Merryn Somerset Webb



Profile:
Full name: Merryn Somerset Webb

Area of interest: Personal finance (esp. for women)

Journals/Organisation: Financial Times | MoneyWeek

Email: [mailto:merryn@ft.com merryn@ft.com] | [mailto:merryns@moneyweek.com merryns@moneyweek.com]

Personal website: http://msw.typepad.com/merryn-somerset-webb

Website: http://www.ft.com/personal-finance/advice-comment/merryn-somerset-webb

Blog: http://www.moneyweek.com/blog

Representation: http://unitedagents.co.uk/merryn-somerset-webb

Networks: https://twitter.com/#!/merrynsw | http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/merryn-somerset-webb/0/558/80



Biography:
About: http://msw.typepad.com/merryn-somerset-webb/about.html

Education: Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge University: History & Economics (First); London University - School of African and Oriental Studies: Japanese (MA)

Career: NHK TV (Japan): programme producer, 1992; SBC Warburg: institutional broker, 1993; The Week: finance writer, 1997/1998; worked in the City before joining MoneyWeek at its launch: editor, 2000-; The Sunday Times: financial columnist, 2003/2008; Financial Times: columnist, 2008-
 * see: MoneyWeek: biography

Current position/role: Editor in chief of Moneyweek, FT columnist


 * also writes/written for: writes regularly for Saga Magazine and has also written for the Spectator, Harpers, The Week, and a variety of other magazines

Other roles/Main role: Editor of MoneyWeek and also writes a regular column
 * MoneyWeek: articles

Other activities:

Disclosures: Non-executive director of two investment trusts: the Montanaro European Smaller Companies Plc (appointed in March 2011) and Baillie Gifford Shin Nippon (appointed October 2011)

Viewpoints/Insight: Interview by Sophie Morris: My Life In Media: Merryn Somerset Webb - 'Predicting the credit crunch and global recession was relatively easy because it was so obvious. But I have no idea what happens next. It's new economic territory', The Independent, 1st September, 2008

Broadcast media: http://msw.typepad.com/merryn-somerset-webb/radio.html
 * Frequent radio and TV commentary on everything to do with money, appearances on The Tonight Show, Working Lunch, The Money Programme and BBC Breakfast

Video: http://msw.typepad.com/merryn-somerset-webb/video.html
 * C4: SuperScrimpers: Waste Not Want Not. "This new series shows how to scrimp and save in these straitened times", with Mrs Moneypenny. May 2011

Controversy/Criticism:

Awards/Honours:

Scoops:

Other:



Books & Debate:

 * http://msw.typepad.com/merryn-somerset-webb/Books.html

Latest work: Love is not enough: a smart woman's guide to making (and keeping) money OCLC 173238590, 2008

Speaking/Appearances:

Current debate: 

Financial Times:
Column name:

Remit/Info: Personal finance (esp. for women)

Section: Your money

Role: Commentator

Pen-name:

Email: [mailto:merryn@ft.com merryn@ft.com]

Website: FT/Merryn Somerset Webb

Commissioning editor:

Day published: Saturday

Regularity: Weekly

Column format:

Average length:



Articles: 2016

 * Tax the living — and end the IHT madness - Replace controversial levy with something less emotive and better - 16th April
 * Wait until about 2019 to purchase property - It’s worth holding on until everyone with unmanageable levels of buy-to-let debt has sold up - 2nd April
 * Aren’t you glad Scotland voted No? - If you want to keep your finances intact, don’t move north of the border - 26th March
 * Has Osborne had El-Erian round for tea? - The chancellor’s capital gains tax reform comes from the economist’s playbook - 19th March
 * Is Iran a great opportunity? - Post sanctions, this is a country with much going for it - 12th March
 * Why UK investors should back Brexit - The eurozone is heading for an existential crisis - 5th March
 * London homes and the madness of the crowd - Property crowdfunding doesn’t address market failure - 27th February
 * Fair financial fees — a turning point? - Things are improving very fast — even without super heroine input - 13th February
 * A pound’s still worth a pound — for now - First, negative interest rates — capital controls might not be far behind - 6th February
 * Money manager capitalism harms us all - Mourn the passing of old-fashioned share ownership by individuals - 30th January
 * Why London house prices will crash - Add it all up and the future for the capital’s house prices seems grim. Yet I’m buying - 23rd January
 * Calm heads are needed as markets yo-yo - Our failure to take the pain after the crisis simply extends the agony - 15th January
 * Golden opportunity? The cycle turns - After years of falling supply, mining companies are changing - 8th January



Articles: 2015

 * In retirement, there are few guarantees - This week’s reminder that dividends come at the market’s discretion is a warning - 12th December
 * Cash in the attic? Don’t tell the Bank - Why the central bank hates us using banknotes - 5th December
 * Tax dabbling and the public finances mess - When will Help to Buy turn into Help to Sell? - 28th November
 * We need more ‘easy’ in the UK tax system - George Osborne wants to make a global tax regime a reality - 2nd November
 * Investing in oil is a slippery slope - Much of what you think you know about the market is complete nonsense - 24th October
 * Pension top-ups — a waste of your money - There are much better ways to achieve a higher retirement income - 17th October
 * Our stupidly complicated pensions regime - Retirement cruises will become an impossible dream for millions - 10th October
 * Vietnam’s a lesson in value for the West - Inflated valuations, profits and dividends are causes for concern - 3rd October
 * Trust goes up in smoke at VW - There’s little incentive for companies to play fair - 26th September
 * Central banks suffer rate constipation - How silo thinking infects interest rate policy - 19th September
 * The power of second-level thinking - In 20 years, the Chinese equity fall will be seen as a mere blip - 12th September
 * Value investing — you’d be crazy not to - Buy cheap stocks and let sanity prevail for once - 5th September
 * Low interest rates are the problem, not the solution - A 0.5% base rate isn’t the answer to our troubles - 29th August
 * Charity should not begin with a tax break - Our money isn’t being spent as it should be - 8th August
 * Light holiday reading with heavy message - From treasure hunting to US prisons and the demon of debt - 18th July
 * Budget may really affect house prices - If I didn’t know better I would think George Osborne was one of my more regular readers - 11th July
 * Is power swinging back to the people? - Wealth transfer can only be good for the global economy - 26th June
 * Funds that won’t help you sleep at night - What happens when the sector is tested by rising interest rates? - 20th June
 * Japan plays corporate catch-up - QE in Japan is off the scale, driving share buybacks and rising prices - 6th June
 * UK tax policy leads a generation astray - Would young people be better off working 16 hours a week with a buy-to-let on the side? - 30th May
 * Bonds will blow up — but not just yet - When FT Weekend was first published in 1985, the great bond bull market was well under way - 23rd May
 * Hope in the fund performance debate - Fund management is the greediest profession I know - 16th May
 * The future is cash - When everyone clocks the problems in the interest rate system, they’ll want to get their cash out - 2nd May
 * Could China be the new Japan? - Chinese market may follow the model of its neighbour in the 80s - 25th April
 * Both sides are wrong at Alliance Trust - The board has been weak and Elliott is short-termist, but shareholders should profit from the spat - 11th April
 * Slow death of equity markets is bad news - Growing companies no longer need stock market listings. That’s bad for all of us - 28th March
 * Osborne’s LTA plans are a mess - Pensions saving is going to turn into a guessing game - 21st March
 * Tax-free fun in the sun - Portugal allows untaxed withdrawals from pensions - 13th March
 * A generation game lost - Should the government be propping up the housing market? - 7th March
 * No security in the crowd - Liquidity is not the least of the risks - 27th February
 * Seductive pension flexibility - Political risks outweigh the benefits - 14th February
 * Virtues of market disruption - Believe it or not, things are getting better for investors - 7th February
 * Negative yields are everywhere - Paying to own something in the hope that its value rises is nothing new - 31st January
 * ECB honey’s sticking point - Ultimately, QE can only end badly. Enjoy the ride for now, but hold gold just in case - 23rd January
 * Deflation isn’t a bonus - Falling prices aren’t good news for an economy built around debt - 17th January



Articles: 2014

 * Crises are nothing new - My Christmas reading list includes accounts of financial dramas past, present and future - 20th December
 * The new politics of hate - Think that multinationals can do as they like on tax? Think again - 6th December
 * Time to bring trackers out of the closet - Suggestions pour in for funds with high ‘active share’ - 29th November
 * Technology will decide future oil prices - Advances in manufacturing sharply reduce demand for oil - 15th November
 * The deficit will kill the property bubble - Politicians need more tax revenue – and there’s nowhere else to get it - 25th October
 * Unanswered questions over China - Evidence of a sharp slowdown is obvious - 11th October
 * Options for an uncertain world - There may be more QE bubble magic ahead - 6th October
 * The cost of being disliked - Banks, tobacco companies and mansion owners beware - 27th September
 * How do you invest for good? - Nobody seems to know where to draw the lines - 20th September
 * Gaining financial savvy is not schoolwork - Money earmarked for teaching finance should go towards maths education - 3rd September
 * Scottish ‘Yes’ could be costly - Statistics shows how similar not how different the Scots are to the rest of the UK - 30th August
 * Tips for a happier holiday - Readers’ suggestions on car hire and much else - 26th July
 * The case of the €360 tyre - Companies that compete on price rarely tell you the full story - 19th July
 * Illusion of ‘low risk’ bonds - Low interest rates mean holding gilts is riskier than you think - 5th July
 * Merciless lessons of Ming era - The 17th century art market looks a bit like today’s property market - 28th June
 * Compounding: dull, but crucial - Keep your returns as close to the line as possible - 21st June
 * A bull market for complacency - There’s no shortage of things that could go wrong - 14th June
 * Equity release and the downsizing deniers - Want to raise cash from your home? Sell it - 7th June
 * China is cheap but finely balanced - Valuations are low but risks high - 31st May
 * Overcharging by any name - Disruption in other areas hasn’t spread to wealth managers - 24th May
 * Messy portfolios and ‘be busy’ syndrome - Too many fund managers have too many stocks - 10th May
 * Russia’s cheap – though unsettling - Stocks have fallen but are now very inexpensive - 5th May
 * Should mortgage lenders pry into your personal life? Well, yes - Banks are likely to start looking at potential homebuyers' bank accounts and expenditure. They should have been doing this all along - 29th April
 * The black economy and the internet age - Much ‘collaborative consumption’ is not taxed - 26th April
 * Inheritance should be a tax on the living - A gift tax would be a very kind policy - 12th April
 * Cameron should scrap IHT threshold - Taxing unearned income more lightly than earned income is morally wrong - 5th April
 * Adapting to the new pensions world - The end of annuities means we need new retirement products - 29th March
 * An uncommon outbreak of common sense - Clarity of thinking worldwide is something to celebrate - 22nd March
 * Seeing the wood for the trees in pensions - New forestry fund looks an alternative to pensions - 15th March
 * A tax on ignorance and inflation - Think the lifetime allowance doesn’t apply to you? Think again - 8th March
 * The price of melons and Japanese shares - Japan isn’t the bargain it once was - 1st March
 * Money for nothing among VCT managers - VCTs might save tax, but what about the charges? - 15th February
 * Workers of the world will unite - Profit margins are at unsustainably high levels - 8th February
 * Property warrants aren’t like houses - What’s the catch with Housas? - 31st January
 * Footsie – a tale of inexorable decline - Banks, tobacco, retail are yesterday’s champions - 25th January
 * Reforms make active management cheaper - Industry change is redefining the passive vs active debate - 18th January



Articles: 2013

 * Books it will pay you to read - From executive pay to index funds via technology, China and the eurozone - 21st December
 * Big oil – a big call for uncertain times - Energy shares appealingly cheap and defensive - 14th December
 * Investors are paying more - US shares are overvalued, whatever brokers say - 30th November
 * How to spot a bubble about to burst - The ‘adjustment phase’ of QE could be painful - 9th November
 * Hedge fund wisdom, cut to the bone - Successful hedgies share top tips in the name of philanthropy - 2nd November
 * Warnings that few are heeding - The world economy is not fixed, but no one wants to spoil the party - 26th October
 * Learning the hard way - Most student accommodation investments represent poor value for money - 19th October
 * QE has stigmatised the well-off - At best it is unfair, at worst it is an evil policy - 12th October
 * One-stop shops for lazy investors - A simple answer to your investing dilemmas - 5th October
 * Save more – but not necessarily in pensions - More people are putting some money aside, but it’s not enough - 28th September
 * A tax debate shrouded in Scotch mist - Huge uncertainty over Scottish independence plans - 21st September
 * Betrayals of trust are so costly - Investors are convinced the industry exists just to fleece them - 14th September
 * A bad day at the office for Mark Carney - The UK’s debt-driven consumer recovery has caught the Bank of England out - 7th September
 * Emerging markets party is over - This is not a good time to put new money into equities - 31st August
 * The penny drops on China’s economy - Look at the facts and the danger seems clear - 24th August
 * Why suffer current account incompetence? - Switching banks is about to become easier - 17th August
 * The origin of outperformance - Out-of-favour sectors mean fewer but better managers - 27th July
 * The safe bets that are anything but safe - Some recent listed structured product launches are truly awful - 20th July
 * Of economic models and men - Markets often don’t behave as economists predict - 29th June
 * The sheer folly of QE - It should have been fairly obvious that markets would collapse - 22nd June
 * Emerging markets aren’t the answer - Economic growth is no guarantee of returns to investors - 15th June
 * Tokyo tumbles. So what? - The market needed to cool off and company fundamentals are still good - 8th June
 * Russia: cheap and unloved - Russian shares are cheap and the country is overlooked by many fund managers - 1st June
 * In praise of cash - Fund managers don’t like holding cash, but individual investors can and should - 25th May
 * Fund managers are a busted flush - The structure of the industry condemns many of them to underperform - 18th May
 * What price the lucky country? - The mining boom has distorted Australia’s economy - 11th May
 * Interest-only, a big problem? - Look at the numbers and the mortgages aren’t so bad - 4th May
 * High pay means low returns - Massive rewards for managers encourage misallocation of capital - 27th April
 * UK house bubble may deflate - A gradual erosion in real terms is the most likely outcome - 20th April
 * Cures for a passive dilemma? - There is a middle way in investing - 13th April
 * Why passive investing is buy high, sell low - Index trackers that can outperform fund managers - 6th April
 * Two sides of the same tarnished coin - It’s a mistake to think Cyprus and the UK Budget aren’t linked - 23rd March
 * Land of the rising optimism - Current events are surely on Japan’s side - 16th March
 * A wealth of inequalities bodes ill - Riches are concentrated in the hands of the few - 9th March
 * How capital gains tax destroys wealth - CGT disproportionately affects the well-off - 2nd March
 * Qualified to recommend seven sensible funds - Small is beautiful when you’re looking to beat the market - 23rd February
 * Can your fund manager move with the times? - What is needed to win in a low-growth era? - 9th February
 * A new take on the active vs passive debate - Fund investors might be smarter than we thought - 2nd February
 * Another industry managing quite nicely thank you - Wealth managers are an expensive option for many - 26th January
 * Sterling pulls ahead in race for the bottom - It’s hard to find any reasons to be upbeat about the pound - 19th January
 * Banks ignore the spirit of RDR - This is not the revolution in transparency we were expecting - 12th January



Articles: 2012

 * This time Japan has a yen for change - A weaker currency could boost Japanese shares - 15th December
 * Never forget that elephants don’t gallop - Traditionally, small-caps have outperformed. They should do so again - 23rd November
 * Chinese shares are just not cheap enough - Chinese companies are not what many investors think - 17th November
 * 1950s lesson for the boom in bonds - Pension funds now own more bonds than equities -10th November
 * The cost of growing old frugally - Older people spend less, so expect lower GDP growth in future - 27th October
 * Going soft on the commodities supercycle - Metals may have seen their best gains, but softs could yet soar - 20th October
 * A small island of good in a sea of bad - I’m learning about the awful products the industry has sold - 13th October
 * A brief history of hyperinflations - Iranian-style hyperinflation is a lot more common than you might imagine - 6th October
 * The day that really changed the world - Collapse of Lehmans was more significant than 9/11 - 29th September
 * The long-term price you pay for yield - Most funds charge their costs to capital, not income - 22nd September
 * Property treading water? Sinking, more like - Prime central London is propping up house price indices - 8th September
 * Look to the east for cheap yield - Japan is not an obvious choice, but it should be - 1st September
 * Euro defies gravity – but not for much longer - To keep eurozone broad money supply from contracting will take a whopping €3tn - 25th August
 * Gold’s glittering future? We’ve seam it before - History suggests that gold mining shares could stage a rally - 18th August
 * My gripping, revealing, shocking holiday reads - Be financially well-read on your staycation - 21st July
 * My aversion to reversion – and UK banks - Sometimes prices revert to zero, not their historical average - 7th July
 * Trust index sinks to an all-time low - People don’t trust banks, but what of equities? - 30th June
 * How people power is changing banks - Democratic finance is a powerful force for good - 23rd June
 * Road to nowhere can be road to riches - Active fund managers in focus as market goes sideways - 15th June
 * Beware of falling prices for villas in the sun - A Spanish villa looks cheap from soggy Britain – but it isn’t - 9th June
 * While all around are panicking . . . buy - Take a deep breath and start looking at European stocks - 2nd June
 * Sooner or later, it’ll be time to get real - We’re going to have to move out of cash into proper assets - 26th May
 * Protected by white lie of money printing - The US and the UK aren’t in any less trouble than other western countries - 19th May
 * Where share buybacks are ‘a steal’ - Shareholders should oppose institutionalised theft - 12th May
 * Overvalued US will be worth the wait - Market valuation measures suggest it’s time to delay - 5th May
 * Want a house deposit? Ask a shipbuilder - China is the greatest credit bubble yet - 28th April
 * Is it worth bypassing the usual suspects? - Shunning traditional financial products is not as easy as it sounds - 21st April
 * What do I invest in? OK, I’ll tell you... - My cash also isn’t going into bank shares or anything connected with China - 7th April
 * A stellar stock? Beware the smoke trail - Tobacco is nasty and in terminal decline - 31st March
 * Fairness would be an ultimate tax incentive - Budget measures will let us devote time to more productive activities - 24th March
 * Do your bit to distort the UK economy - What you should do to prepare for next week’s Budget - 17th March
 * Land of my rising pension fund - You can entrust your pension to a Dane or, like me, put your faith in Japan - 10th March
 * Chancellor, I’m waiting for your email - Is my idea to replace pensions with Isas brilliant – or idiotic? - 3rd March
 * Pensions . . . frankly, who needs them? - Abolish all pensions! Isas are a far better deal - 25th February
 * Test of nerves for holders of defensive stocks - ‘Safe bets’ are no longer as secure as they were - 11th February
 * Water has potential for conflict and wealth - Water is an oddly undervalued resource – but many fund managers consider it a long-term investment theme - 4th February
 * I’m sticking with my Japanese holdings - When the yen falls, the market rises – and the Bank of Japan must realise that success in a globalised world is about having a weak currency - 28th January
 * Find a trend follower with skin in the game - You need to capture skill, sector and style momentum - 21st January
 * Brics look nothing like a solid investment - Is there value in Bric equity markets? Or is it a Bloody Ridiculous Investment Concept? - 14th January
 * Fund managers’ success? Put it down to luck - Good stockpicking is really all about momentum – the trick is buying in to it at low cost - 7th January



Articles: 2011

 * Don’t be fooled by euro’s strong pulse - The euro must eventually be valued by the strength of its weakest link: think more drachma than deutschmark - 10th December
 * Our economy is anything but in the pink - With another crisis looming, banks’ forbearance on mortgage arrears can’t go much further – so house prices must go lower - 3rd December
 * Europe’s bleak, but it’s not the new Japan - If the ECB starts printing money, it should make you feel bullish for the prospects for the European market a year or a two out - 19th November
 * Hang on to gold and keep faith in cash - What does the euro crisis mean for house prices, gold, Japanese equities and share dividends? - 12th November
 * It’s not the end of the euro – yet - Germany’s big businesses have a pressing need to hold the euro together, so it isn’t likely to end yet - 5th November
 * The profits and perils of the ‘Nifty Fifty’ - The new Nifty Fifty shares – in quality companies exposed to growth markets – are the latest investment theme, but how much should you pay for them? - 29th October
 * Is there a case for litigation funding? - Specialist funds provide funding for commercial litigation cases to cover the costs of a case in return for payment if the case is won - 15th October
 * QE is the last resort, but will it work? - QE might help the stock market to end the year well – but the pound in your pocket is worth less now that it was on Wednesday - 8th October
 * China is no panacea for global ills - A “decoupling” of emerging markets seems unlikely – for now - 1st October
 * The exhausting search for an elusive safe haven - It’s been a week of searching for safe havens – and I’ve been given more than enough ideas in the past five days - 24th September
 * The truth about pensions – and lemon juice - If you are in your mid 30s and you haven’t started a pension, it might be getting close to a good time to do so - 10th September
 * Funds, fees, fairness and economies of scale - In most industries, prices fall as the number of customers grows and the provider achieves economies of scale - 3rd September
 * I’m off to the Klondike - None of the things that would make me happy to dump gold are happening - 27th August
 * Door reopens on mansion tax for the masses - Introduce CGT on £1m primary homes and I’d give it a decade before everyone’s paying it - 20th August
 * Find out why we’re washed up... on the beach - When the going gets tough, “the tough find a quiet beach and some good books” – so here are my top ten holiday reads about the financial crisis - 23rd July
 * Buy into the gold rush as metals go mainstream - I’m getting an unusual number of e-mails about gold, asking how to go about buying it - 16th July
 * Don’t go with the Asian flow – invest in Europe - We can’t quantify the risks in emerging markets as precisely as we can in Greece - 2nd July
 * The UK can learn from Greece’s tragic loss of faith - Five years ago, we trusted the big banks to keep our money safe and they trusted each other to stay more or less solvent - 25th June
 * China investors can’t see the wood for the trees - Emerging market equities aren’t necessarily worth a premium – as investors in a plantation operator and a popular fund are finding - 17th June
 * Bank shareholders are staring at the last straw - T his time last year, most people thought interest rates would have risen by now - 11th June
 * UK’s housing climate is just as chilly as the costas’ - The truth is that buying to let in the UK now is no less dangerous than doing so in Spain - 4th June
 * Robbery? But the cash is still in the bank . . . - Your money has to be somewhere and at the moment the risks of holding cash might be lower than the risks of holding too much in other assets - 21st May
 * Private investors should brush up on geopolitics - If you’d asked someone five years ago what they thought was the biggest risk to their portfolio, they wouldn’t have said geopolitics - 14th May
 * The dark truths behind gold’s glittering rise - More important than the fact that the gold price has reached $1,500, is why it has done so - 23rd April
 * Bust-up brews between Buffett, Bonner and bullion - I wrote a few mild criticisms of Warren Buffett here last week - 16th April
 * I’m turning my back on boring Buffett - Back in 2005 after a visit to Warren Buffett’s shareholders’ meeting, I wrote an article in which I was mildly critical. I called the event “boring and irritating” - 9th April
 * Sort out yourself before you worry about the kids - Everyone loves the idea of the proposed new Junior Isa - 2nd April
 * ‘Evergreening’ will still leave banks in the red - Letting banks prune their good loans and pay out ‘spare’ cash in dividends isn’t going to stop me worrying about their solvency - 26th March
 * Why I’m sticking with Japanese stocks - I have long been a fan of the Japanese stock market for the simple reason that unlike every other market in the world, it has been cheap. I’m not changing my mind now - 19th March
 * Houses for sale but where are the buyers? - We hear much about the return of 90 per cent and 95 per cent mortgages. But I have yet to hear of a first-time buyer who has persuaded a bank to give them one - 12th March
 * Golden barriers can protect us against stagflation - Back in 1962, a writer in one of the UK’s political magazines lamented the fate of US oil companies - 5th March
 * Go for gold: it is far ahead of electronic money - Mostly, when you buy insurance, you hope it won’t ever turn out to be necessary - 26th February
 * There’s nothing normal about today’s markets - The vast majority of people suffer from what behavioural scientists call “normalcy bias” - 19th February
 * For once, a good thing that can run and run - Good things rarely happen in the investment industry - 5th February
 * China could price itself out of all sorts of markets - Given the wage pressures building behind it, the consumer price index in China might be a tad higher than the official number - 29th January
 * I’m not sure what passes for normal these days - Ihaven’t always seen eye to eye with Ken Fisher, the US market guru - 22nd January
 * There is no need to fear the China syndrome - It obviously isn’t possible for China to grow at 10 per cent a year forever - 15th January
 * Eleven reasons to worry – but two reasons to invest - On Thursday morning, I started making a list of all the things that might upset the markets in 2011 - 8th January



Articles: 2010

 * yourself: now’s the time to buy real assets'' - The young couple behind me have a technically unemployed friend who makes more money than they do by spending his days digging around in skips for bits of discarded metal which he then sells by weight to the “scrappies” - 18th December
 * spite of debt crisis, Germany is in the zone'' - Back in 1962, most European bankers were mad for monetary union - 5th December
 * Asia implode if America recovers?'' - Can I separate my “beef” with the marketing and costs of Anthony Bolton’s China fund from its actual performance? - 20th November
 * much cash, bubbles and hot potatoes'' - In the end, the Fed didn’t really have a choice - 6th November
 * sensible changes could feather this Nest'' - It’s been a long time in the thinking but the coalition has finally given the National Employment Savings Trust (Nest) - 30th October
 * tenants would benefit from German lessons'' - Germany, where the institutions are active in residential housing, is pretty much the only place that hasn’t had a nasty property bubble in the past decade - 23rd October
 * on blue chips to boost your purchasing power'' - It used to be that if you wanted to get a rate on your savings that would beat inflation you got a cash Isa - 16th October
 * Japanese? I really don’t think so'' - If you want to go against today’s consensus, all of this suggests you should soon sell your western government bonds and buy Japanese equities - 9th October
 * cheers for the product, boos for the charges'' - People in the financial industry are constantly asking me what people want. I always tell them the same thing: products that are simple and cheap - 2nd October
 * self-cert charter could have a bitter result'' - It was perfectly clear even in the 1960s that if you increased access to credit, you’d get a house price boom that wouldn’t necessarily be helpful to first-time buyers - 25th September
 * mind the yield gap – it’s a new kind of normal'' - Are equities cheap? If you believe in the “yield gap”, the answer is yes - 18th September
 * begins to fly when deflation is in the wind'' - Deflation is good for gold prices - 11th September
 * are trumps in a game of poor rates'' - To make good returns over the next few years investors need to find not just high-yielding companies but ones that “commit to realistic dividend growth” too - 4th September
 * of confusion in a flood of deflation data'' - Something has changed. Until very recently the investment world was, for the most part, convinced that the worst was over and that a recovery of sorts had taken hold - 28th August
 * the farm on tractors, not the price of wheat'' - Prices of tea, rice and bacon have risen 30 per cent, 59 per cent and 9 per cent respectively - 21st August
 * whole new angle'' - For those who like their fishing wild and scenic, Shetland can be hard to beat - 7th August
 * at the globe through a glass half full'' - I’m settling into my summer reading: Baillie Gifford’s Rational Optimism - 31st July
 * property no substitute for National Savings'' - The indefinite suspension of National Savings & Investment (NS&I) Index-Linked saving certificates earlier this week has irritated savers. And for very good reason - 24th July
 * lunar or simply moonstruck?'' - Tomorrow is an important day: it marks the start of the next lunar cycle - 10th July
 * is a danger if the coalition stops cutting'' - Merryn Somerset Webb? The Budget went down pretty well - 3rd July
 * – be bold, be brilliant, but keep it simple'' - I rarely find myself  wanting to be a  politician – or to stand  in the shoes of a politician – even for a second. Not so today. Right now, I’d like – for one week and one week only – to be George Osborne - 19th June
 * sensible pension? Yes – if you cap contributions'' - What is the point of providing tax relief on pension contributions? - 12th June
 * a forest: wood is good for you'' - What do you do if you are a rich man in need of a pension fund? - 4th June
 * bought a house: my worst ever financial decision'' - We’ve just bought a house. It is exactly the kind of house we have long wanted to live in - 29th May
 * only currency that can’t be printed on a whim'' - You probably think gold is in a bubble - 20th May
 * wrong kind of quantitative easing?'' - Sterilised QE can still work in that it can affect expectations – with a big new buyer of even the most rubbish of bonds in the market - 15th May
 * markets to bet on when chaos reigns'' - Last week, I wrote here about the crisis in Greece and its likely effects on the eurozone. I didn’t expect any of them to be good. And they haven’t been - 8th May
 * out for more economic dark clouds'' - I was wondering earlier this week if the Icelandic volcanic eruption might have an effect on stock markets - 24th April
 * debacle is not going to go away'' - 10th April
 * nothing isn’t easy'' - Taking a holiday from US and European shares looks like a sensible move – but keeping cash on deposit involves almost as much proactivity as being invested in equities - 3rd April
 * to embrace the government’s backyard bribes'' - Britain’s backyard electricity generation plant plan - 27th March
 * is not the best'' - Today the state pension is paid at such a pathetically low level that anyone living on it alone would be more destitute than secure - 20th March
 * a healthy housing culture'' - Last week, I spoke at the Chartered Institute of Housing (CIH) conference in Brighton. This was particularly interesting for me as, when I meet property professionals, I am normally meeting property investors - 13th March
 * of cash, currencies and China'' - A friend has sent me an e-mail saying she has just sold her flat in London - 6th March
 * manager, shame about the fees'' - The forthcoming launch of Anthony Bolton’s Fidelity China Special Situations Fund is bothering me - 27th February
 * slows down the Orient Express'' - As the euro falls, China’s price advantage will narrow – so I can’t see a good reason to put any money in - 13th February
 * – it’s not a question of ‘if’ but ‘when’'' - A friend has just sent me a picture of his latest eBay purchase: a 100 trillion dollar bill from Zimbabwe. It cost him £2.48 - 6th February
 * these banks think we’re stupid?'' - Banks that charge high loan rates – and pay £1m bonues – must think their customers either don’t notice, or care - 30th January
 * prices should rise...but they won’t'' - One of the biggest surprises last year was the rise in UK house prices - 23rd January
 * going the way of Spain, Ireland and Japan'' - The “miracle economy” looks caught in a nasty trap of artificial and unsustainable growth driven by rapid credit growth and bubble psychology - 16th January
 * I’m hoping to be a bull, by the end of the year'' - I spent almost all of the noughties as a bear on equities, and the second half as a property bear – but if markets fall back, I’m hoping to change my ways - 9th January



Articles: 2009

 * case for gold continues...'' - Back in 2000, Bill Bonner, author of financial newsletter The Daily Reckoning, announced his trade of the decade. It was a simple one: sell dollars, buy gold. It turned out to be a good plan - 12th December
 * Better its currency than its shares'' - For the past year or so, I have shared this page with UK fund management guru Anthony Bolton. No more - 5th December
 * value for my pension cash'' - Buying a fund of value stocks should provide good upside if the rally continues, some capital protection if not, and reasonable income either way - 21st November
 * they don’t teach you at business school'' - Business school students – and investors - should throw out their textbooks and looking for real value in their investments instead - 14th November
 * should put their house in order'' - Much fuss this week about the Financial Service Authority’s (FSA) review of the mortgage market - 24th October
 * these cheap outperformers - while you still can'' - Investment trusts are cheap, they’re easy to buy and they easily outperform most other funds in rising markets. Buy them while you still can - 17th October
 * too early to sing a requiem for the dollar'' - The dollar looks just about dead. The US is running a massive trade deficit, has an almost unfeasibly large budget deficit and offers basically no yield at all to anyone dumb enough to hold its currency - 10th October
 * cash can unite you from the freaky market'' - There was a time when David Swansen was every investor’s hero. Under his stewardship the Yale University endowment fund outperformed pretty much every other fund in the world between 1985 and 2008 and became the subject of a million business school seminars in the process - 3rd October
 * adds spice to the dinner table conversation'' - I had dinner this week with friends from my Japanese stockbroking days. They have not gone back into the market. So the question round the table was: is it too late? - 26th September
 * me gold sovereigns over paper currency'' - If, like me, you believe a perfect storm is just getting going in the currency markets, it’s now a question of how – not if – to buy gold - 19th September
 * for gold'' - I’ve been a gold bug for nearly ten years. It’s been good: the dollar price of gold has nearly quadrupled since 2000. It has also been easy - 12th September
 * jam tomorrow for retailers'' - I made jam tarts the other day. many of my friends also bake. It is one of the classic symptoms of collapsing consumer confidence - 29th August
 * euro feels the strain'' - There was much excitement this week among the “worst is over” crowd as Germany and France reported GDP growth of 0.3 per cent - 22nd August
 * law of averaging'' - Market timing is easy in hindsight – but do you know anyone who got out of the market two years ago and went back in this March? - 15th August
 * early to declare V for victory'' - Just because I don’t believe in a V-shaped recovery doesn’t mean I disagree with Barry Norris of Argonaut on European equities - 1st August
 * is a dead loss'' - If you want a Michael-Jackson-style send off, don’t pre-pay for a funeral plan. Open a savings account, or buy shares in a funeral director, instead - 11th July
 * upside in these knock-down prices'' - The fact that commercial property prices in the US are still coming down so fast – along with the fact that residential prices remain under pressure – really matters - 20th June
 * ‘hornets nest’ would prevent us being stung'' - If no one is willing to make a flat-fee system work for fund management, the next best step would be to regulate for absolute transparency - 13th June
 * fees would deliver better fund managers'' - Why not charge flat rates for fund management? Everyone would understand what they were paying and there would be lower costs all round - 6th June
 * news dressed up as good'' - The rising pound is undoubtedly good news for those about to head off on holiday, but investors still need a safe haven - 30th May
 * bearish case for property'' - Houses are still too expensive. The average house price is now around £150,000 and the average salary around £25,000. That makes the price to income ratio a whopping six times - 23rd May
 * replaces V-shaped'' - For the last 80 years or so, there hasn’t been a recession and recovery cycle in the UK that hasn’t been V-shaped - 16th May
 * knack'' - One of the many press releases I received this week has got me a little worried. It says that a mere 25 per cent of financial advisers think that the recent massive rally in the stock market - the FTSE 100 is at a four-month high – represents the beginning of a new bull market - 9th May
 * is looking palatable'' - The key driver behind the collapse of the gîte and frite dreams of Britain’s middle classes is clearly the pound. Sterling has fallen10.2 per cent against the euro in the last 12 months - 2nd May
 * is looking palatable'' - The key driver behind the collapse of the gîte and frite dreams of Britain’s middle classes is clearly the pound. Sterling has fallen10.2 per cent against the euro in the last 12 months - 25th April
 * art for art’s sake'' - The great contemporary art boom was just another bubble. There was never a shortage of supply and demand was more speculative than rational – as perhaps all art investment always is - 11th April
 * Investing'' - I promised myself that, on my return from maternity leave, I would write no more columns about the property market. I assumed the argument was over. Not so - 4th April
 * will soon vouch for deflation'' - For the first time in many months, I ended up paying full price (and not a particularly cheap full price at that) in a UK high street shop - 28th March
 * bank on the bulls'' - Since March 6, the S&P 500 index is up 14 per cent and the FTSE 100 is up 9 per cent – leading to a growing belief that we may have seen the back of the bear - 21st March



Articles: 2008
FT columns begin from this date...
 * Focus on your target, aim and fire - Three years ago, Albert Edwards and James Montier, then of Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein, published a fabulous report called “Seven Sins of Fund Managers”. It explained how a variety of “behavioural weakness”, all “inherent in the average investment process”, caused average fund managers to make endless mistakes - 5th December 2008
 * Scraping the barrel for real returns - Back in July, I wrote that anyone with significant cash savings should take them to Northern Rock and pile them into the bank’s savings bonds – which, at the time, were offering to pay a fixed rate of interest at 7 per cent a year for five years. Why? - 14th November 2008
 * Property will stay in the doldrums - However hard I try, I still can’t see how the rate cut will make things much better for the housing market. For starters, it doesn’t help most of those looking for a new mortgage - 7th November 2008
 * Songs in a minor key - Anyone who thought the path of the commodities “supercycle” would be a smooth one would have been in for a shock this year. Just look at the performance of the miners - 25th October 2008
 * to invest it'' - back to basics guide to weathering the fiinancial crisis - 18th October 2008
 * Bubble, toil and rouble - They say a real bear market isn’t over until all the bubbles surrounding it are well and truly burst. On that measure, you might think we are nearly there. The oil bubble has popped – the price has now fallen below $83. So has the property bubble in most countries - 11th October 2008
 * All this optimism is getting me down - Desperate to find a reason to buy stocks? You aren’t alone. Everyone wants to be the one to pick the bottom of the market and to make the fortunes that tend to come with doing so - 4th October 2008
 * It’s time to review the house rules - Banking regulation is nothing to be rushed into. But that doesn’t mean Gordon Brown shouldn’t use this opportunity to introduce new rules. He should. It is just that he should forget the banks and focus on an easier target: the property investment market - 26th September 2008
 * Forget frantic fixes - it’s a capital offence - If you are one of the remaining stock market bulls looking for a sign of the bottom, you have been spoilt for choice this week. Unfortunately none of the events, extraordinary as each one is and as mad as each one would have seemed a year ago, tells us that the end of our crisis is in sight. It isn’t - 19th September 2008
 * There are no rewards for being brave - I get a lot of irritating press releases. This week’s worst came from one of the personal finance websites and announced that “women are noticeably more brave than men as house prices drop”. The irritating bit? The use of the word “brave” - 12th September 2008
 * Wading through the deluge - An EU directive has resulted in more than 200 UK companies reporting their financial results this week – overwhelming share investors with information, preventing analysts from finessing their forecasts, and making it a frantic week for me - by Oliver Ralph, 29th August 2008
 * Advertisers should switch on to TV - In the course of the average day, I spend several hours on the internet. Before I started writing this, I read and answered tens of e-mails. I looked up car rental prices for the bank holiday weekend. I even double-checked the cheapest rates for offset mortgages (I am absolutely not planning to buy a house – just looking) - 22nd August 2008
 * Make pessimism pay - Anyone who has put land up for sale in the past few years has had the satisfying experience of watching rich City-lifestyle buyers and real farmers elbow each other out of the way to get their hands on fields anywhere from Cornwall to Northumberland - 15th August 2008
 * The problem with cash - We go on holiday to a remote area of Shetland every year. Last year, the talk was of little but fast-rising house prices and the need to get on the ladder as quickly as possible. This year, it was all about how the housing market had frozen. Final proof, were it still needed, that the bubble/bust cycle knows no boundaries - 8th August 2008
 * The recession has just turned global - The most interesting bits of corporate news out this week came from Vodafone and De Beers. These are two very different companies – mobile phone businesses drive their growth at the bottom end of the market and diamond companies at the top end. But they both said similar things - 25th July 2008
 * It’s time to form an orderly queue at Northern Rock - I’ve never been one for tying my money up in long-term products of any kind. But I’m beginning to find myself looking rather longingly at some of the fixed-rate savings bonds on offer - 11th July 2008
 * Get yourself more money and sense I wandered through a City shopping centre earlier this week and marvelled. Here, in the midst of the credit crunch and on the edge of a nasty recession, were hordes of people shopping. Not in Woolworths or French Connection, but in Tiffany, Paul Smith, Hermès, Penhaligon’s and Gucci - 27th June 2008
 * Sorry, but this is going to hurt for a little longer - How do you cope with a credit crunch? That’s the question I was asked to address in a talk to a group of Dutch pension fund managers earlier this week - 20th June 2008
 * Try putting your trust in infrastructure - How often do you buy investment trusts these days? Probably not as often as you did a few years ago - 13th June 2008
 * The City is full of cloth ears - My sister is trying to sell a one- bedroom flat in Battersea. It is on the fourth floor of a Victorian mansion block. It is perfectly decorated and, being on the corner, has two terraces with fabulous views over the park. If one single property were to be immune from the housing collapse in the UK, this would be it. But it is not immune - 6th June 2008
 * In these uncertain times, it pays to hold on to gold - When gold was going for $300 an ounce and oil for $25 a barrel, it was easy to know where to put your money - 30th May 2008
 * Aim is looking cheap – but it’s still not worth it - Around this time last year, the nation’s investment experts all started to point out how cheap the big FTSE 100 stocks looked and to suggest that we all switched out of smaller companies and into blue chips - 23rd May 2008
 * A glimmer of a chance to save face in Japan - At the launch party for the new Spectator business magazine on Wednesday, a banker introduced himself to me. He’d been wanting to meet me for ages, he said. He was a great fan – he read all my columns and had done well over the years out of taking some of my advice. I glowed with pride. Then came the fall. But, he went on, he had also lost a small fortune as a result of buying into the Japanese market – again on my advice – in 2007 - 9th May 2008
 * Rescue rumours require a reality check - Deep in Cathar country in the south-west of France is a small village called Bugarach. To the uninformed eye, there isn’t much to distinguish it from the hundreds of other villages dotted around the Pyrenean foothills - 25th April 2008



News & updates:


References:


Links:

 * London Stock Exchange: Merryn Somerset Webb - archive 2005/2008
 * MerrynSomersetWebb.co: articles by Merryn
 * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merryn_Somerset_Webb