Investors’ love affair with bonds has likely come to an end. The yield on the 10 year U.S. Treasury bond peaked at just under 16% back in 1981. Over the next 35 years, this rate dropped continuously reaching a low of 1.375% in the summer of 2016. This decline fueled perhaps the longest bull market […]
News & Insights
The 2-Minute Thought: Sticking with Emerging Markets
If you own emerging market stocks, you know it’s been painful this year. The chart below from McKinsey shows just how wide the divergence has been between emerging markets and the stellar S&P 500. Source: McKinsey Global Institute To say that emerging markets are out of favor now is a bit like saying water seems […]
The 2-Minute Thought: Geopolitical Risk Declining?
Believe it or not, attention to geopolitical risk seems to be declining — in spite of trade tensions, saber-rattling between the U.S. and China, and emerging markets turmoil. That at least is according to BlackRock and its quantitative tool, the BlackRock Geopolitical Risk Indicator (BGRI). The BGRI attempts to measure the amount of attention geopolitical […]
Time To Question The Middle Kingdom?…
I have been an admirer of China’s growth for a long time. The doomsayers predict it will come to an end and maybe soon, but with a nearly forty-year track record of solid results, I will stick with China until they stumble. Call me stupid. However, today there may be reasons for me to second […]
The Longest U.S. Stock Market Rally Ever…
From the lows in early 2009, it has been up, up and away for Wall Street. The market has not suffered a decline of 20% (the Bear market definition) in over nine years. However, this market has not been loved. Stock prices have risen less on an annual basis than the average Bull Market and […]
What We’re Hearing from Management…
It’s been another interesting season of listening to corporate earnings calls, and getting management’s take on their companies, industries and the world at large. What have we learned? Here are a few selected themes: Underlying demand in the U.S. is good. As hard as it is to generalize, things look pretty good for U.S. companies. […]
Cleaning up the World’s Oceans…
In the 1967 movie The Graduate, recent college graduate Dustin Hoffman is advised to pursue a career in plastics. As it turns out, this was probably good career advice. As the chart below shows, the production of plastics globally has increased more than 20-fold since then. But what has made plastic an ideal input to […]
The 2-Minute Thought: When the Robots Come, Human Hearts Will Matter
In a recent speech called “The Future of Work,” Bank of England Governor Mark Carney addressed how artificial intelligence, automation, interconnectivity, and other elements of the Fourth Industrial Revolution will change the way we work. The way we work already has changed enormously. In Carney’s words, economies are being reorganized into “a series of distributed […]
The 2-Minute Thought: Pursuing Outside Interests
In a 2017 editorial, David Epstein and Malcolm Gladwell noted that most scientists have about the same number of hobbies as the general public, but that scientists inducted into national academies tend to have more – and Nobel Prize winners still more. Nobel laureates are at least 22 times more likely than others to have […]
When ‘Cash- Strapped’ Takes on New Meaning…
When you think ‘siege’ you think of the Middle Ages and months of castles surrounded and stalemated armies. Sieges don’t happen in the modern era. Well a siege actually did happen in Sarajevo (Bosnia) between 1992 and 1995. The Serbs completely surrounded the city and pounded Sarajevo daily with bombs and sniper fire from the […]
“Once A Year Go Somewhere You Have Never Been Before” – The Dalai Lama
I am the kind of person who needs to go to a place and see it, then I can better understand the history and current events. In the recent past I have been to Iran, the five ‘Stans, the South Caucasus and this summer, the Balkans. All of them are now a little more understandable. […]
Our Limitations… Our Habits…
Not too long ago, The Economist wrote an article about an academic paper that I’ve since learned is called “Evidence for a conserved quantity in human mobility” by Laura Alessandretti and Andrea Baronchelli, both in the Mathematics Department at City University of London, and Sune Lehmann at the DTU Technical University of Denmark. If you […]