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Economist commentary: the stability of the financial system

Money only has value if there is a relationship with the value created in the real economy. So the value of money is not determined by the government, but by the private sector. The role of the financial sector is to allocate savings to those who can use them to achieve a higher return than the interest they have to pay.

The extremely low interest rates frustrate this system. Caveat emptor.

Economist comment: Chinese government bonds attractive

At more than USD 15 trillion, the Chinese bond market is the second largest in the world. China only has to surpass the United States. China is therefore the second-largest economy in the world and the Chinese economy is already almost 20% larger than the United States in purchasing power parity terms. Yet many investors outside China hardly have any positions in Chinese bonds. 

This while, at this time, there is a high added value, both in terms of return and diversification in a broadly diversified bond portfolio.

Economic analysis: the start of the tightening cycle

The Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the ECB have all started to tighten. The Fed thinks that by the middle of next year it will have ended its 120 billion a month buying programme. At this rate, tapering will be faster than last time. To avoid discussions on tapering, Lagarde prefers to talk about recalibrating instead of tapering, but it is the same thing.

Comment: SFDR, confusion keeps us grey

Not all European regulations are good. Under the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), part of the EU Green Deal, asset managers must disclose information on sustainability. The objective is thus more transparency and openness in this area. However, from the start the directive was used as a means to classify funds.

Comment: sustainable investors have major impact

Newton’s second law states that impact equals mass times speed. It is my conviction that sustainable investors have a greater impact than they often think. Not so much because of the speed, but because of the increasing mass. In the financial markets, it is the marginal buyer and the marginal seller who determine the new balance and it is here that sustainable investors give the right push.

Comment: When the well runs dry, we'll know the value of water

The Earth should really be called “water”, because 71 percent of our planet is covered with water. Water in abundance, but only 1 percent of all that water is clean and accessible freshwater. Of that, two-thirds goes to agriculture and other food. The need for water increases with the growing population, a population that is also eating more meat.