Monthly Market Update | 9 October 2020
Covid-19
comes at the back of 11 years of sluggish growth, rock-bottom interest rates
but absence of inflation, negative
global capital investment, manifest income inequality, stagnant wages and low
consumer confidence levels, often dubbed “Secular Stagnation”. It is more of an
understatement to say that these pressures were “greatly exacerbated” by the
pandemic, and probably more accurate to say that the additional strain of the
worst quarter for economic output since the end of World War II brings
significant dangers to the stability of the global economic and financial
systems.
If
growth acceleration was a difficult proposition before February 2020, with both
left-wing and populist mercantilist approaches having virtually no positive
effect on local or global growth, the pandemic renders 5% sustainable growth
for developed economies a very low probability event.
With
growth projected to be sluggish for a long time and the Fed doing its best to
resuscitate inflation, in a bid to prevent the vicious cycle of deflation, our
investment committee felt that we need to be realistic about where we can get
growth for our portfolios. It
means we have to lower fund charges. This quarter, we will be replacing some
regional exposures for a much cheaper global index fund, without compromising
alpha sources. I means we need to stay diversified, despite very low bond
yields. It also means working harder, so in the next few months we can
meaningfully reduce UK home bias in our portfolios, while still taking into
account the fact that our clients are Sterling-based. Improvements like these
are marginal, but without great growth, we can only work on the margins to
improve performance. It’s a lot of hard work, on a lot of small things, the sum
of which might just make the difference between a growing and a stale
portfolio.
As for financial planning?
Sluggish economic growth eventually will mean sluggish investment growth, which means that income from allowances must
be maximized. We must thus navigate through laws as efficiently as possible,
with no room for error. In a world where the state is bound to have a heavier
hand than in the past, where less free markets will mean less growth, lower
ROICs, more zombie-companies and more state intervention, it means this is the
exact time when a call with a financial planner is warranted.
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