Beneath investors’ feet, the ground is shifting
A ny time share prices are slumping, it is worth looking at a chart of America’s S&P 500 index that goes back to 1987. That year on October 19th, or “Black Monday”, it plummeted by 20% in a single day—a crash not equalled before or since. The shock was so great that regulators subsequently devised “circuit breakers”, which automatically halt trading after a big enough drop, to prevent a repetition. Pull up a chart stretching from then to today, however, and Black Monday is barely visible, dwarfed by the scale of the subsequent returns. For long-term investors, what felt like an earth-shaking event at the time turned out to be little more than a blip.
American investors are extremely exposed to a sell-off—and so is the economy
Two new books contain much to commend them
Three Asian countries make their pitch
An economic recovery depends on it. Yet a new action plan may not do the job
Rich-world tenants are angry, and have reason to be
Pity the continent’s exporters
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/03/19/beneath-investors-feet-the-ground-is-shiftingA source: www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/03/19/beneath-investors-feet-the-ground-is-shifting