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The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: Where will the FTSE go now?

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: Where will the FTSE go now?
Russ Mould, Investment Director at A J Bell, marvels at the recovery of the FTSE to a higher level than it stood before the pandemic hit the UK. But how secure is its current level and where will it go from here? Now with a 3.5% yield and dividends growing rapidly, Russ assesses the FTSE's growth prospects and says that your outlook will be coloured by whether you feel the UK is out of the pandemic woods yet or not.
Guest:

Russ Mould


Published:
Simon Rose

The Bigger Picture: The Duke of Edinburgh, Covid's help to the economy, Scotland & business & who won the war?

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Bigger Picture

The Bigger Picture: The Duke of Edinburgh, Covid's help to the economy, Scotland & business & who won the war?
Professor Tim Evans of Middlesex University pays tribute to HRH The Duke of Edinburgh, the longest-serving consort in British history. He discusses whether Covid might end up boosting the UK economy rather than harming it. He wonders why Scotland's ruling politicians are so unsympathetic towards business. And he looks at a new book that says that Western historians of the Second World War have always underestimated the importance of the Russian role in defeating the Nazis.
Guest:

Professor Tim Evans


Published:
Simon Rose

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: Why trend-following may trump fundamental analysis

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: Why trend-following may trump fundamental analysis
Tim Price of Private Value Partners explains why he thinks technical analysis - particularly trend-following - may be a more useful discipline than fundamental analysis. He recounts the anecdote of the true-life counterparts of the film Trading Places, with so-called novice investors, called "turtles", taught an investment system, with many of them becoming hugely successful. He points out the downside of index investing and believes that the early warning of problems with the world's burgeoning debts may first be seen in the foreign exchange markets, which central banks are not big enough to control.
Guest:

Tim Price


Published:
Simon Rose

The Business of Film: Godzilla vs. Kong, Chaos Walking & Run

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Business Of Film

The Business of Film: Godzilla vs. Kong, Chaos Walking & Run
James Cameron-Wilson marvels at the encouraging box office news from the United States where Godzilla vs. Kong is top of the heap, despite streaming on TVs simultaneously. He reviews the movie, which features some big names as well as the giant titular stars. In the UK, it's only available online. James also reviews the Doug Liman sci-fi movie Chaos Walking, with Tom Holland and Daisy Ridley and the new Netflix film Run, starring Sarah Paulson.
Guest:

James Cameron-Wilson


Published:
Simon Rose

Gadgets & Gizmos: Spinach as scaffolding, landmine-sniffing bees & texting pedestrians

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

Gadgets and Gizmos

Gadgets & Gizmos: Spinach as scaffolding, landmine-sniffing bees & texting pedestrians
Share Radio's technology editor Steve Caplin discusses LG pulling out of smartphones, why lab-grown meat needs spinach as scaffolding, a sunlight-catching ball to enlighten basements, an Icelandic innovation for making online meetings more like the real thing, why bees are sniffing out Balkan landmines, a smart knee brace and how Japanese scientists have proven just how annoying texting pedestrians can be.
Guest:

Steve Caplin


Published:
Simon Rose

Gadgets & Gizmos: Uber's electric cars; space wine; lab-grown caviar; and a robot self-portrait

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

Gadgets and Gizmos

Gadgets & Gizmos: Uber's electric cars; space wine; lab-grown caviar; and a robot self-portrait
Steve Caplin looks at Volkswagen's bizarre April Fool's joke, how Uber users can now request electric, how wine tastes after a trip in space, the world's first lab-grown caviar being made in Devon, the robot self-portrait selling for $688,000, an antenna powered by 5G signals, an app mapping the world's radio stations, a gadget for sharpening disposable razor blades and what can be discerned by eye tracking.
Guest:

steve caplin


Published:
Simon Rose

The Business of Film: The Mauritanian, Minari and Tina

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Business Of Film

The Business of Film: The Mauritanian, Minari and Tina
James Cameron-Wilson on the encouraging signs of an appetite for cinema in the USA where people have been flocking to big-screen viewings of Tenet. He reviews The Mauritanian, a true story directed by Kevin Macdonald which did not pick up any Oscar nominations, Minari, an American-set film in the Korean language which got 6 nods and Sky's documentary Tina on Tina Turner.
Guest:

James Cameron-Wilson


Published:
Simon Rose

The Bigger Picture: Vaccine passports, the SNP & Alba, the Race and Ethnic Disparities Report

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Bigger Picture

The Bigger Picture: Vaccine passports, the SNP & Alba, the Race and Ethnic Disparities Report
Political commentator Mike Indian looks at the question of vaccine passports and asks whether we should be prepared to show documentary proof of a jab to be allowed to go to the pub. He wonders if Alex Salmond setting up the Alba party will boost Scottish nationalism or divide it. He discusses the recent Race and Ethnic Disparities Report. And he ponders the naivety of David Cameron, caught up in the type of lobbying effort he once decried.
Guest:

Mike Indian


Published:
Simon Rose

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: Why value investors need patience - lots of it

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors

The Financial Outlook for Personal Investors: Why value investors need patience - lots of it
Tim Price, director of Price Value Partners, looks at why benchmarking to stock market indices is a bad idea and why investors should think more about the preservation of capital than chasing the latest market fads. Tim discusses the surge of interest in cryptocurrencies, why gold is less rampant and why value investors, of which he is one, need considerable patience. Citing the ignominious debut of Deliveroo amongst other things, Tim senses the market may be on the point of a big change of sentiment.
Guest:

Tim Price


Published:
Simon Rose

Gadgets & Gizmos: The sound of Mars, NASA's airless tyres, robot lifeguards & 42, the archive

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

Gadgets and Gizmos

Gadgets & Gizmos: The sound of Mars, NASA's airless tyres, robot lifeguards & 42, the archive
Share Radio's technology expert Steve Caplin lets us hear the first ever audio from Mars. He brings news of airless tyres developed from NASA tech, of a virtual Mars house sold for $0.5m, an invisible security keypad, robot lifeguards, a car using your phone as its dashboard, a foolproof Face ID system for phones, the archive of Douglas Adams's letters called - perhaps not surprisingly - 42 and the launch of clothes made from mushroom leather.
Guest:

Steve Caplin


Published: