
Flight #42: Why is the Fed Driving Us into a Recession and What is Deep Risk?
The Pilot Money Guys · Charlie Mattingly
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Show Notes
- Headline of the day! (See slide...)
This chart shows the annualized performance of a $10,000 investment made between January 2002 and January 2022. A fully invested investment returned 9.4% or $60,253. When the investor missed the 10 best days, the return is 5.21% or $27,604. When the investor missed the 20 best days, the return is 2.51% or $16,414. Finally, when the investor missed the 30 best days, the return is 0.32% or $10,651. An added fact is that seven of the 10 best days occurred within 15 days of the 10 worst days.
Topics we have been writing about, helping our clients with...- Non-Airline Company Life Insurance and Portability...
- The limits of standard Disability Insurance and how to manage those limits
- How to stay disciplined in this battle...bad stock market
- What's the best path for young aspiring pilots? Cargo, Passenger, Fractional, Military?
Meat of the Mission:
- Why is the Fed raising rates such that we could go into a recession
- Why is inflation so dangerous?
- What role does psychology play in our economy, inflation, etc.?
- i. 1970, 1980's...
- Why would we keep investing if we knew we were headed for a recession?
- Official dates of the Great Recession: December 2007 – June 2009
- S&P 500 Market returns
- January 1 – December 2009 – 26.5%
- 2010 – S&P 500....about 15%
- S&P 500 Market returns
- Official dates of the Great Recession: December 2007 – June 2009
- What is Deep Risk versus Shallow Risk? We are afraid of the wrong things.
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- William Bernstein - William J. Bernstein is an American financial theorist and neurologist.
- The Four Pillars of Investing
- If You Can
- Deep Risk
- Deep Risk:
- Deep Risk are inflation, deflation, confiscation, and devastation... "any useful discussion of portfolio design of necessity incorporates their probabilities, consequences, and costs of mitigation."
- For example, investment discipline, taxes, inflation, disability, death, spending, income...
- Deep Risk are inflation, deflation, confiscation, and devastation... "any useful discussion of portfolio design of necessity incorporates their probabilities, consequences, and costs of mitigation."
- Shallow Risk:
- "The Biggest Lie" Leading Edge video, news media. CNBC. Short-term market performance.
- You will experience shallow risk every few years...
- This down market does not help but it is factored in. It's part of investment, a cost, not a risk. Something to be planned for...
- Ongoing, below average returns would be a big concern. In other words, what did you plan for? What are your market expectations?
- For example, March 2020 – down 30%-ish. 35% from the high in February.
- Do not allow shallow risk to become deep risk... Investor discipline
- "The Biggest Lie" Leading Edge video, news media. CNBC. Short-term market performance.
- William Bernstein - William J. Bernstein is an American financial theorist and neurologist.
This chart shows the 20-year annualized return by asset class (2001–2020). REITs returned 10%. EM equity returned 9.9%. Small cap returned 8.7%. High yield returned 8.2%. The S&P 500 returned 7.5%. A 60/40 portfolio returned 6.4%. A 40/60 portfolio returned 5.9%. DM equity returned 5%. Bonds returned 4.8%. Homes returned 3.7%. The average investor returned 2.9%. Inflation ran at 2.1%. Cash returned 1.4%. Finally, commodities returned -0.5%.