About Lord William Rees-Mogg

Lord William Rees-Mogg is the former editor of The Times and is a member of the British House of Lords. He has been credited with accurately forecasting glasnost, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the 1987 market crash. His often controversial insights can be found in the UK edition of Capital & Crisis and Strategic Investment in the US.
All entries by Lord William Rees-Mogg
Sep 19th, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: Stock Market Investing
Over the past few days we’ve seen some pretty scary stuff. The prevailing emotion in the markets seems to be uncertainty and fear. Stocks have gone down, the dollar has followed. We’ve also seen oil tick up with gold shooting like a rocket. Who could have seen any of this coming?
Tags: AIG, Federal Reserve, FNM, FRE, HBoS, LEH, Lord William Rees-Mogg, MER, Northern Rock, U.S. credit crisis, US Banking, US housinng crisis, US stocks
Posted in Stock Market Investing |
Jul 27th, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: US Dollar & Forex Trading
In the last year, the euro has decisively outperformed the dollar and the pound. Some commentators have argued that this means that the euro is the currency of the future, and that the dollar has been relegated to second place. However, there are problems about this argument, says Lord William Rees-Mogg in Whiskey and Gunpowder.
Tags: euro, Lord William Rees-Mogg, US dollar
Posted in US Dollar & Forex Trading |
Jul 18th, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: Featured, Financial News
There are two way of studying economics: mathematical and historical analysis.
If you study economics from a mathematical view, the credit crisis must have come as something of a shock, says Lord Rees-Mogg.
But if you’re an economic historian, recent events won’t surprise you at all. Historical economists don’t see timing as any more predictable for economic shocks than for earthquakes. But they recognize a cycle of debt when they see on. And they know that the liquidation of debt has a deflationary effect…
Tags: credit crisis, Global Inflation, Global Recession, Lord William Rees-Mogg, subprime crisis
Posted in Featured, Financial News |
Jul 10th, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: Featured, Financial News
The outlook for the US economy isn’t pretty.
As we reported earlier this morning, economists surveyed by Bloomberg estimate US growth will slow to 0.5 percent from October to December.
The US economy is not yet officially a recession. But most commentators are treating it as such, including Lord William Rees-Mogg, former editor of The Times and regular contributor to The Daily Reckoning UK. Lord Rees-Mogg says there won’t be a recovery until the first half of 2009…
Tags: B&B, British politics, Global Inflation, Global Recession, Lord William Rees-Mogg
Posted in Featured, Financial News |
Jun 12th, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: Politics & Economics
Sometimes economics works like a domino effect. When one area of the economy goes bad, many others will follow. So many areas of our economy are related, and many are related closely. From the way population effects food supply, to how the price of oil can change almost anything.
Tags: economics, Food Energy, Food Production, Great Depression, House Of Cards, Karl Marx, Monetarist School, politics, Population, Price Of Oil, Shell
Posted in Politics & Economics |
Jun 4th, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: Politics & Economics
On the whole, I have a better record of forecasting American elections than British. Distance makes one see the developments more clearly.
Tags: , American Elections, Barack Obama, Democratic Nomination, economics, Hillary Clinton, Mccain, politics, Primaries
Posted in Politics & Economics |
May 15th, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: Politics & Economics
There seems to be two important consensuses coming from the world’s pre-eminent economic minds. One is that the inflationary policies of the Federal Reserve are setting the economy down a dark path. The other is that the guys in charge of the Federal Reserve are the only ones who don’t realize this.
Tags: , Alan Greenspan, Bank Of England, Ben Bernanke, economics, Federal Reserve, Hyperinflation, inflation, Mervyn King, Paul Volcker, politics, stagflation, United States
Posted in Politics & Economics |
May 2nd, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: Politics & Economics
The Fed once again cut interest rates on Wednesday, this time by a quarter of a percentage point. So what does this mean for the U.S. economy as well as the central banks in Europe?
Tags: Bank Of England, Bubble Point, bull market, Central Banks, Downside Risks, Economic Concerns, fed, Hot Commodities, House Prices, Housing Market, inflation, Mortgage Backed Securities, Uk Interest Rates
Posted in Politics & Economics |
Apr 29th, 2008 |
By Lord William Rees-Mogg |
Category: International Investing
Gordon Brown’s visit to the United States was not a great success. It was one of those visits which Prime Ministers are liable to make, when they feel in need of reminding the public of their authority. They may not have much business to discuss, but it will help their image for the voters to see them in the Rose Garden of the White House, exchanging chit chat with the President of the United States.
Tags: Conservatives, Gordon Brown, Labour Supporters, politics, Tony Blair
Posted in International Investing |