Trustnet Magazine Issue 24 December 2016 | Page 4

YOUR PORTFOLIO / 2016 IN REVIEW / TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED Daniel Lanyon looks back at 2016: a year that took everyone by surprise T WO WORDS WILL DOMINATE FUTURE HISTORY BOOKS’ CHAPTERS on 2016: Brexit and Trump. Of course, the UK’s vote to leave the European Union and the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States have not been the only major events this year. We also saw the spread of the Zika virus, terrorist atrocities, an intensification of the civil war in Syria and a spate of celebrity deaths. Even without taking a position on the divisive issues of Brexit and Trump it was not difficult for many commentators to label 2016 as one of the most eventful years for decades and the hashtag #worstyearever began trending on social media before the halfway point. So how have UK investors fared during this year of political uncertainty? Actually, surprisingly well. 2 trustnetdirect.com trustnetdirect.com THE WORST POSSIBLE START A well-known maxim in the world of investment says “as goes January, so goes the rest of the year”. However, 2016 has ended with markets in stark contrast to where they began. January saw the worst opening to any year as investors panicked over the sluggish pace of global growth, concerns about China, the price of commodities and central banks’ apparent inability to manage any of these issues. Circuit breakers were triggered minutes after the Chinese mar ket opened this year, when a weakening yuan sent equities down more than 7 per cent. This prompted a major sell-off in global markets as investors became more and more risk averse, according to Adrian Lowcock, investment director at Architas. “Linked to the bad start for China was a collapse in oil and commodity prices as investors feared global growth was going to slow down,” he said. “This hit the mining and oil sectors hard. However, both had already suffered from falls in commodity prices and concerns over their finances in 2015 – and this has so far proved to be the bottom.” These sectors subsequently spiked on a recovery in the underlying commodities and the feeling they had become oversold. Brazilian equities also bore the brunt of commodity weakness early on and the country had a political scandal of its own to worry about with the impeachment of its president Dilma Rousseff. It quickly rebounded, however. Investment trusts focusing on commodities and Latin America were among the best performers on average during the first quarter of 2016. The IT Country Specialists Latin America and the IT Commodities & Natural 3