Who are the happiest investors in Scandinavia
Danish fund selectors are maintaining their reputation as the Nordics most cheerful people, EIE research has shown.
Danish fund selectors are maintaining their reputation as the Nordics most cheerful people, EIE research has shown.
More Danish fund selectors are looking to buy developed market credit than selling for the first time since mid-2012, according to EIE research.
On an asset-weighted basis, Nordic-domiciled funds have annual management charges some ten basis points below the European average, according to a report published by Morningstar Denmark
Our latest research show that, as well as being more optimistic about the future, Danish institutional investors are far more evenly split about where to invest than their counterparts elsewhere
The voting results from fund selectors in Copenhagen, in October 2013
Danish fund selectors will continue reducing their low-yielding bond allocations over the next 12 months and have a strong appetite for global equities, the latest Expert Investor Europe Market Insight report reveals
Stock pots stir in Copenhagen
Norway will see its economic growth rate surpassed by Sweden next year, banking group Nordea predicts
Specifically, we asked this question: for all these various asset classes, over the next 12 months do you expect to increase your weighting (positive), keep it the same (neutral) or decrease it (negative) or do you not use the asset class at all (not used)? Outlook This data is…
Heightened demand for Danish sovereign bonds, driven by the country’s perceived status as an economically and politically stable safe haven, has put its central bank in a difficult situation. While the inflows offer the Danish government access to funding on terms that southern European nations can only dream of (see News Round-up), the shift has…
Danish investors continue to invest, however, following strong inflows into most asset classes during 2010, they expect 2011 to be more challenging. Governments on both sides of the Atlantic don’t seem to be able to get the sovereign debt crisis fully under control, casting doubts over bond investments. In addition investors have mentioned paying more…
true Danish funds have seen significant inflows into foreign equity funds; most increases are in Latin America and Emerging Markets funds (as well as Far East ex-Japan). Apart from European bonds, a similar development can be seen for fixed income investments. Danish asset managers benefit from investors’ trust in local expertise and one can notice…