Year: 2012

The Bear’s Lair: The old City had it right

42 months after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, negative banking stories continue appearing daily – not about the criminal prosecutions for events that happened five years ago, but on examples of greed and stupidity that are occurring today. On both sides of the Atlantic, massive regulatory efforts have been carried out that if anything have […]

The Bear’s Lair: Emerging markets that fail to emerge

Brazil’s 2011 growth was announced this week at 2.7%, or only 1.6% per capita, and prospects for 2012 don’t look too good either. Russia has just re-elected Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, whose apparent flat-tax supply-side economics of 2001 has degenerated into crony capitalism enforced by nuclear weaponry. Indian growth is also slowing; the good news is […]

The Bear’s Lair: The profits bubble

With real interest rates having been negative for nearly four years, you would expect asset markets to be in a bubble. Debt markets, with long term bonds offering yields well below the expected level of inflation, and commodities where gold is currently trading at twice its famous 1980 peak, certainly seem to exhibit bubble valuation […]

The Bear’s Lair: The waning of finance

Wall Street’s 2011 results were disappointing and the howls of banker anguish over shrunken bonuses have reverberated through the better Manhattan restaurants, bars and clubs. The rise in financial services’ share of the economy, seemingly so inexorable, has at least paused. Is this merely a blip, or is it the beginning of a reversal, in […]

The Bear’s Lair: Machines from Hell

In an interview with Gideon Rachman of the Financial Times, a senior German official described the euro as a “machine from hell that we cannot turn off.” Personally I am more positive than most about the euro, provided it is managed by grown-ups and not by Keynesians. However there is no question that our current […]

The Bear’s Lair: Occupy the C-suite!

Probably the biggest single lesson of the last few years outside monetary policy has been that the contract between top management and shareholders is broken. Top management rewards itself with ever more grandiose bonuses and option payments, while shareholders are fobbed off, not with dividends which have value, but with “share repurchases” which do not. […]

The Bear’s Lair: The government bubble

The causes of the 2007-08 downturn are now etched indelibly into popular memory: it all came about because of an infamous housing bubble, which policymakers inexplicably failed to spot. Readers of this column will know that I regard this explanation as simplistic, although housing was certainly an intermediate cause of the problem. However spotting the […]

The Bear’s Lair: They don’t make companies like they used to

The Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing of Eastman Kodak, founded in 1892, highlights the fact that you just don’t see many of the titans of 19th century commerce around any more. Corporate lifespans in general are getting much shorter. It goes along with the rest of life – you can’t get an appliance these days that […]

The Bear’s Lair: The illusions of private equity

The controversy over Mitt Romney’s work at Bain Capital has led me to realize that private equity is a poorly understood business, whose economic effects have not yet been fully explored and are in many respects pernicious. This is not a knock on Romney, who in my view would be a mediocre candidate for President […]

The Bear’s Lair: Independent Scotland: Norway or Greece?

It now seems certain that the Scottish people will have the opportunity of voting on an independence referendum, at latest in 2014 and probably sooner, with David Cameron’s government and Scottish first minister (and Scottish National Party leader) Alex Salmond disagreeing mostly on the referendum’s timing. It’s thus worth looking at the prospects for an […]