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Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Tuesday, 8 October 2013 [View all]xchrom
(108,903 posts)15. How Investors Lose 89 Percent of Gains from Futures Funds
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-07/how-investors-lose-89-percent-of-gains-from-futures-funds.html

Investors in the $337 billion managed-futures market, expecting returns that will defy stock market slumps, instead find most of their gains gobbled up by commissions.
The pitch was enticing. At a time when the Standard & Poors 500 Index had suffered a decline of 41 percent in the previous three years, Morgan Stanley (MS) was offering its clients the possibility of some relief.
In a prospectus, the New York securities firm invited its customers to put their money into a little-known area of alternative investing called managed futures.
If youve never diversified your portfolio beyond stocks and bonds, you should know about the powerful argument for managed futures, the bank wrote. Managed futures may potentially profit at times when traditional markets are experiencing losses.
Morgan Stanley presented a chart telling investors that over 23 years, people who put 10 percent of their assets in managed futures outperformed those whose investments were limited to a combination of stocks and bonds, Bloomberg Markets magazine will report in its November issue.

Investors in the $337 billion managed-futures market, expecting returns that will defy stock market slumps, instead find most of their gains gobbled up by commissions.
The pitch was enticing. At a time when the Standard & Poors 500 Index had suffered a decline of 41 percent in the previous three years, Morgan Stanley (MS) was offering its clients the possibility of some relief.
In a prospectus, the New York securities firm invited its customers to put their money into a little-known area of alternative investing called managed futures.
If youve never diversified your portfolio beyond stocks and bonds, you should know about the powerful argument for managed futures, the bank wrote. Managed futures may potentially profit at times when traditional markets are experiencing losses.
Morgan Stanley presented a chart telling investors that over 23 years, people who put 10 percent of their assets in managed futures outperformed those whose investments were limited to a combination of stocks and bonds, Bloomberg Markets magazine will report in its November issue.
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