John Authers (born 1966), is a British financial journalist and finance author, who spent almost three decades reporting at the Financial Times (including becoming Chief Markets Commentator and global head of the Lex Column), before moving to Bloomberg in 2018.
Authers joined the Financial Times in 1990, where he would stay for over twenty-nine years, holding various positions such as US markets editor, Mexico City bureau chief, US banking correspondent, personal finance correspondent, education and local government correspondent, and ‘On Wall Street’ columnist.[9][10] In 2010, he was made global head of the Lex Column in the FT,[11] and by 2018, he was Chief Markets Commentator.[12] In 2018, Authers left the FT and joined Bloomberg News as Senior Markets Editor.[13]
In 2003, he co-authored with Richard WolffeThe Victim's Fortune: Inside the Epic Battle Over the Debts of the Holocaust, which American diplomat Philip H. Gordon writing in Foreign Affairs described as a book that "... turned an important, depressing, and intensely technical subject – the negotiations over how to repay Holocaust-era debts – into a gripping tale replete with deserving victims, grandstanding politicians, greedy class-action lawyers, and tightfisted European bankers".[17] The book won the Knight-Bagehot award from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.[18]
In 2010, Authers published The Fearful Rise of Markets: A Short View of Global Bubbles and Synchronised Meltdowns, which explained why increasing central bank control over financial markets – to generate economic growth via asset price inflation, and protect asset via the Greenspan put – had led to artificially high levels of price correlation.[19] It made the FT's list of business books of the year for 2010.[20]
Authers is married to financial journalist, Sara Silver, with whom he has three children; they live in New York.[2] Authers and Silver have collaborated on pieces together.[22]
^Peck, Tom (23 October 2011). "Your starter for 10...Where is the student who taught politicians how to handle Paxman?". The Independent. Retrieved 9 February 2021. John Authers (1987): Captain of the University College, Oxford team that racked up the highest score achieved in any round of the show's history (520), but went on to lose in the final. Now a Financial Times columnist.
^"Heading for another crash?". The Globe and Mail. 14 May 2010. Retrieved 9 February 2021. His 2002 book, The Victim's Fortune, co-authored with Richard Wolffe, earned the prestigious Best of Knight-Bagehot Award.
^"Meet the panel: John Authers". Financial Times. 20 March 2012. Retrieved 9 February 2021. He was named senior financial journalist of the year in 2009 by the Wincott Foundation, the premier award in UK financial journalism.