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Do You Need An Investment Advisor?

   

Gary Gordon

 
 

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« Seasonal/Historical Trends: Tech and Financials are "In," Cyclicals and Real Estate are "Out" | Main | International ETFs: Upside Gains With Less Downside Risk? (DGG, EWC) »

October 02, 2007

Israel (ISL): Reducing Risk, Discovering the Rewards

Individual stock pickers rarely get the upper hand on a comparable market index. And on a risk-adjusted basis, the field dwindles to a handful.

Nevertheless, I am always intrigued by the "themes" and/or reasoning behind the selections. In fact, I am often in complete agreement with a thesis, even when I may differ on the best way to capture the upside potential.

For example, one writer/researcher whom I've been reading lately is Asif Suria, publisher of the SINLetter. Asif has been out in front on the global economic expansion with a number of holdings in the biotech, tech and consumer staples arena.

For example, too many people have been fearful of investing in Israeli companies. The political risk alone worries many a would-be investor. Yet Asif's newsletter portfolio has held pharmaceutical giant Teva (TEVA) and WiMax mega-star Alvarion (ALVR) for 27% and 111% gains respectively. (And we're talking about gains that have come in less than a year.)

For my clients, I might look to a more diversified approach to the Israeli economy. The closed-end ETF known as the First Israel Fund (ISL) has Teva Pharma as its top holding with a 10% weighting. It also has Checkpoint Software (CHKPF) and may or may not be acquiring shares of Alvarion (ALVR).

Admittedly, this is where individual stock picking and diversified exchange-traded funds part ways. If I am going to grab Israel, I am going to want a smoother ride with a 6% dividend from the First Israel Fund (ISL). Others may like the extreme upside possibilities from an individual tech standout like Alvarion (ALVR).

Israel

SINLetter's Suria has a penchant for staples too. Not those in the U.S. per se, but those companies making money hand over fist abroad.

Suria lists Unilever (UL) and Procter & Gamble (PG) in his portfolio.  I couldn't agree more.

Still, I prefer to get these consumer goods stalwarts from the iShares S&P Global Consumer Staples Fund (KXI). The exchange-traded fund gives me the multinational flavor with the soap/toothpaste theme. (And it does so with less downside risk for my clients.)

Kxi_ul_pg

Disclosure Statement:  As a Registered Investment Advisor, Pacific Park Financial, Inc. may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds and/or index funds mentioned above. Investors who are interested in money management services may visit the Pacific Park Financial, Inc. web site.

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