Ken Fisher reports he has made some portfolio changes as a result of the situation in Japan: he has "increased weight in Japan and picked up some other things, mostly technology, on the presumption that things tied to [Japan] will" improve faster than many people think.
Overall, Fisher (left) told AdvisorOne in an exclusive interview on Wednesday that we have been in a "normal corrective phase since the beginning of the year. There are too many optimists and too many pessimists, and this is cooling down the optimists." It's "part of the same chop trend going nowhere," he explains. "There are all kinds of super bulls and super bears, and not much in the middle."
Meanwhile, says Fisher, founder and CEO of Fisher Investments, in Woodside, Calif., the firm isn't changing how it communicates with clients. In a regular "weekly commentary e-mail, we said we think this is largely a tragedy that is being expanded in the media."
Media 'Hysteria'
"Rarely do people think they're hysterical when they really are," Fisher says, railing at media coverage of the unfolding tragedy in Japan—especially television. The story, he says is being "reported as worse than things there really are." The media needs to be "responsible about how they are reporting this—TV is fanning the hysteria. I saw Elliott Spitzer interviewing a whistleblower about GE" regarding nuclear plant design—[there have been media reports that the GE design of the most troubled nuclear plant in Japan was less expensive to build and less safe].