Become a Member
Life

This dip is merely a mid-cycle slowdown

October 7, 2010 10:33

By

Paul Mann

1 min read

The st Leger, the 234-year-old horse race run in September, frames that British adage, "sell in May and go away until St Leger's day". This implies that we don't buy equity markets over the summer when volumes are low and prices likely to fall. With the season over and everyone back at their desks, markets are meant to pick up. Not so this year, as the FTSE 100 actually rose approximately 2.75 per cent during this period.

Across the pond, some would steer clear of equities from Labor Day until Halloween. Lehman collapsed in September 2008 and the world trading system fell apart. September 2002 saw a bear market low. The 1998 financial crisis and the 1987 crash were September and October events. Not so last year, as the S&P 500 actually rose approximately 6.4 per cent during this period.

Consolidate both notions and our asset allocation would be consigned to low-yielding cash for at least 6 months of each year. Historic market wisdom and macro-data can give us some measured insight, but not the basis for our market outlook or investment strategy.

For sure, worries about the strength of the global recovery did mount over the summer and are unlikely to recede quickly.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.