Friday, December 11, 2009

Q&A: Pimco's Mohamed El-Erian - Courtesy of Fortune Magazine

Pimco's CEO says individual investors must change their investing style, such as being less U.S.-centric.
By Geoff Colvin, senior editor at large

Pimco, the world's largest bond investor, has benefited from investors' flight to quality over the past two years and now manages about $1 trillion in assets.

Mohamed El-Erian, 51, is still thinking large and deep thoughts; his book, "When Markets Collide: Investment Strategies for the Age of Global Economic Change," won the Financial Times Goldman Sachs business book of the year award last year.
 
Mr. El- Erian sat down recently with Fortune's Geoff Colvin to talk about threats to individual investors, the best framework for an investment portfolio, how the 2008 financial meltdown was like a double-drive-through McDonald's, and much else.

 Here's a sampling of  some of the questions....

We've had one quarter of solid economic growth. Is the recession over?

Why are a lot of very positive things unlikely to occur for the consumer?

If American consumers start saving more, isn't that a good thing?

From the perspective of an individual investor, is the multipolar world a good thing or a bad thing?

What are the most important things that individual investors need to do differently?

What's the best protection for an individual investor against inflation?

In your book you present an asset allocation for a typical U.S. investor. Only 15% is in U.S. equities, which is much less than most U.S. investors hold. And only 14% is in bonds, U.S. and non-U.S., which seems like not very much. What's the logic?

You've said that this asset allocation -- which includes many other elements [see table] -- could be expected to return +5% to +7% a year in real terms over the long run. Many investors believe that U.S. equities will return much more over time. Is that just not correct?

A lot of new financial regulation is in the works. Is it going to be, as it so often is, regulation that will prevent the crisis that just happened and not regulation that will prevent the next crisis?

After the September 2008 crisis, you mentioned in Fortune that you'd asked your wife to withdraw cash from the bank. What was your life like?

What's your bottom line advice to individual investors in today's environment?


Full Interview - Click Here: Investing Advice from Mohamed El-Erian: Q&A with Fortune - Dec. 10, 2009

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