ETFs and emerging markets
Aug 25, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
Emerging markets and exchange traded funds (ETFs) have one thing in common: both are destined to hold increasing importance for investors for many years to come. Emerging markets offer some of the strongest long-term return prospects as they take their place in the global economy of the 21st century. The BRIC countries are widely predicted […]
Red squared
Aug 25, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
Russia’s budget deficit could reach 7.5 percent of GDP in 2010, stretched by state aid for banks, but economic growth should return after this year’s recession, Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said recently. Russia has kept spending high to help the economy out of its first recession in a decade, while tax revenues are falling, in […]
The birth of a paradigm?
Jun 17, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
Even before the birth of the moniker, corporate social responsibility and sustainability have loitered around the foreground of investment analysis. ESG is becoming increasingly prevalent as not only a part of decision-making but also, as a representation of what traditionalists would consider a new paradigm. Never before have these non-financial factors become such a important […]
Barclays to generate £7.3bn
Jun 09, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
Sure, it’s possible to imagine better news – say £7.3bn in cash from a straight sale instead of a mix of cash and a 20% stake in the enlarged US find manager. But this deal would address the UK bank’s biggest problem: a perceived lack of capital. At first blush, selling all of Barclays Global […]
Assessing the US Treasury’s bail out plan
Apr 21, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
It had to happen. In the face of catastrophic losses, massive unemployment and an economy that is still scratching its head as to how the whole crisis unfolded, the US government has stepped into the breach in an effort to bail out the country’s banks, protect consumers, and restore investor confidence so that the economy […]
UK government seeks to prevent cost claims
Apr 21, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
As part of the UK government’s latest plan to curb taxpayer-funded legal spending, companies and directors cleared of criminal charges in the UK could be barred from recovering their defence costs – potentially leaving businesses and individuals acquitted of fraud, price-fixing, corporate manslaughter and other serious offences with legal bills ranging up to several million […]
Rumble in the jungle
Feb 20, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
Moses Singo is an African exception. A black farmer with green fingers, he has probably had to overcome more obstacles than faced by most entrepreneurs anywhere else in the world to get his family business off the ground. A little more than a decade since launching the Singoflora Nursery in Tswane (Pretoria), he now exports […]
Investigating fraud at Satyam
Feb 19, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
Oh the irony. “Satyam” means “truth” in Sanskrit, a fitting name then for the fourth largest company in India’s booming information technology sector – a company that named the World Bank and a series of international blue chip businesses among its clients. But not anymore. The company, it now turns out, was a scam. Its chairman and […]
Do we need the IMF?
Feb 19, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
“We were all Keynesians now,” said Richard Nixon, back in 1969. If it was true then, it didn’t stay true for long. The rise of monetarism and neo-liberalism in the 1970s sidelined the once-dominant theories of British economist John Maynard Keynes Nowhere was the decline of Keynes’ ideas, and their replacement with the ideology of […]
Fixing the bankıng system
Feb 18, 2009
Jeremy Parkinson
News
What element of the crisis has most surprised you?The scale of leverage and underpriced risk on banks’ balance sheets. I was more conscious of household and government debt in thinking about possible problems, and not aware how vulnerable the banks were. Simply put, the world got lazy about balance sheets and more attention was being […]