As of Friday, May 14, 2010, Greece is the worst performer of the so called “PIGS countries” Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain. Year-to-date through May ….
14, Portugal is down -24.62%, Italy -25.25%, Greece -37.35% and Spain -31.61%.
In the same time frame, Europe, measured by the Dow Jones Europe Total Stock Market (TSM) Index, is down -12.56%, outperforming the Eurozone, which is down -18.13% as measured by the Dow Jones Eurozone TSM Index. The Euro was down -12.83% year-to-date as of May 14.
David Krein, senior director product development and analytics, Dow Jones Indexes, has compared the risk factors of
the six European total stock market indexes: “Historically, Greece has been riskier than any of the other “PIGS” nations
based on annualized standard deviation over both short and long timeframes. Greece has experienced significantly greater
risk than Europe as a whole in the past year. In that same timeframe, Ireland has maintained a risk level similar to Europe,
while Portugal, Italy, and Spain have similar levels of risk to each other that falls roughly in-between.”
The year-to-date performance of the six indexes mentioned above is a departure of the positive results achieved in 2009. Between December 31, 2008 and December 31, 2009, the Dow Jones Portugal TSM was up 41.87% outperforming Italy (28.10%), Greece (26.98%), Spain (40.78%), Europe (41.08%), and the Eurozone (34.81%) respectively. The Euro was up 2.71% in the same time frame in 2009.
The performance is based on the Dow Jones Portugal, Dow Jones Italy, Dow Jones Greece, Dow Jones Spain, Dow Jones Europe, and Dow Jones Eurozone Total Stock Market Indexes.
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Source: ETFWorld – Dow Jones Indexes
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