The year 2012 was a surprising one.
Although many of the most notable events reflected ongoing economic and fiscal issues - including crises in the European Union, slowing growth in China, growing debt in the United States, government intervention in Brazil and worries about the "fiscal cliff" - investors remained optimistic and many global stock markets delivered rather attractive performance for the year.
Here are a few of the headline events that caught our attention during 2012:
- China became an economic power, officially
All debate about when China's economic importance would rival that of the United States' was put to rest when The Economist added a section devoted entirely to China. The last time the publication introduced a new country was 1942. It was devoted to the United States.
- It's all relative: the U.S. and global recovery
China's growing importance did not diminish the role of the United States. U.S. economic growth may have been modest during 2012, but it was positively robust relative to that of other developed nations. In fact, the U.S. was called the sole bright spot in global economic recovery.
- Greece? Really?
Greece's ATHEX composite index was the top-performing stock market in Europe during 2012. Despite five years of recession and record unemployment, it closed about 33 percent higher at year's end, beating Germany's DAX. The ATHEX remained significantly below its previous highs.
- "For Euro Crisis Relief, Bang Head Here"
Bloomberg BusinessWeek's tongue-in-cheek headline reflected ongoing frustration with events in Europe. While Europe faces complicated issues that are likely to take time to resolve, there are reasons for optimism including the region's pursuit of a banking union.
- The Supreme Court did what?
Offering headlines that rivaled the memorable "Dewey Beats Truman," both CNN and Fox News misreported the Supreme Court's ruling on the Affordable Care Act. The act remains controversial.
- Bank of America rises from the ashes
After delivering the worst performance in the Dow Jones industrial average during 2011, Bank of America became the best performer for 2012. One of the biggest beneficiaries was Warren Buffett, who stepped in when no one else would. He invested $5 billion in preferred shares and received 700 million in warrants.
- Australian police say Apple Maps can kill you
Apple maps were called a lot of things during 2012, but accurate was not one of them. San Francisco had a French Quarter, Stratford-on-Avon disappeared and the town of Mildura moved to the middle of Australia's Murray Sunset National Park. Since the park has no water supply, Australian police issued a warning.
LOUIS P. INGARGIOLA is president of Ingargiola Wealth Management Group LLC. Find him at iwmg.us. Interested in writing a guest column? Send IN THIS CORNER ideas to business@ timesshamrock.com