Trustnet Magazine 63 June 2020 | Page 4

Cover story 4 / 5 Investors tempted into battered stocks and sectors need to tread carefully, writes Anthony Luzio, as further falls are just as likely as a quick rebound Unexploded bombs An oft-repeated piece of investment advice is “the time to buy is when there’s blood in the streets”, a quote originally attributed to Baron Rothschild after he profited from the panic that accompanied the Battle of the Waterloo. More than 200 years later, it still holds strong, and investors who took a deep breath and bought into the MSCI World index when it bottomed out in March would have been handsomely rewarded, with the index already up 30 per cent from its lowest point. However, they needed to be quick – unlike previous crises such as the dotcom bubble, when investing at the worst possible moment meant you needed to wait 10 years to break even, in 2020 the market has embarked on a round trip encompassing a record high, one of the biggest falls in the past 40 years, then a bounce back to its starting valuation in a little under six months. Yet this has not been a uniform recovery across all sectors and bargainhunting investors who were too slow to tap the rebound may be tempted into areas of the market that were hit the hardest by the economic lockdown. The attraction of this type of investing is clear, particularly for those with a long-term horizon that allows them to ride out any volatility. If a stock falls 90 per cent, In 2020 the market has embarked on a round trip encompassing a record high, one of the biggest falls in the past 40 years, then a bounce back to its starting valuation in a little under six months TRUSTNET