Wondering what’s at the top of Mr. Henderson’s R&D list? Here are the next big frontier markets to invest in - ruclips.net/video/1L3psx8Xr1Q/видео.html
A couple years ago I refused an offer from my company to move to Chicago, telling them that the future is in Asia - I would like to stay in Dubai but eventually consider Singapore. They laughed at me. Look who’s laughing now 😂
@@ec954 small corporate tax was added. But income tax is still 0. Residency rules eased. Almost anyone can get a golden visa now - even Kevin o Leary 😂
As someone living in VN for the past nearly 20 years, buying property, as a foreigner, is extremely difficult and risky. There's a lot of corruption and little transparency. Cambodia is much better choice, at least currently. I personally like Cambodia quite a lot.
So, Asia for the future.👍🏽 China still has a lot to offer. 1.4B population won't disappear that quickly. The US has around 330M people. Without immigration, that number would be around 285M. Nigeria in Africa has around 220M and is still growing, without the help of immigration. Multi-polarity is the future and overall better.
China is in the midst of a demographic decline. Along with demographic decline comes social unrest, financial stress and threats from adversaries, of which China had a quite a few. Future is not looking good for China. Other Asian countries have brighter outlooks. I'm not bashing China or your opinion. Just mentioning facts and trends.
China has large population and lots of IT companies. But why Chinese Billionaires are leaving to other countries like UAE, Singapore, Canada and even USA etc.? There are some hidden rules in this place. For example, you may cash in but it is very hard when you withdraw your fund to other places.
That's why if you invest in China, make sure it's through the SEHK. China still only allows you to turn up to a few hundred thousand US dollars a year into foreign currency. If you invest directly you'll find it very hard to change the RMB back to USD.
We get 7-8% savings account interest rates in India, and investments generally yield positive returns. China will always be a nicer place to live, though.
@@deepisaddictedtoyt Financial Professional From India here, It's just Inflation + 2% interest . Turkish index have rallied 960 % in last 5 years, Again it's distorted due to Inflation. The Real Returns From From India is gonna start coming when the Indian Currency Stabilizes and If India is able to Penetrate Some High Value Industries which will increase Demand for Indian Currency. The People who Invest in India today will win only If India is able to Specialize Currently I feel India is gonna win in Medical + Pharma Sector. If you look at dollar Adjusted Returns of Indian Markets , S&P 500 Beats the Indian Index even in last 5 years when Indian Markets have been rallying
My main concern is how to survive all of these financial and political crisis, especially in light of the US political power scuffle. The government has really called things more difficult for its citizens, and we can't sit back and bear all the consequences of the bad governance.
Cambodia for sure.... Easy visas....central location in s.e. Asia, rising quality medical services, inexpensive housing, cheap food & fresh markets...U.S. dollar based society... English speaking young population.
Why is Zimbabwe not on this list? I don't know that much about finances and such, but I heard individual notes are denominated in the millions. If they are so rich they can bandy about that kind of money casually, it must be a beacon of prosperity.
I assume you recently watched the Grand Tour special, but anyway let me shed more light on the situation. If their notes are denominated in the millions you’re paying millions for everything from soap to bread to fuel, which essentially makes the currency worth close to nothing. Even adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP), the equivalent of one soap in the UK will likely cost several trillions in Zimbabwe money, which is the reason why printing money will not necessarily make everyone wealthy.
@@kiranmenon4797 exactly.... I've seen Zimbabwe currency. I thought it was play money. They need a reset, just like Mexico and Argentina. Or switch to a stable currency like Ecuador did. They now use the U.S. dollar.
@@kiranmenon4797 I have never heard of the programme. But if their soap is so high quality it is worth trillions, it must be really high quality. And even allowing for the superior quality, you would only spend trillions on soap if you were really rich. Otherwise you would just go with a more down market brand.
China, indonesia, India, I heard are fast growing countries, malaysia, and vietnam will have high growth but will be second-tier economies compared to old rich countries like germany or Japan and south korea.
@@nomadcapitalist I would love to watch one more from Tashkent. As far as I know, TBC is currently doing even better there. It would be interesting to watch an interview with Nika Kurdiani, who is the CEO of TBC Group's business operations in Uzbekistan, or with Oliver Hughes from Tinkoff, who has already been the Head of International Operations for a year
Fill up and the car doubles in value, that's a great one. I remember when the first Hyundai started selling here in Canada, the Hyundai "Pony", what garbage those were, rusty after a year or two. Now look how far they've come, the american manufacturers could learn something from them.
I'm really not feeling India. It is a terrible third world squalor. One of the worst places in the world. The British left them perfectly set up for success with all the grand buildings and infrastructure but they blew it and let it all go to ruin. I like all the ASEAN nations though.
China has many growing issues that many are ignoring. In 5-10 years, it may not be nearly as strong as it is now. That being said, it is not out of the realm of possibility that they may find some ways to stem the bleeding, but I am not sure they will be able to completely mitigate it. While BRICs is "growing," it still has issues, mainly the countries involved.
They won't find a way. I live in China, economy is faltering massively and they have no solution and instead are choosing to isolate themselves through their political policy.
India's growth is not all that much when you realize that they're currently at less than 20% of China's GDP per capita. From 1979 to 2010, China has an average growth of 10% a year... for 20 years, and grew 5.2% last year. India is not catching up any time soon. The next China is still China.
This is going to be a 1980s Japan situation. By the late 80s Japan dominated developed far east markets and investors piled in. What they got was 35 years of stagnation. Compared to China 35 years from now Japan in 1988 is going to look like a bargain. Japan at least is not a restrictive communist economy and was not facing steep demographic collapse. China is dead. It just hasn’t fallen down yet.
China is way way worse than Japan in the 80/90s although I agree with you generally. The difference is that Japan was/is a democracy and there was some level of trust and transparency. With China, investors have no idea what is going on there and you cant trust anything coming out of the government and that spooks investors. On top of that, China is expansionist and have border disputes with all its neighbors and the trust in China is quickly deteriorating. This was not the case with Japan back when they peaked.
Pakistan is the only country in the world that tries to balance power relations with the US, EU, China, and Russia. As well as Turkey, Japan, Korea, the Middle East, South and East Asia, and Central Asia.
Reason why you are begging...First become strong internally before being neutral or the balancing act..That needs immense power of your own..Only then you will gain respect or your country will get isolated pity fast
I have been watching your videos off and on for a long time. This video makes me doubt of your credibility. One of the countries that you mentioned here is really having a economic meltdown. I can't believe it you mentioned it here
@@lyhjiba FYI: In the Constitution of the Republic of China, China (based in Taiwan) also claims Mainland China and Taiwan as well as Mongolia and parts of India and Pakistan.
Wondering what’s at the top of Mr. Henderson’s R&D list? Here are the next big frontier markets to invest in - ruclips.net/video/1L3psx8Xr1Q/видео.html
A couple years ago I refused an offer from my company to move to Chicago, telling them that the future is in Asia - I would like to stay in Dubai but eventually consider Singapore. They laughed at me. Look who’s laughing now 😂
Americans who think the US sits on top of the world and offers more freedom than any other place are just clueless.
I'm sure they're not even thinking about you
Hasn't Dubai lost some of its luster recently due to changes in the tax code and residency rules?
@@ec954 small corporate tax was added. But income tax is still 0. Residency rules eased. Almost anyone can get a golden visa now - even Kevin o Leary 😂
As someone living in VN for the past nearly 20 years, buying property, as a foreigner, is extremely difficult and risky. There's a lot of corruption and little transparency. Cambodia is much better choice, at least currently. I personally like Cambodia quite a lot.
Cambodia grows very fast, but not too fast. The political stability is there, and it is located in the fastest growing region in the world, ASEAN.
On the ground Africa videos speaking with local businesses and investors would be excellent content.
It’s best we keep that to ourselves
So, Asia for the future.👍🏽 China still has a lot to offer. 1.4B population won't disappear that quickly.
The US has around 330M people. Without immigration, that number would be around 285M. Nigeria in Africa has around 220M and is still growing, without the help of immigration.
Multi-polarity is the future and overall better.
China is in the midst of a demographic decline. Along with demographic decline comes social unrest, financial stress and threats from adversaries, of which China had a quite a few. Future is not looking good for China. Other Asian countries have brighter outlooks. I'm not bashing China or your opinion. Just mentioning facts and trends.
China has large population and lots of IT companies. But why Chinese Billionaires are leaving to other countries like UAE, Singapore, Canada and even USA etc.? There are some hidden rules in this place. For example, you may cash in but it is very hard when you withdraw your fund to other places.
That's why if you invest in China, make sure it's through the SEHK. China still only allows you to turn up to a few hundred thousand US dollars a year into foreign currency. If you invest directly you'll find it very hard to change the RMB back to USD.
We get 7-8% savings account interest rates in India, and investments generally yield positive returns. China will always be a nicer place to live, though.
Where are you getting a 7-8% "savings account" interest rate in India? Please share the secret I would love to open an account with them 😮
@@deepisaddictedtoyt Financial Professional From India here, It's just Inflation + 2% interest .
Turkish index have rallied 960 % in last 5 years, Again it's distorted due to Inflation.
The Real Returns From From India is gonna start coming when the Indian Currency Stabilizes and If India is able to Penetrate Some High Value Industries which will increase Demand for Indian Currency. The People who Invest in India today will win only If India is able to Specialize Currently I feel India is gonna win in Medical + Pharma Sector.
If you look at dollar Adjusted Returns of Indian Markets , S&P 500 Beats the Indian Index even in last 5 years when Indian Markets have been rallying
He meant "Fixed Deposit" interest rates
Go bank with YES BANK@@deepisaddictedtoyt
Oh wow, didn't expect to be the first to watch this!
Thank you for tuning in.
My main concern is how to survive all of these financial and political crisis, especially in light of the US political power scuffle. The government has really called things more difficult for its citizens, and we can't sit back and bear all the consequences of the bad governance.
Would love to learn more about opportunities in Kenya
Fair play man . Thanks for sharing.
Cambodia for sure....
Easy visas....central location in s.e. Asia, rising quality medical services, inexpensive housing, cheap food & fresh markets...U.S. dollar based society...
English speaking young population.
Thanks for the information sir❤
You're welcome
Why is Zimbabwe not on this list? I don't know that much about finances and such, but I heard individual notes are denominated in the millions. If they are so rich they can bandy about that kind of money casually, it must be a beacon of prosperity.
???...nope.... it just means that their money is worthless. They need a complete financial reset.
@@BetterYet But their money is literally worth millions. How is that worthless?
I assume you recently watched the Grand Tour special, but anyway let me shed more light on the situation. If their notes are denominated in the millions you’re paying millions for everything from soap to bread to fuel, which essentially makes the currency worth close to nothing. Even adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP), the equivalent of one soap in the UK will likely cost several trillions in Zimbabwe money, which is the reason why printing money will not necessarily make everyone wealthy.
@@kiranmenon4797 exactly.... I've seen Zimbabwe currency. I thought it was play money. They need a reset, just like Mexico and Argentina. Or switch to a stable currency like Ecuador did. They now use the U.S. dollar.
@@kiranmenon4797 I have never heard of the programme.
But if their soap is so high quality it is worth trillions, it must be really high quality. And even allowing for the superior quality, you would only spend trillions on soap if you were really rich. Otherwise you would just go with a more down market brand.
thailand also have alot value and high divident stock level 10-12% annually with low p/e ratio
BEKO is one the best brands from Turkey
Africa and Asia is the future 😎✈️
Please can you do a deep dive analysis in promising economies to invest in in Africa, thanks!
Egypt, morocco, Ethiopia, senegal, rwanda
What about vietnam?
I hope these emerging market countries could also host good education universities..
Cambodia is one of the world fastest growing economy, and has good political stability.
What about Türkiye? 🇹🇷
China, indonesia, India, I heard are fast growing countries, malaysia, and vietnam will have high growth but will be second-tier economies compared to old rich countries like germany or Japan and south korea.
Yes please .... interest in Africa potentialities.
My Wisdom Tree ETF India Earnings Fund is slow and steady 14.16% over the last year. Many sectors. Available through most brokerages.
What about Uzbekistan?
We focused on Uzbekistan in this video - ruclips.net/video/xgeqFMrW3LA/видео.html
@@nomadcapitalist What's your take on Kazakhstan?
@@nomadcapitalist I would love to watch one more from Tashkent. As far as I know, TBC is currently doing even better there. It would be interesting to watch an interview with Nika Kurdiani, who is the CEO of TBC Group's business operations in Uzbekistan, or with Oliver Hughes from Tinkoff, who has already been the Head of International Operations for a year
Fill up and the car doubles in value, that's a great one. I remember when the first Hyundai started selling here in Canada, the Hyundai "Pony", what garbage those were, rusty after a year or two. Now look how far they've come, the american manufacturers could learn something from them.
1. Vietnam
ccp is pleased with your decision
Why don't you invest in ETFs instead of single stocks? There is growing consensus that ETFs are the way to go and it is hard to "beat the market".
I think ETF's are very limited for developing markets and probably don't invest in the smaller more upside type kinds of investments
I'm really not feeling India. It is a terrible third world squalor. One of the worst places in the world. The British left them perfectly set up for success with all the grand buildings and infrastructure but they blew it and let it all go to ruin. I like all the ASEAN nations though.
China has many growing issues that many are ignoring. In 5-10 years, it may not be nearly as strong as it is now. That being said, it is not out of the realm of possibility that they may find some ways to stem the bleeding, but I am not sure they will be able to completely mitigate it. While BRICs is "growing," it still has issues, mainly the countries involved.
They won't find a way. I live in China, economy is faltering massively and they have no solution and instead are choosing to isolate themselves through their political policy.
China economy is slowing down India growing at 7%/8% per year.
India's growth is not all that much when you realize that they're currently at less than 20% of China's GDP per capita. From 1979 to 2010, China has an average growth of 10% a year... for 20 years, and grew 5.2% last year. India is not catching up any time soon. The next China is still China.
On a GDP per capita basis, China is still very much an emerging economy / market.
That's why there are so many Chinese refugees flooding the usa rn 😐
Chinese companies have incredibly low PE ratios for a reason: the CCP is slowly getting rid of the private sector.
Why invest in a country like that?
oh my god!
U-s-a is pressuring ind from every corner to take a side 😂🐍🐍
YeeHaaaaw Partnah😅
This is going to be a 1980s Japan situation. By the late 80s Japan dominated developed far east markets and investors piled in. What they got was 35 years of stagnation. Compared to China 35 years from now Japan in 1988 is going to look like a bargain. Japan at least is not a restrictive communist economy and was not facing steep demographic collapse. China is dead. It just hasn’t fallen down yet.
China is way way worse than Japan in the 80/90s although I agree with you generally. The difference is that Japan was/is a democracy and there was some level of trust and transparency. With China, investors have no idea what is going on there and you cant trust anything coming out of the government and that spooks investors. On top of that, China is expansionist and have border disputes with all its neighbors and the trust in China is quickly deteriorating. This was not the case with Japan back when they peaked.
No.
soon.. Afghanistan will be at the top of the list...
It’ll be the Middle East.
Pakistan is the only country in the world that tries to balance power relations with the US, EU, China, and Russia. As well as Turkey, Japan, Korea, the Middle East, South and East Asia, and Central Asia.
Reason why you are begging...First become strong internally before being neutral or the balancing act..That needs immense power of your own..Only then you will gain respect or your country will get isolated pity fast
I have been watching your videos off and on for a long time. This video makes me doubt of your credibility. One of the countries that you mentioned here is really having a economic meltdown. I can't believe it you mentioned it here
"Buy when there's blood in the streets". A lot of people say it; we actually do it.
😊👌💯
lol china, kind of strange selections all over
You need to look at climate change. Bangladesh is an emerging but then there is a monsoon and swipes out every thing
India is best market also cheap country if you done with wokesim.
India is best country to live very cheap country growing economy very fast.
Bhārata.
If you don't want wokesim and want to live in country who economy also growing very fast India is best country.
Dirty and a huge wealth gap. No thanks.
00:49 EXCUSE ME?? WTF??!
India has more people now
@@Renderlesscharacter2454It's about that map of China ,sir
He straight up annexed Taiwan, Kirgisistan, Tajikistan...
@@lyhjiba FYI: In the Constitution of the Republic of China, China (based in Taiwan) also claims Mainland China and Taiwan as well as Mongolia and parts of India and Pakistan.
He is an entrepreneur 🤣🤣🤣, he will have to show the real map of china 🤣🤣🤣