Investing During Extreme Uncertainty
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Investing During Extreme Uncertainty

How understanding risk influences investing.

By Paul Miron
Wed, Jun 8, 2022 11:26amGrey Clock 3 min

OPINION

 

As we return to work after a Federal Election and welcome a new government, there still seems to be no end in sight regarding the war in Ukraine, a worldwide energy crisis, food shortages, supply chain issue, COVID-19 and rising costs of living alongside the prospect of further interest rate hikes.

It seems that our economic future has never been more uncertain. Or are things really all that bad for investors?

Amidst the macroeconomic upheaval in the global economy, the question remains, “How does one remain calm, continue to be invested strongly, and actually take advantage of these changes in the global economic cycle?”

 

How Heightened Risk Can Increase Market Awareness

 

An analogy can be drawn from a social experiment conducted some years ago in Drachten, Holland, by a traffic engineer named Hans Monderman. He removed all traffic signs, speed control, and traffic lights in this city. Naturally, you would expect complete chaos to have ensued. Almost completely counter-intuitively, both fatality rates and car accidents reduced, while traffic flows improved.

It all comes down to personal risk assessment; when drivers have a constant level of heightened risk awareness, they become better judges of risk more careful and prudent in an environment with fewer road signs and other traffic measures.

The same concept applies to investing. When investors are constantly thinking about risk, being self-reliant and filtering through market noise cautiously, investor behaviour changes for the better.

It also demonstrates an essential truth about life and investing – risk is a constant — what changes is both our attitude and reaction to risk.

 

Macroeconomic Forecasts

 

Investors are often lulled into a false sense of security based on what other people are forecasting and thinking, they are caught up in speculative investment trends, often with undesirable outcomes.

The most pressing economic issue impacting all investors is the nexus between inflation and interest rates. How far will the RBA go in raising interest rates to curb inflation? This is now the centrepiece of all forecasts and market predictions. If rates are raised too quickly and aggressively, it increases the risk of an exceptionally prolonged recession. If our central bank is too lax, the inflation we are experiencing may morph into something more disturbing, such as stagflation, deflation, or even hyperinflation.

Thus, the question becomes: how reliant are we on forecasts when making investment decisions?

Below are the Big Four bank economists giving their best attempt at a forecast. Interestingly the CBA and financial market forecasts would differ significantly regarding overall asset prices, from notions of a modest correction to a full-fledged market collapse.

Taking the conservative estimate, if the CBA predictions are accurate, mortgage holders’ monthly repayments will increase by 14.6%, which is aligned with the last time we experienced a rise in the interest rate between 2002 and 2008.

However, if they take the forecasts priced in by the financial market, mortgage payers would be making 39.7% higher monthly repayments.

 

Risk Tolerance

Msquared’s view is aligned with the CBA forecast; that is, we would anticipate property prices falling 15%. However, our risk tolerance towards new opportunities is more conservative as we continue to prioritise asset preservation and have adjusted our risk profile to reflect an extreme decline in property prices.

As Voltaire said, “uncertainty is an uncomfortable position. But certainty is absurd”.

Embracing the volatile world we live in enables an investor to prepare and navigate uncertainty effectively.

The one thing that is certain is Mark Twain’s dire warning that “History does not repeat itself, but it often rhymes”. Market cycles have been around since the advent of money, largely a result of people’s emotions/sentiments. In other words, the market is not driven solely by economic fundamentals.

What is certain and predictable is that market busts will inevitably be followed by market booms, and vice versa. These cycles will continue so long as people make decisions regarding money – that is – forever.

 

Paul Miron has more than 20 years experience in banking and commercial finance. After rising to senior positions for various Big Four banks, he started his own financial services business in 2004.

MSQ Capital

msquaredcapital.com.au



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A Sydney waterfront mansion that has just hit the market could set a countrywide price record as the first home to sell for A$200 million (US$129.77 million).

Located in the affluent suburb of Point Piper, the sprawling home sits on a lot that’s equivalent to “four normal housing blocks” and features 98 meters (321.5 feet) of water frontage along the harbor, according to an announcement on Wednesday from Ken Jacobs, director of Australia Pacific of Forbes Global Properties, who has the listing in association with real estate agent Brad Pillinger.

“The estate is Australia’s most iconic residence and ranks amongst the best in the world, combining both privacy and space, exuding elegance and comfort, while featuring gun-barrel views of the Sydney Opera House and the Harbour Bridge,” Jacobs said in a statement.

The residence is expected to sell for A$200 million or more, Pillinger added. “There is no comparable property in Australia.”

The home, named Wingadal, as it’s located on Wingadal Place, was built for Aussie Home Loans founder John Symond, who purchased the property in 1999. It took eight years to complete the mansion, which was designed by architect Alec Tzannes, according to the listing agency.

“Wingadal is a highlight of my career in residential design and architecture,” Tzannes said. “The timeless design on the Point Piper peninsula offers a unique appreciation of Sydney Harbour from a variety of angles, rotating around an axis that lines up perfectly with the Sydney Harbour Bridge.”

The colossal home has enough internal space to entertain up to 500 people, and underground parking provides space for 20 cars, plus eight more can fit inside the garage.

The four-level home has four bedrooms as well as a two-bedroom apartment. There’s also a 2,500-bottle wine cellar, a home theater that seats 22, two commercial kitchens and a swimming pool.

“Wingadal has been a special home for my family over the past two decades, and now I’m looking forward to spending more time traveling overseas,” Symond said in a statement. “While being an exceptional family home, we have also enjoyed hosting many important events for charities and other worthwhile causes.”

This is not the first time Symond has tried to sell his waterfront estate. In 2016, he listed the home in hopes of selling it for at least A$100 million, which would’ve been a price record for the country at that time Mansion Global reported . The current benchmark was set in 2022, when a baronial-style estate, also in Point Piper, sold for A$130 million, according to The Sydney Morning Herald .

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