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Home News

Should investors worry about the ‘wall of worry’?

Wattle Partners has argued against investors succumbing to the “wall of worry”.

by Jon Bragg
October 18, 2021
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Boutique financial advisory firm Wattle Partners said that investors should remain confident investing despite recent uncertainties.

While a number of factors including the Evergrande default, the US debt ceiling, the energy crisis, lockdown restrictions and APRA’s action on the property market have contributed to the “wall of worry”, Wattle Partners director Drew Meredith noted that his firm was “as comfortable investing today as at any point in the last five years”.

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“There will always be a ‘wall of worry’, so today is no different,” Mr Meredith said.

“If anything, today’s environment is much better than many think, given the clear statement of continued support from central banks and governments alike.”

Mr Meredith pointed to the importance of compounding returns to long-term wealth accumulation and said that always retaining at least some exposure to the markets remains key.

“I’m yet to see a single person, professional or self-directed, successfully call both the top and bottom of any market in two decades,” said Mr Meredith.

He also drew attention to the “massive expansion” in investment opportunities available to investors who can move their focus away from sectors or markets that are considered to be overvalued.

“There is a growing cohort of companies and stocks that are trading nowhere near their full or highest valuations, and opportunities abound in global equity markets,” he said.

Addressing a range of recent worries about the sharemarket, AMP Capital chief economist Shane Oliver said that it was too early to determine whether the pullback that began in September was now over.

“The extent of the rally since March last year — US shares more than doubled and Australian shares rose by 68 per cent — has left them vulnerable to a deeper pullback,” he said.

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