Fund IFM Inner Circle Fund, L.P., Hedge Fund Marketing, Hedge Fund Consulting, Hedge Fund Start-Up

 Monday, March 9, 2015



The entire premise of the article is flawed. The goal isn't to "beat the market." The goal is to create a portfolio of non-correlated, positive expectancy holdings. If you have 5 holdings that are not correlated, and each have a 5% positive ROI expectancy with 1% drawdown, you can then leverage at 5 to 1 for 25% ROI with 5% drawdown.


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 Oscar Cartaya, Insurance Med. Director

 Tuesday, March 10, 2015



@ Doug, as you know most assets tend to be correlated in some way or the other nowadays.


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 Chris A., Chief Investment Officer at Chris Adams

 Wednesday, March 11, 2015



Doug, by definition global investors will get beta returns minus fees. The lower we can get those fees by having more index fund investors*, the less "Wall Street Welfare" small investors have to give out.

*I have to qualify that because we need some active investors who can set the market prices. In my opinion we could have 90%+ index funds & then perhaps 10% leveraged actively managed market neutral active funds.

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