We show the assets under management of various sustainable investing strategies to see which ones are the most and least popular.
Investors may want to buy the dip when values drop or buy the rise when values climb. We compare these strategies with simply following a plan.
To give context to the Wall Street vs Main Street debate, we compare S&P 500 returns and U.S. GDP growth since 1980.
Infrastructure refers to any asset that provides an essential service. In today's interconnected world, data centers are exactly that.
From 2018-2020, global sustainable investing assets grew by 15% to reach $35.3 trillion. Here’s how they break down across five major markets.
A scarcity of capital from local and federal governments will result in a $5.7T infrastructure gap by 2039. What will its consequences be?
The U.S. dollar has been the world's dominant currency since World War II. In this chart, we provide a snapshot of its current global standing.
Governments are keen to make the transition to clean energy, but what will it take to get there? In this chart, we examine two scenarios through...
To determine if foreign currencies were a good inflation hedge, we looked at their performance relative to U.S. inflation over the last four decades.
Global equities had a high median real return—a return net of inflation—while energy equities were a poor hedge against inflation in recent years.