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Markets are proving ever more resilient in the face of shifting policy
Benefits aside from pricing are reasons aplenty to set up a trust
Investors would be wise to protect themselves against tail risks
Government ought to clarify or scrap it
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Far from heralding the dawn of a new post-pandemic paradise, England’s removal of almost all social restrictions this week could easily lead to a sharp rise in corporate defaults.
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At the start of the pandemic, it made total sense for investors to pile capital into distressed debt funds. More than a year on, the decision looks like less of a slam dunk.
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Robinhood’s mission to democratise stock markets is taking its inevitable next step with its own initial public offering, of which it says it will sell between 20% to 35% to retail investors. But while opening up the IPO investor base beyond the institutional investor clique sounds good in theory, such transactions remain extremely risky for retail investors.
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China’s move to tighten its grip on overseas IPOs of technology companies could be a boon to a handful of other markets in Asia.
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The success of Wise’s direct listing can be chalked up as a victory for a UK stock market that has undergone much soul searching about its ability to attract the hot companies of the future.
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Space might well be the new frontier in equity investing, with several deals catching the attention of capital markets professionals in the past couple of weeks. But as exciting as investing in space and space technology are, grouping vastly different businesses together under the catch-all term 'space economy' runs the risk of stoking fads or even an equity bubble.