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THE INVESTOR

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27

THE QUARTERLY REPORT

monthly falls against a basket of global currencies,

growth has taken wages up with it; unemployment

remained below 4.5% throughout the quarter.

3

Hearteningly, this economic momentum

continued over the quarter despite major troubles in

the south, which was afflicted by two destructive

hurricanes.A calamitous earthquake also struck

neighbouring Mexico, killing 333 people.

4

MOMENTUM, MACRON

Politically, there was plenty to unnerve investors

over the three-month period.As North Korea

launched a series of missile tests, two of which flew

over Japan, political tempers were increasingly

flared.Yet although volatility ticked up to its highest

level of the year, it remained subdued in historical

terms.

5

The Nikkei 225 rose by 1.61% over the

quarter, and was boosted again by economic growth

figures late in the quarter, as the prime minister

called a snap election.

After the unorthodox European elections of the

spring, the third quarter offered the staid spectacle

of German federal elections in September.

ChancellorAngela Merkel was duly returned for her

fourth term, but left considerably weaker.

The Eurofirst 300 rose by 2.24%, reflecting a

buoyant economic picture. Greece returned to debt

markets for the first time since 2014 and Portugal

sold 10-year government bonds at record low yields.

More broadly, anAugust report showed second

quarter eurozone growth striking an impressive

0.6%, EU consumer confidence reached its highest

levels since 2007, and the euro continued its rise.

Momentumwithin the EU shifted somewhat

fromMerkel to Macron, as the new French

President pushed his labour reform package through

the French parliament and spelled out a little more

of his vision for the EU. But, the quarter ended with

violence as Catalans voted on independence.

FLORENTINE FLOURISH

In the UK, the FTSE 100 rose by just 0.82%, and

indicators generally told a nuanced tale. Despite

some positive corporate results, new figures showed

that business investment in the UK has remained flat

since the EU exit referendum, and headline growth

in the second quarter was revised downwards,

making the UK the slowest-growing G7 economy.

An OBR report on bank stress tests said that UK

bank balance sheets were much improved since the

crisis.Yet when the OBR applied the same criteria to

the UK government, the institute said the

government would have failed.The UK received two

downgrades bymajor ratings agencies over the quarter

and the Brexit outlook was cited among the reasons.

But, Prime MinisterTheresa May used a speech in

Florence in September to bridge the growing

rhetorical divide between the UK and EU authorities

– and to begin to set out some details.Meanwhile,

Jeremy Corbyn’s star appeared to be rising.

Apparently taking the 10-year anniversary as its

cue, the Bank of England warned that interest rates

might need to rise in the near future, despite meagre

headline growth (not to mention wage growth), due

to inflationary pressures.Yet it was the US Federal

Reserve and European Central Bank which appeared

to be taking the lead on bringing the world out of

the post-crisis era.The heads of both banks in

September said that they were making plans to

withdrawQE programmes.The Fed will begin to

do so this month.The move will mark the end of era,

but it won’t be a short final chapter.

Getty Images,MasaoYamazaki.1 statisticstimes.com,April 2017;2 en.wikipedia.org,September 2017;3 data.bls.gov,October 2017;4 en.wikipedia.org,September 2017;5 yhoo.it/2x1x13g,September 2017

The UK

received two

downgrades,

with the Brexit

outlook cited

among the

reasons