The physical act of literally seeing a danger can require a
deliberate act of searching it out. For example an object
such as a car or aircraft you are on a collision course
with is often masked by the fact that the relative angle
between you is constant, thereby it appears stationary. If
the eye does not detect an angular change then it can be
literally blind to it until the final moments before impact
when its relative size in your field of view blooms to a
large size, at which point evasive action can be too late. It
is due to this optical phenomenon that to spot the danger
we need to move our head around in our scan to create
an angular change for the eye to spot.
Just like in Ernest Hemingway’s novel “The Sun Also
Rises”, the character Mike Campbell was asked how he
went bankrupt; “Two Ways” Campbell replies, “Gradually
and then suddenly”. Essentially the factors had been
in place for a long time but their insidious effects only
showed themselves in the final moments of his financial
demise.
We are now witnessing a similar situation with this
current “inflation shock”. While Central Banks are hoping
(with diminishing credibility) that it is short term and
transient, we can point to a number of factors that have
been present for many years but are only now revealing
themselves. Whether, we are talking about an insufficient
(in size and skills) workforce, the supply of which was
artificially (and unsustainably) boosted by low cost
immigration in the service economy, a demographic
retirement bulge in lorry drivers, commodities that have
been mis-priced against their hidden costs (e.g. carbon
embedded within fossil fuels), a supply chain that was so
stretched to maximise “efficiency” that it lacked any level
of resilience to cope with shocks (blockages in the Suez
canal, chip shortages for car manufacturers, insufficient
warehouse space to accommodate “onshoring” of
production and storage). All these factors have been
present for many years, and while it may have taken
COVID amongst other things to trigger the inflation
shock but the foundations had already been laid.
Having been mindful of this risk through the years of
Quantitative Easing and the build up of structural risks,
we became increasingly concerned about inflation early
this year. It is for this reason we had already built up a
high level of knowledge and understanding within our
Specialist Assets or, “real assets” as some commentators
call them. This portion of our portfolio generates income
streams, much of which is implicitly or even explicitly
linked to inflation, but without having to pay the very high
prices of government index-linked bonds. Diversifying
across real estate (REITs), infrastructure, specialist
financial and asset backed lending trusts and even
private equity, has resulted in a portfolio of assets that
are not intrinsically linked to headline short term GDP
expansion or significant counterparty risks of default.
Our inflation defences are further bolstered by an
allocation to physical gold and gold mining companies.
The yellow metal has been valued for its wealth
preserving qualities for millennia. While gold suffers
the flaw of failing to pay an income; this is of little
concern for the moment as governments and central
banks grapple with how to combat inflation that will not
necessarily respond to any future increase in interest
rates. Financial Repression; the act of allowing inflation
to run without hiking interest rates above it and thereby
deflating the real value of government debt, could prove
to be that stationary dot on the horizon.
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