magazine archive
magazine archive
Russ Mould
Watch margin debt as tech giants keeps powering S&P 500
Thursday 09 Sep 2021The S&P 500 index continues to barrel higher, setting fresh peaks as it does so. The American benchmark has advanced for seven straight months, its best run without a loss since its 10-month romp between April 2017 and January 2018, even if some of the market technicals have not convinced...
Why gold could yet shrug off an unhappy anniversary
Thursday 26 Aug 2021In August 1971, America’s 37th president, Richard M. Nixon, took the greenback off the gold standard, ‘closing the window’ though which overseas governments could exchange paper dollars for the precious metal at a fixed rate of $35 an ounce. That manoeuvre, which signalled the end of the 36-year-...
Five ways to take the markets’ temperature
Thursday 12 Aug 2021The FTSE 100 continues to paddle gently sideways – it is summer after all. The UK’s benchmark index has gone nowhere since May and still stands around 10% below its May 2018 peak of 7,779. Yet the vagaries of the FTSE 100 – which has exposure to sectors that are unpredictable (miners and oils),...
Why Chinese stocks are still not partying
Thursday 22 Jul 2021Tomorrow (23 July) heralds the one-hundredth anniversary of the first meeting of the Chinese Communist Party and the country’s leadership continues to mark its birthday with a series of high-profile events, speeches and actions Whether the centenary is anything that investors can mark with pleasure...
Dividends: the FTSE 100 could yield 3.9% in 2022
Thursday 15 Jul 2021Environmental campaigners may grimace and investors who run strict environmental, social and governance ESG screens are likely to remain indifferent, but yield-seeking portfolio builders will doubtless be delighted to see Royal Dutch Shell ( RDSB ) promise higher cash returns to shareholders in the...
Cash is being drained from the banking system: why this matters
Thursday 08 Jul 2021US journalist Edward R. Murrow may be known for the line which he used to end his broadcasts – ‘Good night, and good luck’ – but this column’s favourite comment of his goes ‘Anyone who isn’t confused really doesn’t understand the situation’. There is one particularly confusing situation in...
Can miners and oils dig the FTSE 100 out of its Brexit hole?
Thursday 01 Jul 2021The fifth anniversary of the UK’s referendum on its membership of the EU (23 June) appears to be passing with barely a murmur. Perhaps both ‘Remainers’ or ‘Leavers’ may be thinking there is no debate to be had, given the result and the UK’s withdrawal from the economic bloc on 31 January 2020. Both...
Assessing the Fed’s policy options
Thursday 24 Jun 2021During the first 200 years of its existence, the US accumulated a cumulative federal debt of $1 trillion, the equivalent of 30% of its GDP (gross domestic product). In the last 40 years, that figure has surged to $28 trillion. The good news is that the US economy has grown too, as annual GDP has...
Reasons why deficits and inflation matter to gold
Thursday 17 Jun 2021Gold bugs get a kick out of telling investors with a heavy weighting toward equities that the precious metal has a better performance record than the S&P 500 index of US shares since the turn of the millennium. The commodity is up by 547% over that period, while the S&P 500 has offered a...
What new floats say about the market’s future direction
Thursday 10 Jun 2021The plunge into bankruptcy of the Softbank-backed, self-styled ‘construction industry disruptor’ Katerra spares investors in US equities the decision over whether to buy into what would have doubtless been an eventual IPO (initial public offering). Katerra had been given ‘Unicorn’ status – a...