Investing in a Geopolitical Earthquake
Now, more than ever, investors need to check our emotions at the door
Summary: You can’t blame pandemic-fatigued investors for being scared when we learned there was a coup underway in Russia. Whatever the result turns out to be, geopolitical earthquakes like this one can trigger a tsunami of aftershocks. When they do, and markets react emotionally, remember that scared investors make bad decisions. The best strategy is not to be one of those scared investors. This is a time to remain calm and take advantage of opportunities created by the overreaction of others.
Geopolitical Earthquake
There have been times in history when investors had reason to be more anxious than today, but not very many of them. Hard on the heels of a global pandemic, we find ourselves in a world that is increasingly run at the whim of autocrats, Russia has invaded Ukraine and threatens nuclear madness. The US and China are fast moving fast toward a new Cold War, and Xi Jinping makes weekly threats to take Taiwan by military force, which would shut off 80% of the world’s supply of cutting edge semiconductors.
And then we woke up on Saturday to learn that Putin’s pet chef/mercenary had turned on his master and was attempting a coup. I’m not going to try to explain what happened here; the facts will all have changed by the time the market opens on Monday anyway. In this post I want to discuss how we should react to it.
Calmly. And we need to hold that pose because there are going to be a lot more weekends like this one before things settle down.
As my friends in Japan know, major earthquakes don’t come by one’s. (Japan sits atop a movable earthquake feast—the intersection of 4 of the world’s 7 major tectonic plates.) When major tectonic plates rub against each other hard enough, they release a tsunami of energy that travels along all the major fault lines, triggering a trail of aftershocks that are, on occasion, bigger than the one that set it off.
The same thing happens in global economics and geopolitics. The fall of a government in one place can change political alliances in many other places, leading to big events many miles away. Watch out for the after shocks that will surely follow the events that took place in Russia this weekend. We have already seen repercussions in Belarus, Turkey, and Kazakhstan. There will be more.
People today, all over the world, are hyper-sensitized to bad news, suffering from a type of PTSD from the extended COVID pandemic. There is a mountain of evidence about the lasting impact of prolonged trauma on people’s behavior. Thucydides, Boccaccio, Camus and others described plagues followed by prolonged periods of lawlessness and violence as frightened people separate into tribes and look for others to blame for their pain. (You can read a review of the literature on pandemics and their aftermath by clicking here.) Plagues and pandemics in history have frequently been followed by decades of social and political stability, changes of government, wars, and volatile financial markets. So too will this one.
There is a reason for these prolonged effects. Eric Kandel won the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physiology for his research showing that prolonged exposure to fear, pain, and other pathogens can triple the number of synapses that connect nerve cells, creating a state of hyper-sensitivity to sudden change. Importantly, he found that removal of the negative stimuli did not return the number of synapses to original levels, i.e., the nerve cells remained permanently hyper-sensitive for the remaining life of the affected brain.
Kandel’s work explains why every decision my parents made during their lifetimes was colored by their experiences living through the Great Depression and World War II. And it may explain certain puzzles about people’s post-COVID behavior as well, including low labor force participation and the reluctance of people to return to the office.
Under these conditions, the best thing an investor can do is to remain calm, maintain a defensive position, and take advantage of opportunities created by the mistakes of other, more emotional investors.
Behavioral Investing—Fear is Not Your Friend
I teach behavioral finance. If we have learned anything from the behavioral economics and finance literatures, it is that making important decisions while under emotional stress is a bad idea.
That’s why I give myself ten minutes of breathing exercises to clear my mind and remind myself how lucky I am to be here before I read the day’s economics reports and sit down in front of the Bloomberg screen. (My preferred app for this is called Balance, with Waking Up as a second choice.) I do the same before I sit down at the keyboard to write these posts.
BTW, if you would like a gentle dose of behavioral finance, Thaler’s Misbehaving (above) is an easy read. He is a legitimate scholar—I have my students read a dozen of his articles on anomalies—and a gifted story teller. The graphic on the above right is a photo of the inside cover of my copy of the book. I don’t read books; I devour them with notes, drawings, and folded pages. Thaler’s basic premise is that “we live in a world of humans” (p. 6), not the mechanical optimizers found in the economics textbooks, and that economists are just going to have to get used to it.
5 Tips for Investing in Geopolitical Earthquakes
Have plenty of cash on hand to buy the best companies at deep discounts when others get rattled by news stories. 40% of my personal portfolio is in cash today.
Don’t chase bubbles. Getting too excited about the latest tech invention (need I say AI?) isn’t a good idea either. Now is a good time to harvest half of our NVDA profits and take our original cost off the table in case something blows up.
Keep fixed-income durations short. With short-term rates above 5%, I see no reason to own anything longer than a three month Treasury bill.
Own stocks of profitable companies with strong cash flow that pay dividends and buy back their own stock.
The US/China schism is real. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has severely depleted inventories of missiles, ammunition, and weapons systems. We can expect many years of extraordinary increases in defense spending in US, Europe, and Japan, and rising revenues for companies with the technical expertise to produce them, like Lockheed, Northrop, Raytheon, and Rheinmetall. I own all four.