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more than China’s current gross domestic product.

1

In broad nancial and economic terms, the past

decade has been an aberration.

Yet it has been a pro table one for investors.

Since its mid-crisis low in early 2009, the

S&P 500 has tripled in value – in the third quarter

alone it rose by 3.96% and crested above 2,500

points for the rst time in its history. Corporate

earnings season provided plenty of support, as

energy, technology and nancial results struck

new highs, and more than 70% of S&P 500

companies beat expectations.

The US economic recovery continued – it is

now the third-longest on record.

2

Moreover,

although the dollar completed a six-month run of

Thequarterly report

26

|

THE INVESTOR

The third quarter marked 10 years since the start of the

financial crisis, and saw central banks just beginning to

move on, says CIO Chris Ralph

THE INVESTOR CENTRE

M

any anniversaries are merely

incidental, of interest only

to reporters lacking a good

story – not this one.The ninth

of August 2017 marked

10 years since the beginning of the global nancial

crisis, and neither the global economy nor

nancial markets can yet be said to have emerged

from its shadow.

At the start of the crisis, the o cial UK interest

rate had never dipped below 2% since the founding of

the Bank of England in 1694.Today, that rate is just

0.25%.More importantly, however, central banks

around the world have injected $15 trillion into

nancial markets over the past 10 years – signi cantly

Tenyears later

Chris Ralph

Chief Investment O cer,St.James’s Place

End of Q3

2017

The FTSE 100

rose by

0.82

%

Eurofirst 300

rose by

2.24

%

Japanese Nikkei

rose by

1.1

%