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Juliette Foster

The Book Review: 'The Man Who Knew: The Life and Times of Alan Greenspan' by Sebastian Mallaby

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

Book Review

The Book Review: 'The Man Who Knew: The Life and Times of Alan Greenspan' by Sebastian Mallaby
When does the irrational exuberance of markets lead to asset price bubbles? A question pondered by Dr. Alan Greenspan, former Chairman of the US Federal Reserve, in December 1996. But the phrase "irrational exuberance" - a polite way of warning that the markets were in danger of overheating - turned out to rather be prescient. This was after all the dotcom era when anything with dotcom behind its name - no matter how flawed the business plan - was a licence to print money. When the tech bubble eventually burst investors took heavy losses while Greenspan looked for a way through the morass. The markets gradually picked up, money flowed in and the public felt rich: Alan Greenspan had worked his magic and restored America's Feel Good factor. When he retired in 2006 he was lauded as a genius, a tough act to follow...yet when the global financial crisis erupted, the fault lines were traced back to him. The hero was now a villain! So why did it go wrong? Sebastian Mallaby is a journalist and author of the book 'The Man Who Knew: The Life and Times of Alan Greenspan'. He joined Share Radio's Juliette Foster in the studio.

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Juliette Foster

Conversations from Africa: Fraud charge backtrack

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

Conversations From Africa

Conversations from Africa: Fraud charge backtrack
Storyteller and financial journalist Chris Bishop speaks to Share Radio's Alex Clark, taking you across the continent of Africa from his desk in Johannesburg for the major stories of the week. On today's programme: Pravin Gordhan lives on. Fraud charges brought against the South African finance minister have been dropped, with the rand rallying on the news. Chris and Alex discuss whether this backtrack indicates political ambition lay behind the charges. Also on the show: a wage deal brings peace for South Africa's platinum industry. And leadership at Africa' largest food retailer is underoging a shake-up. For more of Chris's stories, check out last week’s episode: https://audioboom.com/posts/5199379-conversations-from-africa-gordhan-s-shadow

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Juliette Foster

Emerging Opportunities: Risky business

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

Emerging Opportunities With Gavin Serkin

Emerging Opportunities: Risky business
This is Emerging Opportunities, the only show on radio dedicated to global emerging markets. Your hosts are Share Radio's Juliette Foster and Gavin Serkin, the Managing Editor of the Frontier Funds Consultancy and author of 'Frontier: Exploring the Top Ten Emerging Markets of Tomorrow'. So - just in case you're tuning in from Mars, we're now less than a week away from the US election. With global markets swinging on an increasingly tight race, and with Europe convulsing on Brexit, many investors are wondering whether the risks might in fact be lower in emerging markets. Well, to find out, Juliette and Gavin were joined all the way from New York by Dan Keeler, Editor for Frontier Markets at the Wall Street Journal.

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Juliette Foster

The Motley Fool Money Show: Clouds part over Microsoft

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

Motley Fool Show

The Motley Fool Money Show: Clouds part over Microsoft
Want to keep up with the latest earnings updates from the States? We join Chris Hill and the Motley Fool Radio Show team here on Share Radio - direct from Washington DC each Monday at 2 o'clock for news, views and analysis of US stock markets. On today's episode: Microsoft profits outdo expectations, pizza & donuts, and Chris speaks to Roger Lowenstein about his new book 'America's Bank: The Epic Struggle to Create the Federal Reserve'

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Juliette Foster

My Portfolio with Lord Lee: Daemmon Reeve, CEO of Treatt

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

My Portfolio with Lord John Lee

My Portfolio with Lord Lee: Daemmon Reeve, CEO of Treatt
This is My Portfolio with Lord Lee, our weekly look at investment decisions from the perspective of both the investor and the invested side by side. As ever, our investor is weekly FT columnist Lord John Lee. He is also author of the book 'How to Make a Million Slowly: My Guiding Principles from a Lifetime of Successful Investing'. This week, our invested is Daemmon Reeve, CEO of Treatt - a company Lord Lee has invested in. He joined Lord Lee and Share Radio's Juliette Foster in the studio. If you are interested in this sector, do check out some of our older interviews here: https://audioboom.com/channel/shareradio-smallcapinvestors

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Juliette Foster

The Responsible Investment Show: Cybercrime goes mainstream

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

The Responsible Investment Show

The Responsible Investment Show: Cybercrime goes mainstream
Our Responsible Investment Show aims to help investors understand the complexities of being involved, to disprove some of the common misconceptions, and to raise attention to the pressing investment issues of our time. On this episode: Share Radio's Juliette Foster tackles cyber-crime with Thomas Fitzgerald, Associate Fund Manager at Eden Tree Investment Management. And Share Radio's Alex Clark investigates how renewable energy has fared in the last year with Paolo Frankl, Head of the International Energy Agency's Renewables Division.

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Juliette Foster

Serious Money with Claer Barrett: Trendy trusts

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

Serious Money with Claer Barrett

Serious Money with Claer Barrett: Trendy trusts
Investment Perspectives teams up with the FT Money Editor Claer Barratt to talk Serious Money - the personal finance and investment highlights of her FT Money section. On this edition, Claer and Share Radio's Juliette Foster look at Investment Trusts and why they're suddenly very hip. For more of Claer’s personal finance musings, head over to the Serious Money audioBoom page: https://audioboom.com/channel/shareradio-seriousmoney

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Juliette Foster

The Share Centre: Ian Forrest reviews this week's market activity - BT beats expectations, Llloyds takes PPI hit, & more!

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

The Week Ahead

The Share Centre: Ian Forrest reviews this week's market activity - BT beats expectations,  Llloyds takes PPI hit, & more!
Ian Forrest, Investment Research Analyst at the Share Centre, reviews this week's stock market activity with Share Radio's Juliette Foster. They take a look back at BT, Lloyds, and Whitbread from this week, as well as looking ahead to Shell, Morrisons, and Paddy Power Betfair.

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Juliette Foster

The Weeks Update: A stalling sub-Sahara

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

The Weeks Update

The Weeks Update: A stalling sub-Sahara
Sub-Saharan Africa is on course for weak economic growth by the end of the year - according to recent IMF figures. Regional GDP in 2015 was 3.5%, the lowest in fifteen years although it could shrink to 3% by the end of the year. The sharp fall in commodity prices hasn't helped especially for countries like Nigeria and Angola, which make their wealth from exporting oil. In contrast, oil-importing countries like Ivory Coast, Kenya and Senegal have seen their GDP rise by 5% or more thanks to infrastructure investment and strong private consumption. So what are Sub-Saharan Africa's prospects? Does the overall weakness prove the area's recent growth momentum has stalled? Alemayehu Geda is Professor of Economics at the University of Addis Ababa and he joined Share Radio's Juliette Foster in the studio along with Professor John Weeks, Share Radio's regular economics commentator.

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Juliette Foster

The Weeks Update: Reinvigorating Africa's economies

Juliette Foster
Original Broadcast:

The Weeks Update

The Weeks Update: Reinvigorating Africa's economies
The situation for many African countries has been buffered by the dramatic fall in commodity prices or China's economic slowdown. For example Nigeria, which draws the bulk of its wealth from oil revenue, has seen its economy slip into recession following the drop in the price of crude. The irony is that nearly a decade ago many Sub Saharan African countries were thriving as developed economies wrestled with the fallout of the 2008 global financial crisis. So why have African countries fallen off the rails and what do they need to do to get back on track? Doctor Howard Stein is a Professor in Afro American and African Studies at the University of Michigan. He joined Share Radio's Juliette Foster in the studio with Professor John Weeks, Share Radio's regular economics commentator.

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