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F Palmer & ME Palmer
Trading as Joseph Palmer & Sons
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Palmer Articles

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Super Changes: Smart Investing Doesn’t

2 Jul 2017

Unless you live on a different planet, you have seen many articles about the changes to superannuation that took place on 1 July this year. There have been so many, in fact, that we declined to overload you with even more. Now the dust is settling, our view is that no matter what changes occurred in the superannuation space over the last 20 years (and much did), one thing remains inviolably constant.

The Market is up … How’s Your Risk Management Plan?

19 Jun 2017
The Market is up … How’s Your Risk Management Plan?

When asked for his views on ‘chance’, Mikhail Baryshnikov replied, “To walk across the street is a risk”. Pushed further, the great dancer may have spoken of managing risk by, for example, using designated pedestrian crossings and traffic lights.  All too obvious for pedestrians but what about the many risks that investors face? Can these be managed … and, if so, how?.

Investment & Economic Review April 2017

12 Apr 2017
Investment & Economic Review April 2017

A pickup in business and investor confidence, and a hope that inflation and global economic activity might be recovering, drove pleasing performance from investment markets recently in many parts of the world, most particularly in real estate and shares.

Service in pursuit of clients’ interests

1 Jan 2017

We’ve all done it. We call a service provider to confirm something or make an enquiry and, these days, the auto-response we hear goes along the lines of, “All our consultants are busy right now but your call is important to us. Please select from one of the following options …”

Holding onto a losing share for too long

23 May 2014

The saying goes that ‘a fool and his money are soon parted’. A corollary might be that a fool and a losing share are not parted soon enough. This article briefly examines that proposition.

In the last fifty years or so, highly respected academics have used experiments and real market studies to demonstrate beyond doubt that almost all investors rely more upon emotional triggers than calm reason when it comes to the buying and selling of stocks.

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