Barron's - USA (2020-10-12)

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October 12, 2020 BARRON’S 35


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Recipe for Fewer


Covid Cases


To the Editor:


President Donald Trump’s getting the virus might help


control the pandemic if it causes people to wear masks


and practice social distancing and otherwise take


common-sense precautions (“What to Know About


President Trump’s Diagnosis and the Outlook for


Stocks,” Cover Story, Oct. 2). Not to wish harm to the


president, but his illness actually could be helpful if


some of the virus naysayers finally see the light. Fewer


cases will help the troubled industries as much as any-


thing.


Michael Schneider


On Barrons.com


Fixed-Income Challenge


To the Editor:


In a world where investors increasingly achieve market


exposure through indexing, portfolio construction


should account for index composition (“A 60/40


Stocks/Bond Strategy Doesn’t Work. What to Do In-


stead,” Up & Down Wall Street, Oct. 2). At times, a few


single-name equities drive the market’s performance,


raising questions of concentration


risk. While this diversification chal-


lenge is well known in stocks, it’s


parallel in fixed income is less so.


Certain bond indexes are weighted


based on debt outstanding, skewing


toward more heavily indebted bor-


rowers. With a host of firms issuing


incremental debt to manage the pan-


demic, it’s a point worth considering


when determining appropriate asset


allocation.


Gray Schweitzer


Brooklyn, N.Y.


Relative Risk


To the Editor:


I was delighted to see your focus on


the current low-yield fixed-income


landscape in “How to Build the Best


Bond Portfolio for Crazy Times”


(Funds Quarterly, Oct. 2). The article


covered alternatives to the bond allo-


cation in the benchmark 60/40 in-


vestment plan, since the typical his-


torical returns cannot be achieved


with current interest rates so low.


My concern is the tradeoff re-


quired in relative risk that one needs


to assume within the presumed safer,


ballast portion of a portfolio. For ex-


ample, we purchase various forms of


insurance to alleviate risk with no


expectation of a return. Will the al-


ternatives recommended hold up in


value when the inevitable periodic


equity market downdrafts occur, al-


lowing investors the opportunity to


hold off on selling when prices are


down and wait for the eventual re-


turn in valuations? Will stretching


for yield jeopardize a sound risk-


management investment strategy that


has stood the test of time? As with


most investment decisions, only time


will tell.


Dr. Douglas Prop


Glenview, Ill.


Value, ex-Energy


To the Editor:


I feel a bit like Charlie Brown, being


lured back by Lucy—and Barron’s


into “kicking” the energy football.


Despite the high-yield possibilities


listed in your twin Oct. 2 stories


(“These 6 Pipeline Funds Offer a


Cheap Way to Play a Rebound in


Energy,” and “Oil Stocks Offer Big


Dividends. Some Might Even Be Safe


Enough to Buy,” Income Investing),


I don’t want to wind up flat on my


back.


I appreciate your comprehensive


analysis in both stories, and recall


the wisdom of oil baron J. Paul Getty


suggesting that I consider “buy[ing]


my straw hats in the winter.”


MightIsuggestanewangle?I’d


welcome Barron’s calling the massive


pension funds at the California Pub-


lic Employees’ Retirement System,


Harvard University, Stanford Univer-


sity, and many others, and asking


their managers how many energy


holdings they still have, and when


they intend to stop selling. When that


massive overhang in the sector is


nearing its end, I expect it may finally


be time to buy. Until then, I’ll stick to


value, ex-energy.


Thomas V. Ward


Cumberland, R.I.


Game On


To the Editor:


Don’t overlook GameStop [ticker:


GME] as a key beneficiary through


all of this (“Videogame Stocks Have


Soared for 20 Years. They’re About


to Get Another Boost,” Oct. 2).


A majority of gamers (myself


included, at age 31) vastly prefer


physical games over digital down-


loads, as evidenced in part by the


preorders of the consoles with disk


drives over the cheaper digital-only


editions. The digital shift is over-


stated, in my opinion.


Will Jones


On Barrons.com


Wealth-Gap Solutions


To the Editor:


One solution to close the wealth gap


is a proposed $10 trillion to $12 tril-


lion in direct payments to Black


Americans descended from slaves


(“Closing the Wealth Gap Is One Key


to Recovering From the Pandemic,”


Preview, Oct. 2).


I am very sympathetic to the situa-


tion of Black Americans. However, if


the government is considering repa-


rations, Native Americans should be


first in line.


Robert Perez


Tucson, Ariz.


Health-Care Tunnel


To the Editor:


The Roundtable article “10 Stocks to


Buy as the Health-Care Revolution


Races Ahead, According to Experts”


(Sept. 25), by Lauren R. Rublin, was a


bright light at the end of a very long


dark tunnel that is this pandemic.


Although all of the comments were


optimistic and remarkably idealistic


and mission-driven (rather than just


profit-driven), I found Geoffrey


Porges’ final comment most compel-


ling. Unless we have a robust public-


health system that is financed like a


branch of the military and with the


same zeal as our biotech industry, we


will be circling back to this long dark


tunnel—very soon.


Dr. Louis J. Papa


Rochester, N.Y.


“Will stretching for yield jeopardize


a sound risk-management


investment strategy?”


Dr. Douglas Prop, Glenview, Ill.

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