Tel: +34 93 665 8596 | info@spectrum-ifa.com

Linkedin

“Sales shopping” in investments……

By Portugal team
This article is published on: 19th August 2024

With some stock markets falling over the past couple of weeks, it is an opportunity to review markets and risk.    

We all love the feeling we get when we grab a bargain and have no hesitation in purchasing our favourite goods or services when they have a price reduction or promotion.

However, the world of investments is probably the only one in which the same price reductions are met with fear and anxiety instead of joy, however if you are a long term investor, the falls can be an opportunity.

The numbers matter
Statistics show that, over the longer term, stock markets go up approx. 70-75% of the time. In this context therefore any fall in values can be seen to be temporary setback and opportunity to buy shares at “sale” prices.

“Breaking news! Shares up over 20% in 2023!”

You will rarely, if ever, see such a headline. In the same way, you would not have seen a headline stating there “wasn’t a single casualty in the millions of commercial aviation flights in 2023”, but you probably have seen many “flight from hell” articles published in the same year.

When it comes to the world of investments, the media is not your friend in helping you make informed decisions as the focus tends to be on short-term news developments without taking into accountant the much broader and longer-term picture.

The media also tends to catastrophise events with news headlines being designed to grab attention. We see discussions of “crashes”, “crises”, “recessions” etc. and this is getting worse in the digital age with “click bait” designed to grab people’s attention. Moreover, through sophisticated algorithms, the same messages are reinforced through links to similarly anxiety inducing articles.

As a result of this, many still equate the stock market to rolling dice at the casino. An alternative and more considered and rational description of the stock market could be:

“a highly diversified selection of some of the world’s largest and financially secure companies, including such names as Apple, BP, Nestle etc. many of which have been in existence for decades if not hundreds of years, and whose return has averaged over 10% per annum over the past 50 years”.

This hardly trips of the tongue, but the emotional reaction is much different.

What is risk anyway?
It is not as clear cut as you think. When people think of investing and risk, they think about the possibility of losing all of their investment.

Whilst it is indeed possible for individual companies to fail, if you hold a diversified portfolio of, say, the top 500 shares in the US (the S&P 500 index), the only way you could lose your money would be if every one of those 500 companies were to fail.

Over a 50-year period, the S&P 500 index has increased by an average of more than 10% per annum and this is a period that has been marred with the inflation shocks of 1970s, wars, emerging market crises, 9/11, “Grexit”, “Brexit”, the great financial crisis of 2007/08 etc. Nevertheless, the market continues to increase consistently.

Does risk lie in ‘safe’ assets?
We live in a world in which costs are constantly increasing in value. If we reminisce and think about the cost of our first car or house, we can really appreciate the extent to which prices rise over time. Therefore, in order to maintain our standard of living over time, our money must at least maintain its purchasing power and ideally increase our purchasing power over time.

With that in mind, holding fixed return investments such as cash in a world in which costs are increasing is not low risk; it is high risk in the sense that you are jeopardising the value of you real wealth over the longer term.

Safety in risk?
Conversely, shares have historically demonstrated the ability to grow well in excess of the rate of inflation and therefore, as they are protecting your wealth, they can be regarded as safe investments.

Indeed statistics show that the risk of investing in high quality shares reduces to zero over a 20 year time horizon. This sounds like a long time but if we consider life expectancy statistics, a couple in their mid-60s can expect to live well into their 80s and one of the couple has a good chance of reaching 100! Furthermore, we find that many clients’ portfolios outlive them and will be handed down to children and/or grandchildren, in which case the investment period is likely to be multiple decades long.

Contact Portugal team direct about: "“Sales shopping” in investments……"

    The Spectrum IFA Group is committed to building long term client relationships. This form collects your name and contact details so we can contact you about this specific enquiry. For further information, please see our Privacy Policy.