“How to pay off debts – without actually paying?” — live stream #9
Dan Scott, Chief Investment Officer at Vontobel Wealth Management, answers questions from our live stream audience
4 ways are theoretically possible to reduce the corona debt again. But not all are realistic in practice. Find out why global inflation would be the best thing that can happen to us.
6 key questions at a glance:
- Who is debtor and creditor in global debt? Is it us?
- What does it mean that we are heading for a 120% debt to GDP ratio? And why it’s
- Is there a deep recession on the horizon?
- Is the current crisis an event-driven crisis?
- Why is the Swiss National Bank ahead of the FED but still being critized for its “swollen balance-sheet”?
- What should a long-term oriented investor do right now?
What to expect in this 30' replay video: Follow a Q&A session on global public debt with Dan Scott, new Chief Investment Officer at Vontobel Wealth Management. © Vontobel, recorded on May 8th, 2020, 12:15 p.m.
Current topic: Our series on “Life after Corona”
What moves the world, impacts the markets. Discover interesting perspectives that personalities from a wide range of disciplines share with us concerning our post-Corona life. Our investment experts round out the picture with market assessments and macroeconomic analyses.
White paper: “The world upside down” — 6 challenges for investors “after Corona”
Behavioral economics: “Corona is forcing us to experiment”
Economic history: Why it’s worth taking a look into the past – and across cultural divisions
From the feuilleton: “Corona: The demonic dance, in globalized real time”
Dan Scott
Head Multi Asset
Dan Scott bénéficie de plus de 20 ans d'expérience sur les marchés des capitaux, dans toutes les classes d'actifs et sur tous les marchés. Avant de rejoindre Vontobel en 2017 en tant que Deputy CIO et Head of the Investment Office, il a travaillé pendant de nombreuses années chez Credit Suisse et Kepler Equities. Né à Rheinfelden, en Suisse, Dan Scott a débuté sa carrière en tant que journaliste financier à la fin des années 1990, d'abord chez Dow Jones, puis chez CNBC à Francfort et à Zurich.