Editor's Choice
Australian Retirement Trust people chief to depart
Australian Retirement Trust has confirmed the departure of chief people officer Helen Jackson, who will leave at the end of the financial year.
SSGA loses $2.4bn in two months
State Street Global Advisors (SSGA) suffered $2.4 billion in net outflows over the last two months of 2023, the majority of which hit its Australian and international equities products.
AFCA seeks industry feedback on approaches
The financial complaints authority is asking the industry for feedback on how it approaches issues and reaches decisions.
Apex, ACA partner to broaden client services
Apex Group and ACA Group have formed a partnership to offer their clients a wider range of services.
Further Reading
Sponsored by | Know the facts about lifetime annuitiesSaving for a happy retirement is Australia's #1 financial goal. Learn how LifeIncome can deliver more income, certainty, & choice. |
Products
Featured Profile
Jason Huljich
JOINT CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
CENTURIA CAPITAL LIMITED
CENTURIA CAPITAL LIMITED
A single decision can change your life, and that's exactly what Centuria Capital joint chief executive Jason Huljich learned when he came to Australia in the 1990s. Eliza Bavin writes.
The cat is dead. It's been dead for three years. What you're seeing is FrankenCat - it looks alive only because central banks have taken over debt markets.
Sorry Ben,
"In one of the clearest signal yet that it's about to act, ECB chief Mario Draghi declared that "The strengthening of the exchange rate requires further monetary stimulus. That's an important dimension for our price stability."
So the ECB will embark on another round of 'stimulus', through monetary channels that largely stop with insolvent euro financial institutions? My original 'crucifixion' of your comment was not that central banks wont act, but the giant logical leap that that such actions will 'support sustainable growth'.
My point is there is very little reliable evidence to support such a notion, only hypotheticals of what might have been. Today's snippets of 2 in 1000 data points and the jawboning of an ECB banker are nice distractions as they are every trading day, but miss the point completely.
If you want to discuss how such distractions are likely to affect short term market pricing and possibly stay a Faber style correction, sure , I'm not inclined to disagree! But linking Draghi comments and the FED's actions to actual improvement in economic fundamentals beyond staying a global banking meltdown in 08/09.....That remains speculation and critical analysis is something that will only be possible ex post, probably the next crisis!