Archive for the Category ‘Finance’

The world economy: The odd decouple

The world economy: The odd decouple

Theories about why some rich-world economies are doing better than America’s don’t stand up
AMERICA is used to making the economic weather. It has the world’s largest economy, its most influential central bank and it issues the main global reserve currency. In recent months, however, some rich-world economies (notably Germany’s) have basked in the sunshine even [...]

Buttonwood: Divvying up returns

Buttonwood: Divvying up returns

Investors should pay more attention to dividends
DIVIDENDS do not get the respect they deserve. Over the long run they provide the bulk of equity investors’ returns. Work by Elroy Dimson, Paul Marsh and Mike Staunton of the London Business School* found that over the period from 1900 to 2005, the real return from global equities [...]

Sovereign debt: Wiggle room

Sovereign debt: Wiggle room

The IMF offers indebted governments some reassurance
ONE consequence of the deepest recession since the Depression has been the biggest peacetime build-up of public debt the rich world has ever seen. Some reckon that the debt position of many rich countries is now unsustainable. It is a measure of just how nervous people have become about [...]

Carbon markets: The smoking greenhouse gun

Carbon markets: The smoking greenhouse gun

An alluring trade in “supergreenhouse” gas emissions is coming under scrutiny
ONE of the curiosities of carbon markets is that they do not just trade in carbon. Other greenhouse gases can be given a value, too—sometimes a very high one. Claims that these prices promote scammery are now prompting some searching questions.
The gas at the [...]

Private equity: Candover and out

Private equity: Candover and out

A once-revered buy-out firm is going under. Who’s next?
FOR years people have been predicting the demise of private equity. Now they have a proper tombstone to point at. On August 31st Candover, once one of Britain’s leading private-equity firms, announced that it would unwind its assets and return money to shareholders and investors. The 30-year-old [...]

Rare earths: Digging in

Rare earths: Digging in

China restricts exports of some obscure but important commodities
BEHIND the rise of resource-poor countries like Japan, South Korea and China into industrial giants has been the readiness of other countries to sell them critical commodities, albeit sometimes at excruciating cost. An unfolding collision around a group of elements known as “rare earths” is seen by [...]

Finance after the crisis: Deutsche Bank: A tamer casino

Finance after the crisis: Deutsche Bank: A tamer casino

Germany’s biggest bank is trying to make investment banking boring. The latest in our series of profiles of financial institutions after the crisis
JOSEF ACKERMANN, the head of Deutsche Bank, combines a silky manner with blunt words. When the German government set up a bail-out fund to stabilise the country’s banking system, he said he would [...]

Hedge funds: Bigger, safer but duller

Hedge funds: Bigger, safer but duller

A secretive industry opens up to meet the demands of investors and regulators
FOR much of the past two years hedge-fund managers have tried to convince queasy investors not to give up on them. Now it seems that some of the industry’s biggest names have given up on themselves. Stanley Druckenmiller, a celebrated hedge-fund manager and [...]

HSBC and Nedbank: Mutual attraction

HSBC and Nedbank: Mutual attraction

HSBC learns to play the vuvuzela
THE closest HSBC traditionally got to sub-Saharan Africa was sending its Hong Kong-bound staff round the Cape of Good Hope before the Suez Canal opened in 1869. It is a sign of the region’s vastly improved prospects and the bank’s evolving strategy that HSBC is now in talks to buy [...]

ShoreBank: Small enough to fail

ShoreBank: Small enough to fail

The sorry end to a bold banking experiment
“LET’S change the world”: ShoreBank’s slogan shouted that the Chicago-based lender saw itself as not just a bank but the leader of a movement. Founded in 1973, it set out to prove that money could be lent profitably to poor people in poor neighbourhoods. For 35 years it [...]

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