A difficult year is shaping up for global commerce if last week's political wrangling and market volatility is any indication, as nations are beefing up defense of their borders, their profit centers, and against perceived exogenous threats. No longer is "long-term" the catchphrase of the day, nor is globalism. In their place is a re-energized sense of territorial propriety. Watch out for repercussions to the emerging markets and the underprivileged.
This
populist nationalism is gaining momentum because nations' "middle
class" are growing tired of feeling ignored and left behind. They believe that they can solve complex issues
with quick fix demands and by closing borders, punishing the political/economic
elite, and simply making themselves feel relevant again.
Despite
risk of a full-fledged global trade war, these aggrieved citizens believe that
their best solution is to look inwards when arguing about organic problems before re-engaging with the rest of the
world. With triumphant, charismatic
leaders to guide them, their arguments in favor of nationalism are
emboldened. They prefer leaders who use
simple language, offering simple solutions, breaking down the intricacies of
capitalism into a new reality.
Really?
But we know that economics and global trade are intricate ballets, and do not work effectively when duped by sleight-of-hand rhetoric . Impeding the progress of "water flowing downhill" is tantamount to producing the opposite intended effect, damaging the natural order of science.
Punishing
political foes, neighboring countries, and corporations with excessive
taxation, tariffs, or ultimatums is a departure from what we know as "the
norm" and, as the market's negative performance showed us last week, quite
possibly the antithesis to prosperity.
Global
economies, like it or not, depend upon access to elements within the supply
chain not all of which are located in or produced by each nation
themselves. Disruption of that network
threatens cost and continuity. If a
country is endangered from participating in the process, it might experience
permanent harm.
But
those who argue in favor of a new economic world order speak about breaking
down the old ideologies of right and left. They
underscore a different hierarchy which they believe is not working either, a
hierarchy of up and down.....a
horizontal shift in the distribution of wealth in which the "haves" prosper,
and those who do not must bear the burden of production and financial
irrelevance at the same time.
Those
who cast votes to leave the status quo behind in favor of a new economic
paradigm do so with a type of malice designed to castigate the privileged who
have flourished while Rome figuratively "burns". Their logic is that their plight cannot get
any worse. "What have they got to lose?", they reason.
It
is too early to tell, however, whether that sentiment will actually produce the
desired outcome. I believe that if these
expectations are not met within a reasonable period of time the
resulting disappointment could render an even more malevolent consequence.
Sometimes, rallying against the status quo yields the opposite of what you
wished for. What might that apocalyptic mess look like?
A
mere 9 years since our generation's Great Recession (and a nearly threefold
increase in stock market valuation) the disaffected are nevertheless looking
for a new way to do things....as if the recovery never happened.
If
Democracy is defined as our leaders
giving the population what they want and voted for, then one must conclude
that either the current system is terribly flawed, the people are, or our new
leaders have a hidden basket of shiny new toys we're eager for them to unveil.
My
investment methodology isn't as narrow as bottom-up one-track, focusing,
instead, upon top-down secular themes, many of which are politically agnostic
and averse to cyclical, short-tem influences.
Our portfolios have been and will continue to spotlight the long-term
opportunity expectantly to manifest by developing medicines to eradicate
disease, creating technology that makes water and crops plentiful and healthy, building
systems and infrastructure that improve education, cultivating natural
resources that provide for renewable energy and adequate housing, etc.
Further,
one cannot ignore the "old stand-by" sectors: Non-Cyclicals,
Industrials, Technology, and Basic Materials which offer quantifiable sequence
of entry and exit inflection points that we use to try to build portfolio net
worth within our client's range of risk/reward tolerances.
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