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First of all, I think the amount of investors that participate in the financialmarkets is much smaller than it is in the U.S. And I think that the financial advisors are used, but not as widely used as they are in the U.S. And definitely, their retail market participation is significantly lower than you can see in the U.S.
In the period 2010 to 2014 there was a boom in energy capex particularly into U.S. In the financialmarkets we see evidence of cycles in capital flows as market prices rise. There is also the gnarly issues on ethics and relative competitive risks – will all actors globally follow this ethical mindset?
Salaske: Yeah, I don’t agree with the CFP Board becoming any type of regulator whatsoever over financial advisors, financial planners, whatever you wanna call us in the advice space. Salaske: Right, now. You don’t know that right now, what they’re doing basically… We don’t know what their process is.
Following the financial crisis and the Fed cutting rates, economy and the market starts recovering in late 2009 and then 2010 and we kept hearing from a lot of different value corners, hey, everything is richly priced. And then, most importantly, I do love his ethical antenna and his kind of truth-telling obsession that he has.
And then it turns out, you know, the market, if you go from 91 forward market just sort of went up and business was good and it was good basically until maybe 2010. You had the bull market in the nineties. And, and business cycle, you know, part of the business cycle are the financialmarkets.
NADIG: And trying to help people understand what that means for next week, and the next year, and the next decade, to position products underneath it, like ETFs in 1992, or model portfolios in 2000, or direct indexing in 2010. NADIG: With the enormous caveat that everything you knew about financialmarkets — RITHOLTZ: Is no longer true.
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