China is devaluing its currency. Oil is crashing. Greece is facing years of slow growth and might be dragging down the rest of Europe, where GDP growth is already slowing. The Federal Reserve is also concerned about global growth, which may delay an interest rate hike. The news hasn’t been this bad at the end of the summer since… 2014. Last year, investors were worried about conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza. The death toll from the Ebola outbreak in Africa topped 1,000. Greece was still in crisis, and Congress was up in arms about corporate tax inversions. We… Read More
China is devaluing its currency. Oil is crashing. Greece is facing years of slow growth and might be dragging down the rest of Europe, where GDP growth is already slowing. The Federal Reserve is also concerned about global growth, which may delay an interest rate hike. The news hasn’t been this bad at the end of the summer since… 2014. Last year, investors were worried about conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza. The death toll from the Ebola outbreak in Africa topped 1,000. Greece was still in crisis, and Congress was up in arms about corporate tax inversions. We see the same doom-and-gloom trend if we looked back at the summer of 2013 with the Detroit bankruptcy, Edward Snowden leaks, civil war in Syria and violent revolution in Egypt. #-ad_banner-# My point is there are always going to be problems somewhere in the world. At times like these, I like to ask myself, “What would Warren Buffett do?” While I don’t have a direct line to his office, Buffett is famous for revealing his personal market insights and broad clues about his process in his writings. For example, how did Buffett respond to a deluge of… Read More