âGlobal shares fall as growth fears rattle investorsâ
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âStock markets tumble over China lockdown fearsâ
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âOil hits ÂŁ113 a barrel despite emergency measuresâ
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âStocks slump as UK GDP contractsâ
The headlines are gloomy. Markets have been nervous since late February. Ukraine, rocketing inflation, soaring energy prices, commodity shortages â and now, here in the UK, the latest GDP figures show that GDP growth has unexpectedly turned negative.
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Is it any wonder that the Footsie is down 1.8% as I write these words (at the beginning of the week)?
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At 7,185, it has lost almost 500 points since early February.
Simplistic analyses
Seasoned investors, however, are leery of such headlines, and even leerier of the simplistic analyses that they often denote.
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Yes, the Footsie is down 1.8%. And yes, todayâs GDP figures do show that the UK economy is unexpectedly contracting.
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But cause and effect are tricky things to disentangle â and while the Footsie is down 1.8% today (Monday), Frankfurtâs DAX is down 2.11%, Amsterdamâs AEX is down 3.1%, and Parisâs CAC down 2.3%.
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UK investors might have cause to be gloomy about the UKâs economic performance â but not investors in Frankfurt, Amsterdam, and Paris.
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Far less investors in distant Hong Kong, down 3.4%; or Tokyo, down 3%.
Headlines of hype
At which point, Iâve a confession to make.
âGlobal shares fall as growth fears rattle investorsâ This, in fact, is a headline from 19 May.
âStock markets tumble over China lockdown fearsâ Er, 25 April.
âOil hits $113 a barrel despite emergency measuresâ 2 March, actually. Incidentally, Brent Crude is $7 higher, today â but I donât see any panicking headlines.
In fact, day-to-day headlines are mostly just noise. On any given day, markets are liable to be âtumblingâ, investors ârattledâ, and commodity prices hitting new lows or peaks.
The reality is that, at 7,185, the Footsie is actually higher than it was in December, before market nerves set in, and markedly higher than the 6,844 it stood at mid-July last year. When â you donât need me to tell you â the economic news was distinctly sunnier.
Indeed, look at a five-year chart, and the Footsie is trading roughly in the middle of its range during 2017â2020, right up until the Covid-induced crash in February and March 2020. But âbusiness as usualâ doesnât sell newspapers, or generate clicks.
What to do? Hereâs three thoughts
First, keep a sense of proportion.
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As Iâve remarked before, stock market events that seemed quite dramatic at the time â 1987âs Black Monday, for instance â barely register on a long-term chart of the FTSE 100 going back decades. The Gulf Wars, the dotcom crash, the financial crisis of 2007: wobbles in the chart, yes, but dwarfed by the Footsieâs subsequent steady growth.
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And Iâve no doubt that todayâs market nerves will be no different.
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So definitely, donât rush to sell.
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Second, decent stocks can be snapped up at reasonable prices. There are still bargains to be had, and shares to be acquired that should have a place in almost any investorâs portfolio. In particular, the UK-focused FTSE 250, to my mind, is looking over-sold.
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And third, itâs undeniably true that the rush away from stocks that have been regarded as âtaintedâ on ESG concerns has come screeching to a halt. Far from ditching these stocks in order to burnish their ethical and sustainability credentials, institutional investors are instead looking to load up on them. (Me? I never sold them in the first place.)
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Oil and gas stocks, defence stocks, mining stocks â even, oddly enough, tobacco stocks: all up 20%, 25% or more. No longer unfashionable or unwanted, theyâre delivering decent profits and a tasty income stream, with arguably more upside to come.
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So if your portfolio is light on such stocks, now could be the time to redress that.
Gloom? No way.