South America is also looking more attractive by the day.
Back in May, Standard & Poor’s decision to bump Brazil’s credit rating to “BB+” put the country near the top of Christopher Hancock’s soon-to-be-bull-market list. Any country’s debt with a rating of “BBB-” (the next step up for Brazil) is considered “investment grade,” and according to Christopher, a flood of international investments nearly always ensues. “In a global economy,” writes Christopher, “sovereign credit ratings are crucial to informing investors around the world of a country's creditworthiness. They signal domestic and financial stability. Earning the investment-grade rating signals that a country is viewed nowhere near a default. Most institutional money will not even dip their toe in the water of a country that lacks an investment-grade rating. “That means one thing: The trillions of dollars in excess liquidity that hedge funds, private equity groups and sovereign-wealth funds are trying to invest effectively ignore some of the world's greatest assets for the simple fact that these assets rest in a country with a ‘subprime’ credit rating.” According to Mr. Hancock, Brazil is on track to get the big bump as early as 2008. If you’re in the right stock before Brazil is a BBB-, you could far outperform your U.S. investments.
Back in May, Standard & Poor’s decision to bump Brazil’s credit rating to “BB+” put the country near the top of Christopher Hancock’s soon-to-be-bull-market list. Any country’s debt with a rating of “BBB-” (the next step up for Brazil) is considered “investment grade,” and according to Christopher, a flood of international investments nearly always ensues. “In a global economy,” writes Christopher, “sovereign credit ratings are crucial to informing investors around the world of a country's creditworthiness. They signal domestic and financial stability. Earning the investment-grade rating signals that a country is viewed nowhere near a default. Most institutional money will not even dip their toe in the water of a country that lacks an investment-grade rating. “That means one thing: The trillions of dollars in excess liquidity that hedge funds, private equity groups and sovereign-wealth funds are trying to invest effectively ignore some of the world's greatest assets for the simple fact that these assets rest in a country with a ‘subprime’ credit rating.” According to Mr. Hancock, Brazil is on track to get the big bump as early as 2008. If you’re in the right stock before Brazil is a BBB-, you could far outperform your U.S. investments.
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