Thursday, November 22, 2018

Briefings Magazine: Beyond Blending In

By SIMON CONSTABLE


It’s an oil painting by 17th-century Flemish painter Anthony van Dyck, the kind almost any museum would proudly display. Only this one is hanging in a slightly different location: a conference room of a wealth-management firm.
Or at least it could be. While everyone from clients to office workers may give it scant notice, most companies tend to treat office art fairly seriously. After all, aside from the money they may spend on it, the art alone can help business, serving as an icebreaker, for example. “It is difficult to get people to start talking about their money immediately,” says Annelien Bruins, CEO of the Tang Art Advisory in New York. For their part, hedge funds may use artwork to signal financial success. Read more here.

Briefings Magazine: It Isn’t the End of the World

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Italy somehow goes without a ruling party government for three months. Britain’s government is only a little better off, with internal conflict and party bickering bringing Brexit negotiations to a halt. And let’s not even bring up all the dizzying turmoil from the White House and Congress in the United States. All of which should be shaking up these countries’ economies, with investors and corporate leaders feeling pretty nervous with every headline. Read more here.

Monday, November 19, 2018

Korn Ferry: No-Brexit Deal-- The Ultimate Crisis

By SIMON CONSTABLE

It was months in the making, and still the deal that Prime Minister Theresa May forged with the European Union didn’t passing enough muster within her own cabinet. And so the talk of a no-Brexit deal scenario continues to rumble through the global markets. Read more here.

Photo by USGS on Unsplash

Friday, November 16, 2018

Middle East Eye: How finance technology can grow Middle East economies

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Lack of access to banking is hampering the Middle East and North Africa.
Access to such services in the region lags the world, which, in turn, is holding back economic growth, according to new research. 
The better news is that there is plenty of untapped potential to unleash, particularly through the use of fintech, or financial technology. In other words, the problem is fixable. Read more here.

Barron's: Two Ways to Play Theresa May’s Brexit Drama

By SIMON CONSTABLE

United Kingdom Prime Minister Theresa May’s travails in selling her Brexit deal with the European Union to her own Conservative government played out in the U.K. market. Stocks were hit hard, with the locally focused FTSE 250 index losing 1.6% and the pound retreating 1.7%. 

Among the harder hit stocks were big U.K. real estate investment trusts, British Land (ticker: BLND.UK) and Land Securities (LAND.UK), which fell 5.4% and 5%, respectively, on Thursday alone. Read more here.

Photo by John Cameron on Unsplash


Saturday, November 10, 2018

Barron's: Why Hungarian Stocks Are Ready to Rise

By SIMON CONSTABLE

There’s lots to like in Hungary, including strong capital inflows, fast economic growth, low borrowing costs, and a much-improved banking sector. All should help boost local stocks.
“Higher bank profits should improve banks’ ability to ramp up lending and give more support to output growth and investment,” says Ugras Ulku, deputy head of emerging market Europe research at the Institute of International Finance (IIF). Read more here.
Budapest
Photo by Keszthelyi Timi on Unsplash


Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Korn Ferry: In Germany, New Lessons on Succession

In a move that rocked the political sphere, Germany’s chancellor Angela Merkel has recently announced she’d step down in three years. Sure, that’s a ways off, but Merkel has held the position for more than decade and been a clear if not stable fixture that will be hard to replace. And for now, few experts see any obvious replacements. 
Succession plans in the political world are, of course, different than those at a company. “There’s no assurance that the up-and-comer politician might not get impatient and challenge the leader to an election,” says Alan Guarino, Vice Chairman in our CEO and Board Services practice for Korn Ferry in New York. “It’s not like corporate America.” Still, a growing number of firms are waking up to the often-ignored importance building high-level pipelines far in advance.  Read more here.

Monday, November 5, 2018

WSJ: What Is the Real Effective Exchange Rate?

By SIMON CONSTABLE

In reports explaining why some currencies plunged this year, analysts may have mentioned the Real Effective Exchange Rate, or REER.
The REER provides a broader assessment of a currency’s value than simply comparing the value of one country’s currency against another country’s currency. Read more here.
Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash

Friday, November 2, 2018

Barron's: How Electric Vehicles Should Give a Jolt to Copper Miners

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Copper prices have dropped 18% in recent weeks, creating a long-term opportunity to get in on some cheap copper-mining giants with generous dividend payouts. Their prospects will depend on a major technological transition: the move from gasoline-powered to electric vehicles.
“If you’re bullish on global growth over the next 18 to 24 months, you have to own copper-related assets, especially since current prices aren’t high enough to fund new-mine development,” says Adam Johnson, founder and author of the Bullseye Brief financial newsletter. Read more here.

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Forbes: More Upside In Gold Prices

By SIMON CONSTABLE

This month's rally in gold prices may not be over.
That's because investors are still heavily betting on a decline in the value of the precious metal. When speculators overwhelmingly bet in one direction then a move in the opposite way is often the result. Read more here.

Forbes: Gold Outperformed Bitcoin In October

By SIMON CONSTABLE

When investing in alternative assets gold remains the king.
The yellow metal performed far better than the world's best-known cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, during October's market volatility. Read more here.

John Batchelor Radio Show: What Does Brexit Do For Scotland?


By SIMON CONSTABLE

Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Mid East Eye: Saudi Economy May Pay High Price for Khashoggi Killing

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Saudi Arabia’s economy will likely pay a high price over the recent killing of dissident Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a sordid affair that sparked global outrage and which may prompt some action by the United States and other governments.
However, the longer-term issue is that investors will likely shun Saudi Arabia because the killing highlights the kingdom’s political instability, and that shakiness is something from which investors tend to shy away or exact a high price. Read more here.

Forbes: Message From The Bond Market -- More Turmoil For Stocks

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Already stocks have had a volatile fall, but it could get even worse.
That's because a change in the bond market is pointing to a sharp decline in stocks unless something changes, according to one analyst. Read more here.

Monday, October 29, 2018

Forbes: The Italian Financial Mess Ain't Over Yet

By SIMON CONSTABLE

The disagreement between the European Union and the recently-formed Italian government coalition, ain't over yet.
Quite the contrary. It could run and run, according to a recently published report. Read more here.
Photo by Emma Fabbri on Unsplash

Forbes: How A Small Scottish Biotech Firm Could Win A Decisive Battle Against Cancer?

By SIMON CONSTABLE


A small Scottish-based biotech company could soon win a decisive battle in the war against cancer. 
NuCana, led by biotech industry veteran Hugh Griffith, is developing therapies that could radically change cancer treatment. Despite only being founded in 2008 the firm has already captured the interest of investors with good results from clinical trials of the compounds. Read more here.

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Barron's: Get Ready for Big Oil Stocks in Europe to Rise if Prices Do

By SIMON CONSTABLE
Favorable valuations, a change in investor outlook, and a surge in oil prices could lift the stocks of major European oil producers.
“If you have a broad rally in energy, I think it is safe to say that both European and American investors will look at some of the big oil names globally and find them interesting,” says Steve Chiavarone, a portfolio manager at Federated Investors in New York. “Those companies with bigger dividends will become attractive again.” Read more here.

Thursday, October 25, 2018

Korn Ferry: Europe’s Rattling Political Power Plays

By SIMON CONSTABLE

The upheaval keeps building up across western Europe’s political landscape. Germany’s center-right parties, which the country’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, represents, are increasingly getting squeezed at the polls. In Italy, the coalition government is having trouble developing a budget. And across the English Channel, the UK prime minister’s cabinet is in turmoil while Ireland’s president faces five challengers in an election on Friday.
Pundits have their own views on each country’s issues, but private-sector leaders are likely to see a simple lesson across the board: When the landscape changes, fundamentals become ever more important. Read more here.

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Korn Ferry: Picketing for Equal Pay

By SIMON CONSTABLE

For years, it was a topic that would surface in studies and headlines, but rarely beyond. Then several countries began to get serious, requiring companies to report differences in gender pay gaps or trying to close it themselves. A few big firms spent millions trying to make up the pay difference between men and women in the same job. Read more here.