economy, there are cheerleaders, there are doomsayers and there are those who hold up the mirror. Nouriel Roubini, the New York University professor, belongs to the last category as he passionately propagates his theories based on data.
Roubini, the Turkish-born economist may have earned the moniker of Dr Doom for predicting the US subprime housing implosion that triggered the global financial crisis, but he's more often misunderstood by the markets whenever it is on steroids, as it is now.
The economist, who will be wearing the hat of a fund manager with an exchange-traded fund soon, is set to reveal his view of the world at ET's World Leaders' Forum this month in New Delhi.
The author of many books, including Megathreats and Crisis Economics, will come armed with an arsenal of economic data challenging the popular belief that the US is headed for a hard landing, and to counter that investment opportunities are shrinking.
When the world was dancing to the music of financial innovations, Roubini warned an audience at the International Monetary Fund in Washington on September 7, 2006, that a housing bust could «lead to a systemic problem for the financial system.»
He didn't stop with that. In a warning that a financial «pandemic» was round the corner, Roubini prophesied the collapse of a few standalone investment banks and that the financial system wouldn't be the same again.
It wasn't just on the financial markets that he was well ahead of time. He was prescient in what's in store for global trade.
«If it