Mark Mobius

Mark Mobius
Joseph Mark Mobiusis an emerging markets fund manager at Franklin Templeton Investments. Mark Mobius, Ph.D., executive chairman of Templeton Emerging Markets Group, joined Templeton in 1987. Currently, he directs the Templeton research team based in 18 global emerging markets offices and manages emerging markets portfolios. In 2015, after leading the company for a quarter of a century, Mark Mobius decided to step down as the lead manager of the Templeton Emerging Markets Investment Trustand handed over control of the fund...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionBusinessman
Date of Birth17 August 1936
CountryUnited States of America
China and the U.S. have a very symbiotic relationship which will not decline any time soon. There are more shared interests as compared to shared differences and for this reason relations will continue to be good.
If you ever want to eat a tuna sandwich again, don't go to a tuna factory. I visited one where they had two lines: one was the human food line and one was the cat food line - and they didn't look any different.
There is definitely going to be another financial crisis around the corner because we haven’t solved any of the things that caused the previous crisis,
What goes down usually goes back up, if you're willing to be patient and don't hit the panic button.
The only way to consistently stay ahead of the game is to adopt a long-term view and, if appropriate, with a strong contrarian spin.
The secret to global investing is gaining an insight into the hopes and desires of the people who live and work in the countries you invest in.
Although investors have been concerned with China's slowing growth rate, China remains one of the largest and fastest-growing economies in the world.
Sometimes, when there's too much traffic clogging up the road, you need to take a different route. But following the same path as everyone else can stall your progress in reaching your investment goals too.
The safe time to invest is when there is blood in the streets.
When you consider the sheer magnitude of investable equities to choose from in the world's emerging markets, you realize that finding one that looks attractive enough to warrant investing your faith and assets in is as formidable a task as finding a needle in a haystack. Fortunately, researching investment opportunities is a lot more interesting than digging for needles in haystacks.
I'm more bullish about emerging markets because we know the emerging markets are growing at double the rate of the developing nations. This is reflective in the stock market eventually,