Think Nvidia looks dear? American shares could get pricier still
H ow can you tell it’s time to get out of the market? In 1929 Joseph Kennedy, an American businessman and politician, supposedly realised the party was over upon hearing a shoe-shine boy dispensing stock tips. In 2000 the exit doors beckoned after 17 “dotcom” firms paid millions of dollars each for brief advertising slots during the Super Bowl, an American football extravaganza.
And so to a sell signal fit for 2024: Keith Gill is back on social media. Mr Gill was an architect of the meme-stock frenzy of 2021, exhorting retail traders to buy shares in GameStop, a struggling chain of video-game shops. After a three-year absence he is posting once again, now apparently in possession of a stake in the firm worth a few hundred million dollars. GameStop’s share price has resumed a gut-churning rollercoaster ride and is up by more than 40% since Mr Gill’s return; the ailing company has made use of the excitement to issue some $3bn-worth of new shares. If you are looking for signs of speculative excess in markets, this is Exhibit A.
The country’s next prime minister faces a brutal fiscal crunch
In America, Australia and parts of Europe, property markets have shrugged off higher interest rates
Its share of international reserves has stalled
The country’s next prime minister faces a brutal fiscal crunch
In America, Australia and parts of Europe, property markets have shrugged off higher interest rates
Its share of international reserves has stalled
With a big discrepancy in jobs data, the economy may be weaker than it seems
Plenty of countries are in a dealmaking rush
Two new studies suggest not—at least in the long run, and in Scandinavia