Sports & Investments: Orange manager Joof Verhees (VLK) 

In 2017, Joof Verhees, senior client advisor and former board member at Van Lanschot Kempen, was asked if he wanted to become team manager of the Dutch national field hockey team. Up to and including the Tokyo Olympics, Verhees was responsible for the ins and outs of the national field hockey team as the right-hand man of national coach Max Caldas.

No greenwashing at Auréus's new blue chip fund

In April this year, Auréus launched the Equities Blue Chips fund. The fund is in Morningstar’s highest rated percentile for sustainable funds. “That is amazing. The fund is not labelled as sustainable, and just this one is in the top percentile,” said Auréus’s Chief Commercial Officer Han Dieperink in an interview with Fondsnieuws, Investment Officer Luxembourg’s sister publication (for whom Dieperink writes regular commentary articles).

Long-term trend plays through expensive stocks

“If you want to identify long-term trends, you would do well to select mainly companies that are best positioned within that trend. In general, these are the more expensive listed companies in the stock market.”

 This is the view of portfolio manager Jack Neele in a conversation with our sister publication Fondsnieuws. Robeco’s Global Consumer Trend Fund operates as much as possible independently of underlying macroeconomic factors such as interest rates and inflation. His approach is bottom-up when it comes to stock selection. 

Inflation no longer driving market corrections

BlackRock calls the new status quo in the global economy ‘New Nominal’. “The ’New Nominal’ is the situation in which higher inflation no longer causes sharply rising interest rates, and dangers for corrections in the stock markets are lower,” said Lukas Daalder, chief investment strategist at BlackRock, in an interview with Investment Officer Luxembourg’s sister publication, Fondsnieuws.nl. The reason is the 2021 Mid-year Outlook that was published last week.  

Analysts at a loss: ECB is “extremely vague”

Equity markets in Europe fell sharply on Thursday. It was even the worst trading day of the year, with declines of the major indices from 1.7 to over 2 percent. The reason: investors are afraid of an economic slowdown and overvaluations. At the same time, analysts dived into the European Central Bank (ECB) minutes, which they found “extremely vague”.