Global Markets

Today – March 9 – is the eleventh anniversary of the crescendo of global panic that marked the bottom of the bear market of 2007-09.

It is to me a thing of the most wonderful irony that the world has elected to celebrate this iconic anniversary with – you guessed it – another epic global panic attack.

At this morning’s opening level of 2,764, the S&P 500 is down over 18% from its all-time high, recorded on February 19, while the FTSE 100 Index over one trading day is almost 7% lower. Declines of that magnitude are fairly common occurrences – indeed the average annual drawdown from a peak to a trough since 1980 is close to 14%.* But such a decline in barely a month is noteworthy, not for its depth but for its suddenness.

As we all know by now, the precipitants of this decline have been (a) the outbreak of a new strain of virus, the extent of which can’t be predicted, (b) the economic impact of that outbreak, which is equally unknown, and (c) most recently, the onset of a price war in oil. (That last one is surely a problem for everyone involved in the production of oil, but it’s a boon to those of us who consume it.)

The common thread here is unknowability: we simply don’t know where, when or how these phenomena will play out. And in my experience, the thing in this world that markets hate and fear the most is uncertainty. We have no control over the uncertainty; we can and should have perfect control over how we respond to it.

Or, ideally, how we don’t respond. Because the last thing in the world that long-term, goal-focused investors like us do when the whole world is selling is – you guessed it again – sell. Indeed, I welcome your inquiries around the issue of putting cash to work along in here.

On March 3, the billionaire investor Howard Marks wrote, “It would be a lot to accept that the US business world – and the cash flows it will produce in the future – are worth 13% less today than they were on February 19.” How much truer this observation must be a week later, when they’re down 18%.

The words of legendary investor Benjamin Graham, who said in 1934 still ring true today:

 

“The investor’s chief problem – and even his worst enemy – is likely to be himself”.

 

So, our advice is clear, as a client of Henwood Court your portfolio is positioned to withstand the losses you can emotionally and financially tolerate, and our planning should ensure that you have no immediate need to drawdown on funds when prices have so dramatically fallen. This is all part of investing, and while it hurts, the pain is often temporary.

However, we do understand that world events can be very unnerving, but we must stick with our plan and not be side-tracked by the noise, however disconcerting this can be.

Rest assured this too shall pass.

 

*JP Morgan Asset Management’s Guide to the Markets, page 13

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