Leaders | The bull’s big blind spot

Euphoric markets are ignoring growing political risks

Investors’ exuberance in the face of political ructions is unlikely to pay off

image: Carl Godfrey

THE PAST year has brought war to the Middle East, escalation of the trade conflict between the West and China and, on July 13th, an attempt to kill the frontrunner in America’s presidential race. But if you look at financial markets, you’d think nothing was amiss. No amount of blood or political rancour, it seems, can distract Wall Street from the good economic news: that fears of recessions have so far proved wrong, and that inflation has nonetheless tumbled. As a result markets are at, or close to, all-time highs in America, the euro zone and Japan, and many emerging-economy stocks are booming, too. Optimism is rife. Compared with companies’ profits, America’s stocks have only ever been this pricey during two previous booms.

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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The bull’s big blind spot”

When markets ignore politics

From the July 20th 2024 edition

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