Following the New Trade Winds
This isn’t just about finding a bargain, though. The world is changing. America’s focus on its own backyard is forcing other countries to build new relationships and create new supply chains. This is creating a fascinating shift in global economics. Take China, for instance. While Washington engages in trade spats, Beijing appears to be playing a much longer game. Chinese companies are expanding their reach into Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America, building new markets that have little to do with American consumers. This creates a vast landscape of opportunity that a purely US-focused portfolio might miss entirely.
Then there’s Europe, which is often overlooked. While America wrestles with itself, Europe, and particularly its German industrial heartland, is quietly getting on with business. German companies are often world leaders in the sort of things that will define the next economic cycle, like advanced manufacturing and green energy technology. They are building the tools for the future while others are arguing about the past. These are not speculative ventures, but established, profitable businesses adapting to a world that is becoming less reliant on a single superpower.