Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 53,770
The principal risk to financial markets lies not in any crisis-induced loss of confidence, but rather in the consequences of the preceding overconfidence. Equity earnings yields of 3% imply an almost arrogant certainty. The future would be exactly like the present except better, the consensus of investment opinion has had it. It went without saying that peace would reign forever
This was driven partly by unprecedented technology induced productivity gains in the Western economies but most of all it reflects a sort of peace dividend for the new Pax Americana.
Saddam had been put in his box. Western oil supplies are secure. Capitalism's nemesis, the Soviet Union, came out with it hands up, begging gimme, gimme. Defence spending, for the first time in human history could take a more appropriate place in the economic landscape.
Hark to me!
There is no upside left - only some very sizeable potential bananaskins. What if there is a revolution in Kuwait or Saudi Arabia?, for example, that would be good for a 50% crash. What if the Soviet Union returned to its old ways? What if the Chinese seize Taiwan? And the Middle East, well?!
I am not referring to Nuclear Catastrophe here, we'll all go together if that happens! I am pointing out that we are at an unprecedented peak in human economic development and geo-political stability. The next seismic shift will surely be south! Hark to me!
The latest London Business School study of long-term returns found that more than a quarter of equities' historical outperformance can be explained by an increase in share valuations (rather than by the underlying performance of the corporate sector).
...the performance of bonds may have been artificially depressed by the inflationary 1970s and 1980s.
... This is already the case with some UK pension funds, which have switched to bonds as they struggle to comply with the new accountancy standard FRS17.
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