ochotona wrote: ↑Sun Mar 09, 2025 10:09 am
Currently, the US is pursuing an austerity budget.
Oh, how I wish that were true. The fact is the US has been spending lots of money in the public sector in recent years even though the private sector has been doing great. Ideally the government should reduce spending when the private sector is chugging along and be there in reserve for times when the economy sputters. The government spending response to COVID-19 was too high for too long, and now the US has an unsustainable budget deficit. Granted there are some haphazard attempts by DOGE to reduce spending, but I believe DOGE has done nothing of consequence yet to meaningfully reduce the budget. Congress faces a March 14th deadline this week to finalize fiscal year 2025 appropriations. Let's see how that pans out before declaring "US is pursuing an austerity budget".
ochotona wrote: ↑Sun Mar 09, 2025 10:09 am
Europe is pursuing a expansion budget (re-arming itself).
I hope so as it seems Europe can no longer depend on the US. Trump today again saying "nuclear weapons are bad" or something. And yet his own idiotic foreign policy encourages the world to pursue them: countries neighboring Russia that don't have them want them (or wish they had never given them up), France offering to extend its nuclear umbrella to other European nations as the US withdraws, autocratic leaders emboldened by an isolationist US. The other NATO countries should just go ahead and kick the US out - get it over with. And move to a wartime economy to counter Putin who is already there. Once the US is out of the way (Hungary too if need be), the EU could start by seizing the ~200 billion euros worth of frozen Russian assets to fund the re-arming before any impact to taxpayers.
ochotona wrote: ↑Sun Mar 09, 2025 10:09 am
"Oh, woe is China!". Well VWO ETF which has a big China allocation is dead even with VOO over the last 252 trading days.
"Woe is Germany!" EWG is up 27% but VOO is 13.4% over the past year.
I recognize there are many good companies domiciled outside the US. But as a US investor, a key challenge I have with investing in them is the currency conversion impact. For foreign equities you have to get two things right: (1) prosperity in the stock market of foreign nations, (2) weakness in the US dollar relative to other currencies. Morningstar Investing 101 has a nice article on the topic:
How Does Currency Impact Your Portfolio? https://my.morningstar.com/my/news/1596 ... folio.aspx
If I just stick with US stocks, then per Harry Browne PP theory they should cover the case where prosperity is the dominant economic theme. And they should do this regardless of US dollar strength/weakness relative to other currencies.
For cases where US dollar weakness is the dominant economic theme (i.e. inflation), the PP has an allocation to gold which is agnostic to fiat currencies.
I just don't find the need for international "diversification" in the stock portion of the PP. Or any need for currency diversification beyond T-Bills and gold.
I think the stock/bond/cash portions of the PP should be in the market of whatever economy the investor's expenses are in. This is easy for the US investor. Could be less easy for investors in countries that don't have a large stock market.