Many people are angry and upset over the trend of recent events and mounting financial losses around the world. The list of those who bear guilt in this fiasco is long.
In the final months of election campaigns in Canada and the US, it is presently very popular to blame the current mess on failures of the Bush administration, regulators and Alan Greenspan. I agree they are all culprits in the present mess.
It is also popular to blame the executives on Wall Street, and I agree they are extremely culpable in this.
It is not so popular to blame the lazy, somethin’ for nothin’- consumption and risk-addicted behaviour of individuals who have helped to orchestrate their own demise. But individuals are clearly to blame too.
At the end of the day, no one party was to blame for present turmoil. So the reality is that no one party can fix it. Collective action through individual responsibility and behavioural change is the only way forward.
Recessions and bear markets are times when gains that were recklessly made in bull times are taken back. Bear markets are the time when the masses discover that those they deemed genius now profoundly disappoint.
The fact is that no CEO or analyst or big bank or government body is ever in charge of the prices bid on investment markets. I repeat no one person or body no matter how competent or educated or charismatic they may seem are ever in charge of the bid on investment markets. Investment markets (stocks, bonds, commodities, futures, currencies) are all secondary auctions. They are all priced by the collective bid of the masses.
The only valuable risk management that any of us can employ is to control our own behaviour and to control when and how we allow our own savings to participate in capital markets. When and how we participate means that we must control the type of assets, the amount of each asset and especially the TIMING of our own exposure to each asset cycle. If your investment advisor tells you they do not try to control for timing, then get another advisor or get out of secondary markets altogether. Trying to participate blindly will be harmful to you and your capital over time.
Most people spend most of their time following and commenting on absolutely useless factors. People will talk about how smart or experienced management is. People will talk about how great profits have been. People will talk about how “solid’ the balance sheet looks; or how many people live in Asia. These factors are all absolutely irrelevant to what is happening to our investment capital today or next week or next year. All that matters in real life is where we are at with in the cycle of prevailing market sentiment.
The market sentiment now is increasingly negative. And so it should be. We have been through a lengthy period of utter idiocy. People of all walks and areas have been ignorant and wilfully blind to the dangers that were mounting. Now they are suffering for their poor decisions. It is not easy or fun to watch but it is inevitable and cathartic and ultimately necessary to clean out the BS and set up for the next real demand driven expansion.
While everyone is presently distracted with the collapse of Wall Street (sorry but collapse couldn’t happen to a more deserving bunch a ‘fellas. And I say that in the kindest possible way), the next horror is going to be the impacts of credit evaporation on the already teetering economy. Earnings expectations are still way too high.
We will either revert to the mean quickly and sharply over the next several weeks. Or we will do it in slower fits and starts over the next several months. It is happening. Your only decision is whether you let it happen to you and your savings.
Follow
____________________________
____________________________
Danielle’s Book
Media Reviews
“An explosive critique about the investment industry: provocative and well worth reading.”
Financial Post“Juggling Dynamite, #1 pick for best new books about money and markets.”
Money Sense“Park manages to not only explain finances well for the average person, she also manages to entertain and educate while cutting through the clutter of information she knows every investor faces.”
Toronto SunSubscribe
This Month
Archives
Log In