, Columnist
Central Banks Are Creating a Horde of Zombie Investors
In a world of ultra-stimulative policies, individuals are plowing money mindlessly into risky assets.
Call investors programmed; call them zombies — it’s the same thing.
Photographer: Britta Pedersen/AFP/Getty Images
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Ruchir Sharma, chief global strategist at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, wrote a provocative op-ed in the New York Times last weekend. Titled “When Dead Companies Don’t Die,” it argues that unprecedented monetary stimulus from global central banks created a “fat and slow” world, dominated by large companies and plagued by a swarm of “zombie firms” — those that should be out of business but survive because of rock-bottom borrowing costs.
I would add that central bankers are creating a horde of zombie investors as well.
