• Hedge Funds Never Been Less Bullish On Clovis Oncology Inc (CLVS)

    Hedge Funds Never Been Less Bullish On Clovis Oncology Inc (CLVS)How do you pick the next stock to invest in? One way would be to spend days of research browsing through thousands of publicly traded companies. However, an easier way is to look at the stocks that smart money investors are collectively bullish on. Hedge funds and other institutional investors usually invest large amounts of […]

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  • 3 exciting ASX growth shares to buy with $3,000 today

    man drawing upward curve on 2020 graph, asx share price growth

    If you’re interested in adding some growth shares to your portfolio, then I think the three named below could be great options.

    I believe all three are well-positioned to deliver above-average earnings growth over the next few years and could generate strong returns for investors.

    Here’s why I would invest $3,000 across the three:

    Bubs Australia Ltd (ASX: BUB)

    The first growth share to look at is this vertically integrated producer of goat’s milk-focused infant formula and baby food products. While I’m not sure whether it will ever be as successful as a2 Milk Company Ltd (ASX: A2M), I do see a lot of similarities. For example, around five years ago a2 Milk Company was a loss-maker and people were questioning the investment proposition. Fast-forward to today and a2 Milk Company is a highly profitable business and growing at an extraordinary rate. Could the same happen with Bubs? Well, after several years of operating at a loss and burning through cash, the company has just become cash flow positive. I’m optimistic this is a sign that it has now reached a scale which will make its operations more and more profitable over the coming years. This could make it a great long term option for growth investors.

    Megaport Ltd (ASX: MP1)

    Another growth share to consider buying is this elasticity connectivity and network services company. Megaport’s increasingly popular service allows its customers to increase and decrease their available bandwidth in response to their own demand requirements. A good example of this is an airport. It can increase its bandwidth during busy parts of the day and then decrease it when its terminals are quiet. This means the airport doesn’t need to be tied to a fixed service level on long-term and expensive contracts. Demand for its offering has been growing strongly, leading to stellar recurring revenue growth. I expect this trend to continue for some time to come thanks to the cloud computing boom.

    PolyNovo Ltd (ASX: PNV)

    A final growth share to consider buying is this exciting medical device company. I think it could have a very bright future thanks to its NovoSorb Biodegradable Temporising Matrix (BTM) product. This was developed at CSIRO and is a wound dressing intended to treat full-thickness wounds and burns. It currently has a sizeable $1.5 billion market opportunity, but management is intent on expanding its usage into the hernia and breast treatment markets. If this is successful, it could be very lucrative. Management estimates that these markets would add $6 billion to its addressable market.

    5 stocks under $5

    We hear it over and over from investors, “I wish I had bought Altium or Afterpay when they were first recommended by The Motley Fool. I’d be sitting on a gold mine!” And it’s true.

    And while Altium and Afterpay have had a good run, we think these 5 other stocks are screaming buys. And you can buy them now for less than $5 a share!

    *Extreme Opportunities returns as of June 5th 2020

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    James Mickleboro has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of BUBS AUST FPO, MEGAPORT FPO, and POLYNOVO FPO. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of A2 Milk. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended BUBS AUST FPO and MEGAPORT FPO. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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  • German Watchdog Faces Wirecard Grilling From Lawmakers

    German Watchdog Faces Wirecard Grilling From Lawmakers(Bloomberg) — Germany’s top financial watchdog faces a grilling by lawmakers in Berlin over the regulator’s failure to uncover problems at Wirecard AG before it collapsed in one of the country’s biggest-ever corporate scandals.BaFin President Felix Hufeld is scheduled to testify behind closed doors to German parliament members at about 11:30 a.m. local time on Wednesday. Given the critical comments made by some lawmakers last week, the hearing may be Hufeld’s toughest since he took the job more than five years ago.Even with ample warning, German authorities failed to catch accounting issues at the digital-payments company, whose collapse has shaken confidence in the country’s finance industry. While the government is now plugging gaps in its oversight framework, the hearing presents a chance for Hufeld to counter criticism that BaFin sought to protect Wirecard by banning short sales of the stock last year.The BaFin president acknowledged last week that his institution is among the organizations responsible for the scandal at Wirecard, yet Hufeld defended the short-sale ban as being a legal requirement following indications that the stock’s trading was being manipulated. Sarah Ryglewski, a deputy finance minister, will also be questioned by parliament members.At the hearing Hans Michelbach, a member of the finance committee from Angela Merkel’s bloc, plans to ask Hufeld why he didn’t inform the committee that BaFin was investigating Wirecard’s accounts during an April 2019 meeting at which the regulator mentioned the company. He’ll also ask why BaFin didn’t take action when it began to suspect that Wirecard was manipulating the market.German lawmakers have already taken shots at BaFin in the media. Fabio De Masi, deputy leader of anti-capitalist Left party’s parliamentary caucus, questioned whether Hufeld will be able to hang onto his job. Danyal Bayaz, a committee member for the opposition Greens, told Bloomberg that “personnel consequences” — a euphemism for sackings — may be required.Politicians from the ruling parties haven’t gone that far. Alexander Dobrindt, the head of the CSU party caucus in the lower house of parliament, said on Tuesday that lawmakers may begin their own investigation if the Finance Ministry doesn’t clarify BaFin’s role in the Wirecard scandal.Hufeld, 59, is a lawyer by training and a keen cellist. He’s known as an affable person who speaks plainly about controversial issues. He often starts speeches with cultural references ranging from Rip van Winkle to German TV advertisements from the 1990s.While BaFin was seen as slow to react, another major issue was the delegation of responsibilities.Germany is one of relatively few countries to split accounting enforcement between a private-sector watchdog and its markets regulator. This week, the country’s Justice Ministry canceled its contract with the former, while Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said that BaFin needs investigative powers similar to prosecutors.That would hand more influence to Hufeld, a former banker and insurance industry executive who joined BaFin in 2013. Although he missed out on the soul-searching that followed the 2008 credit crunch, the BaFin president has had a front seat to the resulting seismic shift in the finance industry as one of the key players in shaping the regulatory response.That won’t make the hearing any easier.“Any failures have to be laid clearly on the table,” said Matthias Hauer, a lawmaker from the CDU and a member of the finance committee. “We owe it to the savers, staff and investors as well as all the other market participants to prevent a repeat of such a situation.”(Adds planned questions in fifth paragraph.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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  • Is Beyond Meat, Inc. (BYND) A Good Stock To Buy?

    Is Beyond Meat, Inc. (BYND) A Good Stock To Buy?How do you pick the next stock to invest in? One way would be to spend days of research browsing through thousands of publicly traded companies. However, an easier way is to look at the stocks that smart money investors are collectively bullish on. Hedge funds and other institutional investors usually invest large amounts of […]

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  • Wirecard Debt Hedges Set to Pay Out $212 Million to Funds

    Wirecard Debt Hedges Set to Pay Out $212 Million to Funds(Bloomberg) — Hedge funds that bought credit insurance on Wirecard AG debt are among those in line for a windfall of as much as $212 million after the disgraced German payments company filed for insolvency last week.A committee of traders ruled late on Tuesday that Wirecard has gone through a so-called bankruptcy credit event, triggering payouts to holders of credit-default swaps. These contracts are commonly used by hedge funds to make bets on a company running into trouble as well as by bond investors to hedge their exposure.Wirecard filed for court protection in Munich on June 25 after disclosing more than $2 billion was missing from its balance sheet. The scandal led to the arrest of ex Chief Executive Officer Markus Braun and inflicted severe damage to the reputation of Germany’s financial sector. The country’s deputy finance minister has pledged a quick overhaul of regulatory oversight.Wirecard’s credit derivatives reference its 500 million-euro bond due 2024 which is now in default and quoted at about 20 cents on the euro, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.The decision is binding on swaps governed by 2014 definitions and the panel will meet again to decide whether an auction should be held to settle the contracts, the Credit Derivatives Determinations Committee said in a statement on its website.(Updates with panel’s ruling from second paragraph.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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  • Wirecard administrator says received inbound interest for assets

    Wirecard administrator says received inbound interest for assetsWirecard’s administrator said he has received strong inbound interest for the payment firm’s assets and will shortly mandate banks for the sale of individual parts of the company. “A large number of investors from all over the world have contacted us, interested in acquiring either the core business or business units that are independent of it”, Michael Jaffe said in a statement after a creditor committee meeting late on Tuesday. Wirecard filed for insolvency last week owing creditors almost $4 billion after disclosing a 1.9 billion euro ($2.1 billion) hole in its accounts that its auditor EY said was the result of a sophisticated global fraud.

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  • Amazon defends new Sydney warehouse as ’employment creator’

    Man opening Walmart package in home office

    American e-commerce giant Amazon.com, Inc (NASDAQ: AMZN) has certainly garnered its fair share of fans. The online giant morphed from a garaged online book retailer to one of the largest global companies. All this in the past 2 decades.

    This has no doubt been a joyful experience for anyone who has bought Amazon shares along the way. Just 5 years ago, Amazon shares were US$443. Today, those same shares will set you back US$2,759 each.

    But Jeff Bezos’ baby has attracted its fair share of critics, too. And that’s perhaps why we are hearing mixed views about the company’s plans to build a new ‘robotics fulfilment centre’ in Sydney’s western suburbs. 

    Amazon expands its Aussie footprint

    According to reporting in BusinessInsider, the company already has 4 of these ‘fulfilment centres’ (also known as distribution warehouses) in the country. But the new Sydney centre looks likely to be Amazon’s largest investment in Australia to date. The warehouse is set to occupy 200,000 square metres over 4 levels and house around 11 million items. It will be constructed in partnership with ASX companies Goodman Group (ASX: GMG) and Brickworks Limited (ASX: BKW).

    The report states Amazon faced past criticism for excessive automation in fulfilment centres, heavily relying on ‘robots’ instead of human workers. Amazon also denied reports of increased rates of worker injury through higher automation levels

    These issues seem pertinent to NSW taxpayers with Amazon reliant on NSW government grants to build the centre. The report also quotes an investigation by Reuters, which has found that after initially being operated by human workers, Amazon’s US-based fulfilment centres have been increasingly automated in recent years, which has cost around 1,300 jobs across 55 centres.

    However, BusinessInsider quotes Amazon Australia’s director of operations Craig Fuller, who calls the new centre an “employment creator”:

    “We know from our experience of launching Amazon robotics buildings in other countries that we actually make jobs. Since we started launching robotic sites, we’ve created around about 300,000 jobs… We still need people to maintain and look after the robots.”

    Should ASX investors pay attention?

    Despite what you may think of Amazon’s business practises, it looks as though the e-commerce giant is here to stay. Especially as the government has effectively rolled out the red carpet. Whilst many ASX investors may not want to invest in Amazon directly, Goodman Group and Brickworks shares seem worth another look. Especially after these developments.

    REITs (real estate investment trusts) have been on the nose in recent times for ASX investors. But I think investing in the future of e-commerce (as Goodman Group and Brickworks are doing) is a smart path to explore.

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

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    John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Sebastian Bowen has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of and recommends Amazon and recommends the following options: short January 2022 $1940 calls on Amazon and long January 2022 $1920 calls on Amazon. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of and has recommended Brickworks. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Amazon. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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  • 10 FY21 ASX share picks revealed by Bell Potter

    Top 10

    We have just entered FY21 and there are plenty of ASX share investment opportunities.

    Bell Potter is one of the leading brokers in the country, with Bell Financial Group Ltd (ASX: BFG) being the parent company.

    The broker released the names of lots of different opportunities in different sectors, both large caps and small caps. So, I’m going to cover 10 of them in this article:

    Banks 

    Share 1: Macquarie Group Ltd (ASX: MQG)

    Why it’s pick: The global investment bank has $25 billion of capital to be deployed into infrastructure and other assets. If it weren’t for COVID-19 then the profit could have been up 4% in FY20.

    My view: Macquarie is one of my preferred ASX share blue chips for its international growth and quality.

    Share 2: Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA)

    Why it’s pick: Bell Potter thinks that underlying CBA income should be stable with sufficient capital on the balance sheet. Asset sales are lifting its CET1 ratio. There could still be a $1 per share dividend paid in August.

    My view: CBA is my preferred ASX bank share. Quality is key to thrive through periods like this.

    Diversified financials

    Share 3: Afterpay Ltd (ASX: APT)

    Why it’s pick: It’s in an upgrade cycle. Continued success at integrating with other e-commerce players like Visa, Mastercard and so on will be important. Geographic expansion will help too, such as growth into Canada.

    My view: At a share price above $62 I’m not sure Afterpay represents good value. It has run really hard and margins could come under pressure in the future.

    Shares 4, 5 and 6: Janus Henderson Group (ASX: JHG), Pendal Group Ltd (ASX: PDL) and Perpetual Limited (ASX: PPT)

    Why it’s pick: These fund managers seem relatively cheap ASX shares, they still pay healthy dividends and are about to show a good increase in funds under management (FUM) as share markets had a strong quarter to 30 June 2020.

    My view: I agree that these fund managers could prove to be performers over FY21 as share markets recover. However, I’m not sure about the long-term as passive investing continues to capture a lot of fund flow.

    Listed investment companies and trusts (LICs and LITs) 

    Share 7: MFF Capital Investments Ltd (ASX: MFF)

    Why it’s pick: Low operating fees, a large cash balance and a big franking credit balance could help deliver good returns over the next 12 months.

    My view: I concur, I have said for a long time that MFF Capital is one of the best LICs out there. Chris Mackay is a great portfolio manager.

    Share 8: Magellan Group Trust (ASX: MGG)

    Why it’s pick: The ASX share can provide investors with diversification whilst also being focused on the biggest and best internet, ecommerce, technology and payment companies. It produces strong returns and is trading at a discount to its assets. 

    My view: I believe the LIT could be one of the best-performing ones over the next decade. The Magellan team are great investors and are capable of consistently outperforming the benchmark and peers.

    Share 9: WCM Global Growth Ltd (ASX: WQG)

    Why it’s pick: The LIC has delivered a strong performance over the past 12 months, yet it’s trading at a sizeable discount to its net assets. The LIC is well positioned for whatever happens next with COVID-19. For example, its largest holding at the end of May 2020 was Shopify.

    My view: I love buying ASX shares for less than they’re worth. I like the idea of buying quality LICs trading at an attractive discount, particularly when they’re invested in great shares themselves.

    Agriculture

    Share 10: Rural Funds Group (ASX: RFF)

    Why it’s pick: The agricultural real estate investment trust (REIT) is shifting to natural resource assets which are appreciating rather than depreciating in value, which also have market linked rental reviews. Over time Bell Potter expects favourable asset revaluations and growth in rental income as capital is deployed in newly acquired assets.

    My view: Rural Funds is favourite REIT of the sector. I think it has pleasing income growth qualities as well as a solid tenant base. It may have the best chance in the sector of increasing its distribution over the next 12 months.

    5 stocks under $5

    We hear it over and over from investors, “I wish I had bought Altium or Afterpay when they were first recommended by The Motley Fool. I’d be sitting on a gold mine!” And it’s true.

    And while Altium and Afterpay have had a good run, we think these 5 other stocks are screaming buys. And you can buy them now for less than $5 a share!

    *Extreme Opportunities returns as of June 5th 2020

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison owns shares of Magellan Flagship Fund Ltd, MAGLOBTRST UNITS, and RURALFUNDS STAPLED. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of and has recommended Macquarie Group Limited and RURALFUNDS STAPLED. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of AFTERPAY T FPO. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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  • ASX 200 finishes 0.6% higher, Aussie house prices fall

    ASX 200

    The S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) finished the day higher today by 0.6%.

    Investor eyes continue to focus on the growing COVID-19 numbers in Melbourne.

    Nextdc Ltd (ASX: NXT) shares grow

    Out of all the ASX 200 shares, Nextdc saw the biggest rise today with a share price rise of almost 8%.

    What happened? It announced material contract wins in New South Wales. Contracted commitments in NSW have risen by approximately 4MW to more than 36MW. This means contracted customer commitments plus expansion options at NSW data centres are now approaching 60MW.

    Due to the new customer commitments, Nextdc has committed to completing the S2 fit-out to a total planned capacity of 30MW.

    Revenue recognition for the new contracted commitments is expected to commence during FY21 after completion and commissioning of the associated data halls.

    House prices fell faster in June 2020

    The CoreLogic Home Value Index showed a second consecutive decline of national house prices. The national index showed a 0.7% drop in June.

    Melbourne and Perth showed the heaviest declines of 1.1% each over the month. Sydney prices fell 0.8%, Brisbane prices dropped 0.4% and Adelaide registered a 0.2% fall. However, both Hobart and Darwin saw growth of 0.3% and Canberra managed an increase of 0.1%.

    CoreLogic head of research, Tim Lawless, warned about what may happen down the road: “While it is encouraging to see lenders have recently hinted at an extension in their repayment leniency policies, the government stimulus will eventually taper and banks will require borrowers to repay their loans.  The longer term outlook for the housing market is largely dependent on how well the economy is tracking when these support measures are removed.”

    Suncorp Group Ltd (ASX: SUN) new model doesn’t impress

    The ASX 200 insurance business was one of the worst performers today. The Suncorp share price went down 4% after announcing changes.

    There will be two people in charge of the Australian insurance division. One will focus on the underwriting, distribution, brands, marketing, product design and innovation. The other executive will be responsible for all aspects of claims management and operations.

    Suncorp is also going to combine a number of the insurance and group functions to create a more streamlined and efficient organisation.

    Clive van Horen has been appointed to the vacant CEO of banking and wealth division.

    The ASX 200 company also announced that the FY21 natural hazard allowance is expected to increased by $90 million to $130 million. The FY21 main catastrophe reinsurance program is going to be finalised with a similar structure to previous years, with new aggregate excess of loss cover purchased for FY21 providing $400 million of cover for events in excess of $5 million once the retained cost of these events reaches $650 million.

    ASX travel shares jump

    Aside from Victoria, the other Australian states look like they’re in good shape to resume travel again.

    The Corporate Travel Management Ltd (ASX: CTD) share price went up almost 8%.

    The Webjet Limited (ASX: WEB) share price climbed around 7.5%.

    Flight Centre Travel Group Ltd (ASX: FLT) announced today it has access to a debt facility of up to GBP 65 million from the Bank of England. It will be used as and when required to help offset the COVID-19 impacts in the UK. The Flight Centre share price rose 3% today.

    The Qantas Airways Limited (ASX: QAN) share price went up 2.4% and the Sydney Airport Holdings Pty Ltd (ASX: SYD) share price rose 1.2%.

    ASX 200 declines

    Trading has begun for the new telcos on the ASX. Singapore-based telco Tuas Limited (ASX: TUA) suffered a share price decline of 24% after it was divested from TPG Corporation Ltd (ASX: TPM). According to the ASX, the new entity called TPG Telecom Ltd (ASX: TPG) suffered a share price fall of around 4% today.

    5 stocks under $5

    We hear it over and over from investors, “I wish I had bought Altium or Afterpay when they were first recommended by The Motley Fool. I’d be sitting on a gold mine!” And it’s true.

    And while Altium and Afterpay have had a good run, we think these 5 other stocks are screaming buys. And you can buy them now for less than $5 a share!

    *Extreme Opportunities returns as of June 5th 2020

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of and has recommended Corporate Travel Management Limited and Webjet Ltd. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Flight Centre Travel Group Limited. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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  • Australian property prices fell again in June. Will the drop continue?

    real estate, property, housing

    Whilst we Fools normally preoccupy ourselves with the performance of the ASX sharemarket and the S&P/ASX 200 (INDEXASX: JXO), we also take a look at the property prices and the housing market from time to time.

    The property market is an important economic barometer that has far-reaching implications for the economy and the ASX. Up until now, we haven’t been able to get a good grasp of how the coronavirus pandemic has really effected long-term house prices. But new reporting from BusinessInsider has shed some light on the 2020 housing market as we start a new financial year today.

    The BusinessInsider report quotes new data from research firm, CoreLogic. This data shows national property prices fell an average of 0.7% over the month of June. This is nearly double the 0.4% drop we saw over May. On average, capital city property prices declined by 1.3%.

    Sydney, Perth and Melbourne house prices experienced the worst falls, with milder drops in Brisbane, Adelaide and regional markets. Hobart, Darwin and Canberra all managed to eke out slim growth.

    The report notes that things could have been a lot worse. Back in March, forecasters like the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA) were estimating property prices had the potential to plunge more than 10%.

    But various government policies and income support payments like JobKeeper have evidently gone a long way to stem any potential bleeding in house prices. As have moratoriums on rental payments and evictions that the ASX banks like CommBank and various governments have implemented. Interest rates are also at record lows, which is also likely to be buttressing housing market stress.

    What’s next for Aussie house prices?

    Whilst the data from May and June isn’t exactly good news, it certainly could have been a lot worse. We are by no means out of the woods yet though.

    Rental moratoriums will not last forever and neither will the generous support payments like JobKeeper. The report also quotes Domain Holdings Australia Ltd’s (ASX: DHG) Trent Wiltshire, who warns investors to brace for the end of these economic safety nets, which could come as soon as September:

    “The key thing that potentially will push prices down is if people are forced to sell their properties. If we have people losing JobKeeper or the higher JobSeeker payment and then to need to start repaying their mortgage again, then that’s a really big hit to them, the economy and that will likely see a big rise in forced sales.”

    So a lot is riding on the longevity of these safety nets. So if you want to keep an eye on where house price could head in FY21, watching developments in this space is a good place to start. In the meantime, I think all investors – be it in shares or property – should proceed with caution. As I said earlier, we are not out of the woods yet.

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Sebastian Bowen has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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