Shiny Things
Supremacy Member
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2009
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In light of the we work saga, can investors who take part in their late stage funding have any credibility? It's concerning that one of Singapore's swf invested with Softbank in 2018...
So, let's get down to specifics here, Temasek didn't "invest with Softbank", they invested as part of WeWork China's 2018 funding round alongside Softbank.
That said, WeWork's valuation was always loopy and anyone who invested money in it needs to take a long hard look at themselves. There was a publicly traded comp the whole time! Why on earth would you invest in We at >10x the valuation of IWG?!
I simply want to understand more on this currency effect on ETF value and investor's risk to currency.
Hope u don't mind if i keep asking on this as i thought people would want to know what are they investing in.
Sure. I'll keep answering: the currency the ETF is denominated in does not matter. Given that, you should buy the USD listing (IWDA); you should NOT buy the GBP listing [SWDA].
Think about it this way. Imagine you've got IWDA (listed in USD), and SWDA (listed in GBP). They're both completely identical other than the currency they're quoted in; they both own a pile of stocks worth about fifty-eight bucks USD, or forty-seven pounds.
Now, let's say GBP doubles against the USD, and everything else stays equal (stocks don't move, no other currencies move, etc etc etc).
If that happens, the price of IWDA will stay unchanged, but the price of SWDA will halve.
Why? Because it's still the same pile of stocks - but the currency that they're being valued in is much stronger, so the stocks are worth less in terms of the currency they're being valued in.
So the pounds that SWDA is valued in are worth twice as much, but the price of SWDA has halved. Net net, nothing's happened.
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The reason to buy the USD listing is that at Stanchart, the FX spread on purchases of USD is a lot tighter (cheaper for you) than the spread on purchases of GBP.
Hi Shiny, you mentioned there is a better way than Infinity Global funds to get US exposure in SRS? Could you kindly share that? Based on what I know we cannot buy IWDA in SRS.
I'm not sure if I hit "post" on these questions beforehand, but I need to know two things to be able to answer you.
1) Why do you want US equity exposure?
2) Why do you want it in your SRS account?
I wish! Unfortunately the best bet for a blend account is to do it yourself at the moment.I assume that a portfolio of equities and bonds with an appropriate glide path will outperform a high interest savings account or endowment plan over the roughly 18 year period until we boot them out the door, but I'm keen to hear if there is happy medium that blends the growth potential of an investment portfolio with the simplicity of a savings account.

. But as long as you are investing in foreign markets, you will be subject to certain risks and uncertainties, though some of these risks and uncertainties may already be present in the domestic markets as well.