What caught my eye this week.
Families respond to tragedy and upheaval in different ways.
Histrionics. Denial. A chance to air old grievances. An opportunity for a clean break with the past.
In my family we’re tactically jovial but strategically gloomy. We’ll laugh on the way to the hospital – and invariably with the patient. But we’ll gameplay the worst on the drive home or on WhatsApp.
Among my clan of brooding pessimists, I’ve inherited the file marked Worst Case Scenarios from my father [1].
I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone as personally content with his life as my dad [2] seemed to be.
But boy, could he strategize like a 1950s Cold Warrior gaming out nuclear Armageddon.
When he passed it fell to me to be my family’s wartime consigliere – if not its walking, talking memento mori [3].
Whether it’s packing a raincoat for a summer holiday, doubling down on life assurance, or accelerating a long haul visit to a sickening relative, I’m always ready to make the case for the downside.
I could therefore relate to Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey this week when he followed his upper-cut of a 0.5% interest rate rise – itself the largest for 27 years – with an economic forecast [4] that amounted to a kick in the balls.
Britain is to enter recession in autumn, we were warned, and it’s going to last more than a year.
Oh, and despite that hiking of interest rates, inflation will still hit 13% anyway.
As someone who is genetically wired to expect the worst and be surprised by the best, I take this as little more than a ruffle in the hair from my dad at the backdoor with a gentle “stay safe”.
But it seems to have thrown the country at large into convulsions.
The Man Who Sold the World
If I linked to all the different takes in response to Andrew Bailey’s portents, this article would resemble an old-school link farm and Monevator would go into Google’s naughty box.
But fire up your search browser and sniff around and you’ll find:
- Those who think Bailey is being wantonly pessimistic, scaring us for no good reason.
- Many who think he’s anyway making it worse by raising rates.
- Others (including some of the above) who still think he should have raised rates earlier.
- People – including politicians – who superstitiously believe what you say comes true and so damn him for his gloom.
- Left-wing activists who believe we should continue spending money like its 2020 to keep us out of the imminent downturn.
- Right-wing activists – and a Tory leadership candidate – who believe we should cut taxes and let inflation rip to keep us out of the imminent downturn.
And that’s just a taster of the range of the contradictory responses.
I doubt Bailey entered Bank of England governing to become Mr Popular. But like this he’s cast himself as the macro-economic equivalent of reality TV’s Naughty Nick.
Everyone can now boo when he appears on the screen. If we didn’t have the Lionesses to bring us a rare moment of national unity, at least we’d have the Bank of England, eh?
All Apologies
I am more sympathetic than most to Bailey’s plight.
The Bank of England has no good choices. It’s tasked with solving a problem that’s mostly not of its making and that anyway it hasn’t got a great solution to.
Many people seem to have forgotten we’ve just lived through a pandemic that saw vast chunks of the economy switched off, untold billions borrowed on the never-never, money sent to millions of workers to pay them to stay at home ordering goods off Amazon – and that as recently as this spring the world’s workshop, China, was back in idle mode.
I warned in our debates at the time that it was fanciful to imagine you could turn off our finely-tuned just-in-time economic system without, at least, seeing the machine splutter and judder when you switched it back on.
Yet I was equally surprised by how well the economy shape-shifted to (ongoing) working from home – and also by the success of those expensive furlough schemes in entirely warding off skyrocketing unemployment.
Take a moment to add all this up. Billions of workers and millions of factories randomly turning on and off for weeks on end. Immense fiscal transfers. Formerly obscure economic sectors – from baking sourdough to gambling on tech stocks – blossoming in lockdown, then wilting on reopening. The millions who never lost their jobs competing with everyone else for a suddenly limited supply of goods and then later a resurgent demand for services. All this over just two years.
You could even add in some black market mystery. I suspect there’s an untold story of extra economic activity outside of the tax system during the pandemic that may not have quite abated, and that is still distorting the numbers.
And people are surprised we’re not back to a 1990s Goldilocks economy?
Drain You
Then of course there’s the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The surge in a broad swathe of commodity prices that followed Putin’s Hail Mary Risk [5] play has eased. But energy remains a crisis.
That’s especially true in Europe – including the UK – which has been rudely woken up from a daydream of conflicting energy policies. You know, gorging on fossil fuels bought from an autocrat who has admitted he wants to redraw your borders even while you close down nuclear reactors – and all the while fretting about climate change. That sort of thing.
To cap it all, I’ve long expected a tougher time ahead for Britain, thanks to our self-inflicted Brexit.
I was already using the dreaded word ‘stagflation’ in June 2021 [6] when higher inflation seemed a certainty. However I wasn’t confident then about a recession.
But early this year the Russian invasion – and the start of quantitative tightening [7] – put the boot in.
The Bank of England is pinning the blame squarely on soaring energy bills. With the cap on bills expected to hit £3,500 [8] in October, who can blame them?
All the money that goes into heating and lighting our homes can’t be spent elsewhere in the economy. A slowdown is inevitable.
The Bank has nothing to gain from wading into politics. But of course our politics makes it worse.
Lithium
Counterfactual scenarios can be fanciful alternate realities that tell you more about their author than the real-world.
Mine are obviously no different.
But such scenarios are also a safe-space for imagining how things could be different. They provide a lens to seeing where you’ve possibly gone wrong. And perhaps what you might do about it.
As an open economy with an aging population, the UK was never going to escape a ravaging from the Covid pandemic. But our politics over the past six years has made our plight worse.
The sheer cost of the upheaval and distraction of Brexit is impossible to calculate. The slump in inward investment and the de-rating of our equity market is less controversial.
Most countries face post-pandemic staffing problems. But ours are worse, given we switched off the potential free movement of millions overnight. The friction and cost at our borders is also now beyond doubt.
Some readers will groan at me bringing all this up again. Get used to it. I understand it’s hard even for the ambivalent not to be bored, but these consequences are not magically going away.
They will incrementally make our economy weaker. They will cause us more pain, by curbing our freedom of action.
Dumb
Indeed it’s interesting to compare today with the years following the financial crisis.
Despite being whacked as hard as anyone due to our enormous financial sector, the UK – and especially London – prospered, relatively-speaking, in the post-crash years.
Talent and money flowed in, for good and ill.
At worse, we saw dark money from dubious Russians bidding up the price of Mayfair properties.
But at best we saw hundreds of thousands of bright people leave the slower-growing and crisis-stricken economies of Europe to seek their fortunes here.
I watched an entire sector – Fintech – basically built on the brains of bright newcomers to the UK.
But there is much less chance of us creating a new Revolut or Transferwise this time around, given Britain’s plunging attractions to overseas talent:
[9]I suppose this was one of the aims of our leaving the EU. Job done I guess.
But when your country is less appealing to talent than Saudi Arabia you know you’ve got a fight on.
Meanwhile the candidates for our next un-elected Prime Minister continue to simply whistle to their hardcore voters as if none of this was happening.
The Tory party membership is an electorate who thinks Dunning-Kruger is a dodgy German wine. I don’t say the loons on the far-left of the Labour party would be any better, but the fact is right now it’s a brotherhood of Blimps [11] who will determine our political response over the next few years.
Curb your enthusiasm accordingly.
Territorial Pissings
Before one of the dwindling band of Brexit ultras pipes up, I’m definitely not blaming our general economic situation on their glorious project.
Yes we’ve hobbled ourselves with a self-inflicted knee-capping. But these troubles are global.
Some countries are doing better than others – although nobody’s politics reflects that.
The various factions of the US chattering classes for example are continuing to tear themselves to shreds. But I’d rather have its economic problems than ours.
The US is self-sufficient for energy (and much else) for starters. But also, its equally unpredictable economic recovery seems to me more like a car checking its speed after coming too fast off the freeway than a vehicle running off the road.
Yes, the US just saw two quarters of negative economic growth. But it also just added another 500,000 jobs to its workforce, which is now larger than before Covid.
With recessions like that, who needs a boom?
I jest, a bit. We’ve been doing well for jobs [12], too. Also just like the Bank of England, the US Federal Reserve faces the same difficulty of raising interest rates to tackle inflation caused by utterly indifferent factors – supply chains, war, the hangover from Covid support – and again in the face of widespread hostility.
So while I fancy its chances better than ours, the US definitely has challenges. And unlike ours, its response will continue to reverberate around the world, especially via interest rates.
Particularly infuriating are the popular US commentators who condemned the Fed for talking about rate rises earlier – who said they’d prefer to see inflation run hot, and more QE if needed, and an end to boom-and-bust – who now chastise the same Fed for being too late!
Peak central banker was definitely 20 years ago.
Negative Creep
For my part I don’t have any great answers. I mostly have more questions.
To stick with the gloomy theme, for example, where are – or rather aren’t – all the people who died during the pandemic in the economic discussion?
We lost a quarter of a million souls to Covid in the UK. The US more than a million. But you rarely (ever?) hear anyone factoring in their loss into their economic deliberations.
Perhaps now the emotional intensity has died down, there is an acceptance that Covid’s victims were not those whose loss would cause the most upheaval in pure economic terms. (I got hate email for saying so early in the pandemic).
Even more controversially, perhaps the excess deaths from Covid weren’t so excessive on a two-year view? (Very probably not [13]).
Then there’s the question of how we reshape our economies after the huge changes wrought by working from home for years, and an avowed desire for de-globalization.
Finally, there’s the musical chairs of the workforce.
I’ve used the analogy of a machine juddering in fits and starts back into life to explain why I’m not surprised to see the economy so unsettled.
Similarly, I think of the workforce via a sporting analogy of a ‘man out of position’. People just aren’t where they would be optimally if the pandemic hadn’t happened, both geographically and skills-wise.
In some places this is obvious: think struggling NHS wards and broken airports.
But in other places much less so – until you look at, for example, programmer salaries rocketing earlier this year.
All of these factors will take time to resolve themselves.
Come As You Are
I’ve been accused by some readers of being too gloomy for the better part of a year, albeit mostly regarding the market.
I appreciate I won’t have brightened anyone’s Saturday morning with this missive, either.
However we are where we are. Fatten your emergency funds, keep investing, stay usefully employed if you can. Things will get better eventually.
Heck, if you need to then by all means look on the bright side.
Things could definitely be worse. Covid could have turned out to preferentially kill 20-somethings with children. Unemployment might have surged. Policymakers could have hesitated and withheld relief for workers, plunging us into a depression.
A bleak way to cheer up? Again I’m a wartime consigliere. Don’t come to me for faith healing.
Of course I’ve known families who approach the worst in completely the opposite way to mine.
They refuse to talk about a fatal prognosis, say, except in short bursts of stony-faced indifference with doctors. Back on the ward in visiting hours, they’re waving holiday brochures under the nose of their unfortunate – and unconscious – relative.
There’s an upside to that sort of insurmountable optimism. And miracles do happen.
How about we split the difference and settle for muddling through?
Have a great weekend – and to conclude on-brand, try not to think about how this glorious weather is causing the worst drought for a century…
(Wait, come back!)
From Monevator
CAPE ratio by country: how to find and use stock market valuation data – Monevator [14]
Historical UK house prices – Monevator [15]
From the archive-ator: Personal time management for fun and profit – Monevator [16]
News
Note: Some links are Google search results – in PC/desktop view you can click to read the piece without being a paid subscriber. Try privacy/incognito mode to avoid cookies. Consider subscribing if you read them a lot!1 [17]
Bank of England hikes rates by 0.5% to 1.75%, warns of imminent year or more recession – Sky News [18]
UK house prices fall for the first time in 13 months says Halifax – Reuters [19]
Eight-day strike by Felixstowe dockers expected to disrupt UK supply chain – Guardian [20]
Economically inactive Britons with long Covid have doubled in a year says ONS – Guardian [21]
[22]Again, this is not the time to abandon bonds – Vanguard [23]
Products and services
Ofgem to review energy price cap every three months – Which [24]
Santander offering £160 bribe to switch current account, plus £70 cashback on energy bills – ThisIsMoney [25]
Do supermarket cashback apps really save you money? – Be Clever With Your Cash [26]
Open a SIPP with Interactive Investor and pay no SIPP fee for six months. Terms apply – Interactive Investor [27]
How do the Virgin Money and Natwest ‘buy now pay later’ schemes compare? – Which [28]
Thousands of UK households cancel Netflix or Amazon Prime as the cost of living soars – Guardian [29]
American Express offers biggest ever sign-up bonus on new Platinum credit card – ThisIsMoney [30]
Large homes for sale, in pictures – Guardian [31]
Comment and opinion
Ways to spend money that people say brings them joy – Flow FP [32]
What would you do if you were rich? – Darius Foroux [33]
How buffer assets might help you navigate retirement return risks – Retirement Researcher [34]
In praise of Wall Street – Morningstar [35]
Is it time to sell stocks? – Fortunes & Frictions [36]
How to make better decisions: extract from Buy This, Not That [37] – Get Rich Slowly [38]
The only investing decisions that matter – Banker on FIRE [39]
The price of admission – A Wealth of Common Sense [40]
Getting to happy – Humble Dollar [41]
Why have UK tech companies chosen Nasdaq? It’s not just about money [Search result] – FT [42]
Gold and TIPS yields are strongly correlated, but you shouldn’t care – MarketWatch [43]
Equities do hedge against changing inflation expectations [PDF, nerdy] – SSRN [44]
Crypt o’ crypto
How a crypto developer faked a DeFi ecosystem – Coindesk [45]
Latest heists shows crypto has a ‘hack me’ sign on its back – Protocol [46]
Microstrategy shares surge as Michael Saylor moves to full-time Bitcoin role – CoinDesk [47]
Naughty corner: Active antics
Investors grow frustrated with hedge funds after historic losses [Search result] – FT [48]
An interview with Fundsmith founder Terry Smith [Podcast] – Master Investor [49]
High-yield spreads suggest the bear market probably isn’t done yet – Verdad [50]
Rare, fun interview with old-line value manager Richard de Lisle [Podcast] – via Apple [51]
How Scottish Mortgage Trust values its unlisted holdings – Baillie Gifford [52]
Someone has collated all Peter Lynch’s 1990s investment columns [PDF] – via Link [53]
You are a better investor than you think you are – The Onveston Letter [54]
Kindle book bargains
The Ride of a Lifetime by [long-time Disney CEO] Bob Iger – £0.99 on Kindle [55]
Anthro-Vision: How Anthropology Can Explain Business and Life by Gillian Tett – £0.99 on Kindle [56]
Money: The True Story of a Made-Up Thing by Jacob Goldstein – £1.19 on Kindle [57]
Simple Savings Hacks for a Happy Life by Holly Smith – £0.99 on Kindle [58]
Environmental factors
UK rivers on ‘red alert’ as water firms face calls for more hosepipe bans – Guardian [59]
The big business of burying carbon – Wired [60]
Is water cremation the sustainable future of processing our remains? – Smithsonian [61]
Be yourself mini-special
The single best career decision you can make – Ryan Holiday [62]
Reject the algorithm – Of Dollars and Data [63]
You are always the other person – Raptitude [64]
Improve your life with the 80/20 rule – Art of Manliness [65]
Off our beat
Only a complacent country like the UK could give up its border privilege so easily – Guardian [66]
Did we all believe a myth about depression? – BBC [67]
And finally…
“There’s no sense in being precise when you don’t even know what you’re talking about.”
– John von Neumann, The Man from the Future [68]
Like these links? Subscribe [69] to get them every Friday! Note this article includes affiliate links, such as from Amazon [70] and Interactive Investor [71]. We may be compensated if you pursue these offers, but that will not affect the price you pay.
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