Everybody's different. Some of us can take these ups and downs with ease, while others are glued to the TV or computer. The overarching lesson here is that, hopefully, investors came into this well prepared, well diversified with asset mixes that suited their objectives, and with portfolio target levels in place.
His firm spent January and February bringing asset levels back to target levels. Equities had run in 2023 and 2024, so any excess over target level was brought back.
Now that we're in the current situation, just let it play out and let all the chapters be written. He's talked to a lot of clients and reminded them that we go through these events fairly often. Think back to the pandemic of 5 years ago, Brexit of 2016, GFC of 2008, 9/11, and so on. He gently asks people how they felt in the middle of that, with markets going straight down? That brings back memories of fear.
But the lesson is that 6 weeks ago, we hit an all-time high in the markets. That means that all those past events were overcome.
His playbook is well known -- use scare tactics and intimidation to extract greater concessions than he might get otherwise. We saw this in Canada just weeks ago when he was talking about the 51st state and diminishing us as a nation. And you saw Canada's reaction. What happened next? He got some concessions, and then he backed off.
That same playbook will likely play out with the rest of the world. But, of course, no one really knows. If you're portfolio is well structured, you should be OK.
Yes, he'd be buying for current clients with new money or for brand-new clients. This will turn out to be a good buying opportunity. Keep your head and let time work for you. Event-driven recessions (rather than economic, cyclical recessions) tend to be shorter and shallower. About halfway through a recession, the market (being a forward-looking indicator) starts to move up.
But he's not buying tactically. His firm takes a strategic approach, they're not market timers. Which means that they ride through these events, as uncomfortable as they are. His firm's approach has worked over the long term, so why mess with that?
Yes. That will be the second wave of Trumpism 2.0. First he wants to take care of tariffs, then give people a big tax break (even though they'll be paying more in tax through tariffs). The next phase is to reduce regulatory burdens on companies.
He hears that the M&A pipeline is full, especially on the higher end. Lots of deals being either done or contemplated.
What a year it's been last week ;) Lots of volatility out there, but we've seen this before. Right now, we can't call it a bear market or a bull market. It's more like a "kangaroo" market with all the bouncing around.
Uncertainty breeds volatility. But for long-term investors, volatility creates opportunity and we're seeing that at this stage. No one really knows where the bottom is. But if you're investing for the long term or for the next 12- 24 months, investors will probably be pretty pleased with the investment decisions they make today. We saw it in 2008 with the great financial crisis, and in 2018 with the US-China trade war. With the Covid crash, we ended the year at all-time highs.
It's all about patience, not panic. That's what will help in the long run.
US economy is very resilient. Inflation numbers have come down a bit which is good news, and unemployment is still near multi-decade lows. Consumer is still very strong, and the US consumer is 70% of GDP in the US. As long as that consumer remains strong, that will continue to help the market.
Of course, tariffs will affect the consumer. Looking 6-12 months out, we have to ask whether tariffs will look like they do today? Remember that what they looked like a week ago changed 5-6 days later.
Also have to consider that US mid-terms are coming up next year. The trade stance could soften. It already softened yesterday. We can see fiscal support from the US government. We may see more tax cuts and deregulation, which would help the economy.
Pendulum of regulation swings a long way in both directions. Coming out of the financial crisis, a tremendous amount of regulation was built in. No industry has suffered more because of heavy regulation. Market sees an opportunity for efficiencies and M&A.
Very positive on financials such as banks, insurance companies, investment banks, asset managers. Mainly because they went through a 15-year bear market and have only ignited the last couple of years.