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.

Commentary: new oil crisis imminent

Ultimately, the price of oil is determined by supply and demand. What is special about the oil price is that, in theory, there are several equilibrium prices. This is because a large part of the supply is linked to a state budget. Where normally the supply goes down when the oil price goes down, there are countries that in the past pumped more oil to realise the same yield.

Knowing that the final price is determined by the marginal buyer and the marginal seller, identifying these two parties is essential for predicting the oil price.

Han Dieperink: the investor and the government

The moment the government starts determining what you are allowed to earn as an investor, it is usually wise to be gone. In Europe, there is more regulation than in the United States. In some cases, such as in the financial sector, there has been de facto nationalisation since the Great Financial Crisis. The average bank employee has to deal with more rules than the average civil servant. 

Commentary: Time is running out and inflation is rising

Only the first statement is certain. The first half of 2021 has gone by so quickly that we haven’t had a chance to pay proper attention to all the exciting economic and financial developments. Economic indicators have shown unprecedented recovery in both the U.S. and Europe in the first six months of 2021, resulting in exponential growth expectations for corporate earnings on both sides of the Atlantic. The European industrial outlook, in particular, is taking off.