Wealth
There
is no doubt in anyone's mind that we are fast approaching the end of one of the
most tumultuous years in our lifetime, one which assailed us with financial,
emotional, and health/medical disruptions as never before. Making and sustaining wealth in that
environment has been difficult, at best.
But building portfolios and capital gains requires forethought, goal
planning, and restraint. Those
attributes will be required going forward.
One
must also be mentally prepared to deal with failure and unpredictability.
“Hoping
for success but planning for failure” is not just a slogan but a necessity for
coming out the other end of these major disorders. Investment success is never a given;
imbalances and obstacles are a part of life.
Understanding the ebb and flow of one's undertaking is the essence of
knowing how to compete in the financial markets. Successful portfolio modeling is predicated
upon cycles, relative strength fluctuations, profits and losses, and an
adherence to a consistent method. If you
can do those things then most of the heavy lifting will have already been done prior to
any roadblocks and capitulations that are certain to occur.
What matters most is that your net worth be adequately buttressed to mitigate against the subjective intangibles that can mess with your mind. Your net worth, after all, is not just an empirical integer of items accumulated, but also the attitudes and feelings you ascribe to that number. Enjoying your life and your assets is as important to your financial well-being as the process of acquiring it.
Markets
In
the aggregate, the most successful sectors this year have been
healthcare/biopharmaceuticals, information technology, consumer staples (including
food and water), and basic materials.
They each have demonstrated an earnings staying power derived from an
"everyday"
application
of functions, as well as strong quantitative measures that are contra-indicative
of the volatility found in other businesses.
We believe those sectors have a likely probability of maintaining their relative
strength advantage.
The
markets are reverting back to a prerequisite for earnings growth. Unlike
previous periods of wild speculation, investors are looking for that which can
sustain portfolios while reducing the effects of short term volatility.
However,
the palette of potential purchase candidates for this quarter is about as
shallow as we have seen in years.
Markets have run so far, so fast, that investors are now searching for
quality and "comfort" to pacify the consequence of mental
whiplash. They are prioritizing
preservation of capital, global security, social issues, and political
empathy. Believe me, there is no dearth
of fabulous capital gains potential in a novel context for the future: biotech, ecology, infrastructure,
technology, education, agriculture, poverty, housing, hunger. There
is no end to global cyclical growth opportunities if we adopt an innovative
paradigm of analysis that makes this" lost year" not a lost year at
all.
When
investors emerge from their financial and psychological cocoon those things
that improve their generational prospects can also increase their confidence,
spending power, and emotional recovery.
Major secular bull markets of the past have always required public
"buy-in" towards fiscal and monetary measures. The Federal Reserve and other global central
banks have imposed a steady measure of low interest rates, unfortunately
without commensurate spending and growth.
Deep-rooted economic expansion has thus far been a myth only in the
minds of those who are trying to create it.
By
this time one would have expected broad capital expenditures and social
projects designed to ameliorate our deteriorating social condition. Previous bull markets have always had sustained
periods of industrial and consumer spending that led to good jobs, good pay,
comfortable lifestyles, and expanding corporate profits. This instance may not, however, be the
halcyon days of years gone by. As I have
said many times before…“you can lead a
horse to water, but you can't make him spend!!”
For the most part today's corporate profits
derive from cost-cutting, share buybacks, and explosive stock valuations on the
exchanges. Robust capital spending must
occur for the next up leg in the financial markets to gain permanent traction.
Strategy
The
pandemic has laid bare many of the policy inequities of the past that left
scars upon the global economy. Too many
are dead, despondent, dislocated, or desperate.
This situation cannot persist.
People must be enticed back to social and economic engagement by
politicians, economists, business leaders, media, and spiritual
institutions. Otherwise, the precarious
nature of things will spiral deeper into a serious psychological, medical, and
financial abyss. It is our hope, and
belief, that the cyclical nature of things will ultimately create a favorable
rebound in all those endeavors.
Good
environmental, social, and political governance falls under the parlance of
what many call “socially responsible investing” (SRI). Using
these benchmarks as principles of investment analysis is a way to build capital
gains responsibly, with a purpose. SRI
also makes a meaningful impact upon everyday life, as well as securing regions,
nations, and continents from harm. As
the world changes in these unprecedented times we might only imagine how a pioneering
perspective could yield bountiful capital gains for financial clients. It is all a matter of knowing where, and how,
to look for solutions as yet unimagined.
SRI
also creates lower beta (volatility) in portfolios while offering a myriad
number of sectors from which to choose.
Conclusion
None
of this conversation is relevant, of course, unless we also undertake to
redefine the meaning and purpose of wealth.
Wealth
allows us to enjoy the moment, rather than opining about what we wish we had.
Wealth relieves us from the myth that the “other guy” has more of what
we want. Appreciation of our wealth
makes it much easier to pursue the things that are really important to living a
good life.
What,
then, is wealth?
That
question has innumerable subjective and objective responses. Is it, as I said earlier, an integer? Is
wealth, by itself, a sense of accomplishment, of achievement? Does wealth define the pace at which we live
our daily lives? Is it good health,
friendships, family relationships? I
suppose the answer to those and other questions is determined by whether you
believe you actually are wealthy.
This is one of life's circular conundrums...which comes first, the
chicken or the egg?
What
one cannot afford however, rich or poor, is a lack of empathy for anyone
else. Then, I'm afraid, you don't
possess the necessaries to appreciate good fortune even if it is staring right
back at you.
Suggested
balanced account asset allocation, Q4, 2020
Equity: 35%
Fixed
Income: 35%
Cash: 30%
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