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World Markets

by Faysal Badran

This year’s poster child for financial excess surely had to be the Gulf stock markets. We warned on several occasions, in past issues of Executive, that the level of gambling in those markets had reached mega-bubble proportions. In fact, our cautionary words were worth about $350 billion in Saudi alone, where the leading index fell from 20,000 points to 10,000, leaving many small players and late entrants in ruin. The near vertical moves in the Gulf were not an isolated event, and while the players were mostly locals, the folly for shares was symptomatic of a larger, more global drop in risk premiums and an almost unquenchable thirst for outsized returns. The investment landscape had been uneventful for a couple of years now. It was a simple rule of thumb: the more risk one took, the better the returns. In this environment, cautious managers were shunned and everyone, even mainstream

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