Edward Chancellor

‘It’s almost tragic’: Bubble or not, the AI backlash is validating one critic’s warnings
Gary Marcus told Fortune that AI valuations remind him of Wile E. Coyote. “We are off the cliff.”
5 new podcasts to listen to this week
These are our top podcast picks.
Billionaire investor Howard Marks looks back on 5 times he outwitted the market from 2000 to 2020—here are 3 key lessons he learned
Oaktree Capital Management founder Marks wrote a lengthy note on how he takes the market's "temperature" to decide where to invest next.
A veteran market watcher who saw the Fed creating a disaster in 2008 says 'distortions in the economy' today are still the Fed's fault
Jim Grant has been writing the “Interest Rate Observer” every week since 1983—and routinely making prescient predictions.
Excessive Housing Speculation Is Weakening Taiwan’s Economy and Society
Housing speculation creates instability and inequality. Given the growing national security threats from China, policymakers’ refusal to confront the problem puts Taiwan in a highly precarious situation.
Conflict of interest: have low cash rates created the ‘everything bubble’?
In new book The Price of Time, economist Edward Chancellor explores the role central banks have played in the snowballing challenges of the past quarter century
Alan Kohler: The hubris of central bankers and the limits of money
Once again central banks, including Philip Lowe’s Reserve Bank, have kept extreme monetary policies in place for too long