Trever Christian and John Schwalbach, Partners
January 20, 2022

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“The Two Most Powerful Warriors are Patience and Time”     -Leo Tolstoy

 

We hope everyone is enjoying a terrific start to the new year! First off, we wanted to thank you, our clients and trusted business partners, for your referrals and introductions that led us to the most successful year in Freedom Financial history. We are truly blessed to be able to work with every one of you. As we turn our attention to the upcoming year, we wanted to briefly review economic and market conditions as well as our investing principles.

Freedom Financial believes the most successful investors are long-term, goal-focused and plan-driven investors. We believe that the key to lifetime success in investing is to act continuously on a specific, written plan. Likewise, we believe substandard returns and even investment failure proceed inevitably from reacting to (let alone trying to anticipate) current economic/market events. We’re convinced that the economy cannot be consistently forecast, nor the markets consistently timed. Therefore, we believe that the only reliable way to capture the full long-term return of the markets is to ride out their frequent but historically always temporary declines.

Just in the last four decades or so, the average annual price decline from a peak to a trough in the S&P 500 exceeded 14%. One year in five, the decline has averaged at least twice that. And on two occasions (in 2000-02 and 2007-09), the Index has actually halved. Yet the S&P 500 came into 1980 at 106,and went out of 2021 at 4,766; over those 42 years, its average annual compound rate of total return (that is, with dividends reinvested) was more than 12%.

These data points underscore our conviction that the essential challenge to long-term successful investing is neither intellectual nor financial, but temperamental: it is how one reacts, or chooses not to react, to market declines.

These principles will continue to govern the essentially behavioral nature of our advice to you in the coming year…and beyond.

Regarding current market and economic observations, It would seem to be counterproductive to look at these past 12 months in isolation. They were, rather, the second act of a drama that began early in 2020, the precipitant of which was the greatest global public health crisis in a hundred years. The world elected to respond to the onset of the pandemic essentially by shutting down the global economy—placing it, if you will, in a kind of medically induced coma. In this country, we experienced the fastest economic recession ever, and a one-third decline in the S&P 500 in just 33 days.

Congress and the Federal Reserve responded all but immediately with a wave of fiscal and monetary stimulus which was and remains without historical precedent. This point cannot be overstressed: we are in the midst of a fiscal and particularly a monetary experiment which has no direct antecedents. This renders all economic forecasting—and all investment policy based on such forecasts—hugely speculative. We infer from this that if there were ever a time to just put our heads down and work our investment and financial plan—ignoring the noise—this is surely it.

If 2020 was the year of the virus, 2021 was the year of the vaccines. Vaccination as well as acquired natural immunity are in the ascendancy, regardless of how many more Greek-letter variants are discovered and trumpeted to the skies as the new apocalypse. This fact, it seems to us, is the key to a coherent view of 2022.

In general, we think it most likely that in the coming year (a) the lethality of the virus continues to wane, (b) the world economy continues to reopen, (c) corporate earnings continue to advance, (d) the Federal Reserve begins draining excess liquidity from the banking system, with some resultant increase in interest rates, (e) inflation subsides somewhat, and (f) barring some other exogenous variable—which we can never really do—equity values continue to advance, though at something less (and probably a lot less) than the blazing pace at which they’ve been soaring since the market trough of March 2020.
Please don’t mistake this for a forecast. All we’re saying, and now say again, is that these outcomes seem to us more likely than not. We are fully prepared to be wrong on any or all of the above points; if and when we are, our recommendations to you will be unaffected, since our investment policy is driven entirely by the plan we’ve made, and not at all by current events.

With that out of the way, allow us to offer a more personal observation. These have undoubtedly been the two most shocking and terrifying years for investors since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008-09—first the outbreak of the pandemic, next the bitterly partisan election, then the pandemic’s second major wave, and most recently a 40-year inflation spike. You might not be human if you haven’t experienced serious volatility fatigue at some point. We know we have.

But like that earlier episode, what came to matter most was not what the economy or the markets did, but what the investor himself/herself did. If the investor fled the equity market during either crisis—or, heaven forbid, both—his/her investment results seem unlikely ever to have recovered. If on the other hand he/she kept acting on a long-term plan rather than reacting to current events, positive outcomes followed. It was ever thus. We expect it always will be.

As always, we welcome your comments, questions and concerns. As always, we can’t predict, but we can plan. As always, thank you for being our clients. It is a privilege to serve you!