Fisher Investments UK

Inflation is an over-inflated market risk

From our UK edition

It appears Mark Carney barely escaped writing a letter to Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond this week: UK inflation remained at 3.0% y/y in October, exactly one percentage point above the BoE’s target. Whilst we imagine Carney and his typewriter are breathing sighs of relief, headlines aren’t: Most observers still believe high inflation is choking the UK economy, putting the expansion (and UK shares) at risk. History and recent data, however, disagree: Britain’s economy and markets have endured higher inflation in the past, and UK consumers are far more resilient than most believe. As headlines are quick to point out, inflation is at a five-year high. That sentence cuts both ways. Yes, inflation is higher than at any point in the last five years.

An antidote to Brexit jitters: diversify by investing globally

From our UK edition

Over a year after the UK voted to leave the European Union, UK stocks are humming along, and the economy continues to grow. For investors, there is one obvious lesson: don’t overrate any widely discussed event’s potential market impact, and instead take popular narratives with a grain of salt. But there is also a secondary takeaway: to limit your exposure to any country-specific risk – whether or not it’s overhyped – diversify globally. Diversification is a straightforward investing concept. It is about recognising two things: risk is everywhere, and spreading your money around helps limit exposure to any single thing – be it a country, region, industry, company, trend and so on.

Don’t Lose Sight of the Investment Forest for the Trees

From our UK edition

Do stocks outperform bonds? The widely accepted answer is yes — and by a significant margin over the long term. However, one paper making the rounds in America recently challenged this conventional wisdom, arguing most stocks aren’t great investments because only a sliver of US stocks — fewer than 4% — have generated all of US markets’ long-term returns. This prompted responses from financial pundits, with some asking if stock investing is a futile exercise, like looking for a needle in a haystack. However, in our view this conclusion misses some important context and wrongly focuses on the importance of individual stocks — not the most critical ingredient to successful long-term investing.