By Myron Genyk, Evermore Capital
Special to Financial Independence Hub
You see lots of people on business channels and investing blogs talking about the types of things to invest in when inflation is high – energy stocks, material stocks, value stocks, dividend growth stocks, floating rate bonds, inflation bonds, oil, copper, gold, silver, crypto, etc. OH MY! – and what types of investments you should avoid. On the surface, it’s pretty reasonable advice.
“Of course!! I should be invested in something that does well when inflation is high! Inflation is high now! And everyone says it’s going to continue like this for a long time! And I want my investments to grow!” But before we go leaping and investing in whatever it is that’s great during inflationary times, let’s explore the soundness of the argument itself.
The Tautology of it all
I’m always a little amused when people say things like:
“When market variable X is high (or low), that will cause thing Y to happen, which will cause thing Z to occur, which will cause some asset A to go up (or down). And so when market variable X is high/low/whatever, then buy (or sell) asset A. Easy peasy!”
There’s a lot happening there, but at its core, it’s just a chain of events: X leads to Y leads to Z leads to A going up (or down). At each step, there are assumptions baked in, assumptions that aren’t exactly baked into the fabric of the universe, but let’s leave that for now. Because what is more interesting here is that the expression above can be simplified as follows:
“When asset A is going to go up, you should buy asset A.”
This is much cleaner. It removes all the unnecessary hand-waving (but, perhaps the hand-waving IS necessary … but by whom? And for what purpose?) and lays bare what is actually being said:
“Buy things before they go up in value.” Continue Reading…