A well-functioning financial system should allow scarce savings to be directed towards the most promising investment opportunities. However, due to the savings glut and the printing press of the central banks, too much money has been flowing around and investments have been made into opportunities that perhaps should not have been funded. If a company received billions of investments but realistically will never be profitable, then that money has been wasted and it is detrimental to economic growth in the long-term. Especially in an environment of steeply rising interest rates, many of these companies will not survive.
Related to the above and as a further consequence of having too much money flowing around, investors are willing to accept lower returns on a risk-adjusted basis. Because in the end, investment supply (those that invest) and investment demand (those that require investment) is also subject to supply and demand forces. The lower required return is manifested by the increase of prices of assets: stocks, debt instruments, the price of residential and commercial property, etc. In search of return, some investors are willing to invest in high-risk opportunities with poor fundamentals, increasing the risk in the financial system overall.
Of course, inflation has been one of the main
headlines over the past months and the primary concern for many consumers. All
the money flowing around increased demand for a finite supply of services and
products, which due to supply chain issues exacerbated by the war in The
Ukraine, Covid, personnel shortages in various sectors and underinvestment in
key industries such as oil have led to significant inflation.
The response
The central banks worldwide have begun taking money
out of the financial system which leads to higher interest rates and a reversal
of what I described above, if successful. I like to think it’s best compared to
an earthquake hitting the financial world: the buildings with solid foundations
(i.e. good-quality companies) will continue to stand, while those that have
been built in haste and with the expectation that earthquakes will never happen
(i.e. the companies with no prospect of becoming profitable), will collapse.
Risk is re-assessed and required returns rise, pushing prices down, even of
good-quality companies.
One of the tasks of the central banks is to smoothen
the economic cycle, which, one can argue, they have collectively failed to do
as they acted too late proclaiming for a long period last year their belief
that significant inflation would be transitory. Consequence of which is that
now they have to slam the brakes hard, as the Federal Reserve in the United
States is doing, which possibly will lead to a global recession. The European
Central Bank has the additional problem that raising interest rates may topple
one or more of its member states and hence there is a limit to how hard the
brakes can be applied, meaning that inflation may be a more persistent problem
and the Euro can potentially weaken further on a comparative basis to the US
dollar.
What to do now?
As a financial advisor, each client is unique and
hence deserves bespoke advice. However, I can provide a couple of general
guidelines that may be useful when determining a sound investment strategy:
• Do not try to determine where the bottom of
the market is, as this will be a fool’s errand. Statistically, timing the
market to perfection is practically impossible.
• Try to leave emotions out of your investment
decisions. Greed is not good when there is a bull market, nor is fear a
constructive emotion during bear market times.
• Focus on the fundamentals. For investment in
shares, ask yourself, which company I expect will still be profitable ten years
from now and what is the current valuation of that company? Many excellent
companies also lost value in the past months and hence may be very attractively
priced at the moment.
• Remember today by writing down what has
happened and read it back to yourself during the next bull run. Don’t convince
yourself that next time it will be different, because it will not be.
• Always build your investment portfolio so that
it can withstand a market reversal. Be very careful with using leverage,
diversify your portfolio and, if possible, only invest excess savings, so you
do not need to sell assets at depressed prices.
Curious what our bespoke advice for your situation would be? Contact us in the Lisbon office for a no-strings-attached discussion of what we can do for you, especially in these times.
Blacktower Financial Management (+351 214 648 220) or email info@blacktowerfm.com