Tuesday, 19 February 2008

Don't forget inflation



According to the FT's Alphaville blog today-

What is remarkable about the past 20 years is not the performance of stocks, but the way inflation was contained.

Now, Barclays says, this is coming to an end. Taking a four-year rolling average, inflation on both sides of the Atlantic has risen by more than 1 per cent during the current expansion - the first time this has happened since inflation was tamed in the early 1980s.

This is attributable to the growth of the developing world. With China and other countries demanding more, and the supply of resources limited, the logical consequence is inflation.

With inflation back as a real risk, policymakers no longer have the easy solution they have used for the past 20 years - cutting interest rates at the first sign of trouble. That implies the current credit crisis is not another turn in the cycle, but the end of an anomalous period when inflation was under control. It also implies the level of inflation in China is crucial.

Wednesday, 13 February 2008

Dow hits 7000!

On this day (13 February) 1997 the Dow closed over 7000 points for the first time. In the subsequent 11 years to today the Dow has risen 76%, a compound annual rate of 5.3%.

Source: The UK Stock Market Almanac 2008

Tuesday, 12 February 2008

A new boy in the City

Extract from a book-
The building that housed the bank was superb. But there were no signs on the doors to mark the lavatories and so, being too embarrassed to ask, for the first fortnight I used the public toilets at Bank Station.

From: Marber on Markets, Brian Marber (2007)