Monthly Market Update: The Covid Issue

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Should we even be investing in this “crazy” market?

Volatility is one of our biggest enemies in investing. It is very difficult to wake up one morning and look at a 20% drop in one’s life savings, a move that may have happened in a matter of days. An inevitable sense of alert, the same one built in our human operating system that has kept us alive since we were fighting woolly mammoths kicks in, and we pick up the newspaper.


“Markets Plunging”. “Covid-19 ending Capitalism” are some of the headlines. When called by clients, we often advised them that asset allocation was their best friend in volatile markets. Indeed, stocks recovered more than half their losses in record-time period.


But the alarm bells are still going. We take a look at the economy (the IMF projected at least 6.5% loss for UK GDP, whilst the BoE brings the number up to 14%). And as if that wasn’t enough, we take a look at earnings. Projected losses for UK companies in the next 12 months are a staggering 35%. Reading the report that follows, it becomes apparent that markets are being propped up by extra liquidity, only to defy the crashing gravity of economic fundamentals. But is that the best way to invest? Should we not look at fundamentals?


The answer is “yes”, but it depends on what fundamentals one is looking at. Valuation fundamentals say we should have been out of equity markets since 2008. If one is looking for the purity of completely liberal markets, unaided by some form of economic and monetary stimulus, then they should have probably stopped investing since the miserable 70’s. For the truth is that markets, both High and Wall Street, have been propped up by bank deregulation in the 90’s, plus low interest rates in the 00’s plus trillions of quantitative easing in the past decade. We should be looking at markets not as an economic health indicator, but rather as an imperfect and often guided asset allocation mechanism, whose function is to maintain the stability of the economy. This is why auto plants may close down, but the markets remain open no matter what the cost.


Is the system right and fair for all players? Probably not. If it were, it would be predictable and leave little room for gains. We employ some of the biggest fund managers in the world to manage our underlying assets and our investment committee meets frequently to discuss. At the end of the day, what we ask ourselves is: is capitalism still a going concern? Insofar as the answer is yes, then markets are still very much investable

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