Trustnet Magazine 63 June 2020 | Page 10

Cover story 10 / 11 Of the hundreds of tech stocks that collapsed when the dotcom bubble burst, just a handful of survivors – along with new entrants into the market – were responsible for the rebound and extended rally in the sector challenged and the pandemic merely appears to have hastened their demise. Searching for investments in these areas means that not only do you need to be careful as regards the level at which you buy in, you need to be even more disciplined when it comes to selling out. This is why Douglas Kearney, investment director at Intelligent Pensions, is sceptical of bottom fishing as a long-term strategy. “Do you want to put your money in Marks & Spencer or Amazon? I know where I would go,” he says. “Now, could Marks & Spencer have a burst and be good for a year or two? Yeah, it is not impossible. You can take a chance with an outsider and it may win the race, but I think I’d rather put my money on the horse with shorter odds. “And that’s how we see the world: there are plenty of short termers who say they can make money from that. I’m sure they can, but we’re not smart enough for that. I’m not being patronising, but to do that you have to be right at the coalface and have the information to move on it. There’s a lovely phrase a manager There are numerous examples in the past where investors have piled into battered stocks and sectors, then put their feet up and waited for the rebound – which never materialised. The most recent of these came in the financial crisis, when Lloyds and RBS both fell more than 90 per cent from their 2007 peak. Yet even if you had invested in RBS at the very bottom of the market on 20 January 2009, you would only be up 35 per cent, 11 years on. Had you invested a week earlier or later, you would still be down significantly. Lloyds has fared comparatively better, but most investors who bought in since its post-financial crisis low are sitting on losses. Duncan MacInnes, comanager of the Ruffer Investment Company, says this does not augur well for industries that have had to rely on government support in the economic shutdown. “We may be moving away from an environment where it is all about the primacy L TRUSTNET