Resources
Peter Martin Fellowship
The Financial Times is offering a three-month internship in the memory of Peter Martin, the FT’s former chief business columnist and deputy editor, who died in August 2002 at the early age of 54.
Peter Martin: 1948-2002
Peter Martin, chief business columnist and associate editor of The Financial Times, died at the age of 54 after a battle against cancer. One of the leading financial journalists of his generation, Peter will be remembered fondly by family, friends, colleagues and the business community...
Related content and features
Obituary
A gifted journalist
Richard Lambert describes an influential writer and editor whose combination of skills as editor, strategic thinker and commentator has not been matched in the FT’s long history.
The bad and the good
After the bubble: five lessons from dotcom mania
Thoughts about the bubble from someone who lived inside the web craze, but escaped the rollercoaster economics of a start-up.
Summertime muse
Lazy, hazy, crazy thoughts - like abandoning 3G
Chief executives should use holidays to think the previously unthinkable, like abandoning third-generation mobile telephony.
Wherever and whatever
The death of geography
The combination of telecommunications, computing power and discriminating consumers is producing a profound change in the company-customer relationship.
Wise before the fact
Internet backers beware
Here is a message for investors in America’s internet stocks: pay attention! Look hard at the revenues of the companies you are bidding up to unsustainable highs.
Boats against current
Ah, shareholders, let us be true to one another
At stake in the present financial malaise is not simply trust in business but faith in capitalism as a motivating force.
A convenient excuse
The cycle is back in style
Chief executives have detected an abrupt loss of “visibility” in their businesses, but perhaps they just don’t like what they see.
Practical proposals
A return to public companies
To restore faith in markets, a new set of guidelines is needed for the institutions that form the heart of the economy.

Peter Martin 







