News

11 January 2023

Ten market predictions to rely on in 2023

Anyone familiar with us will know we’re highly sceptical about the value of financial market forecasts. And if the events of 2022 didn’t convince you of that point, nothing will. But every now and then, even we are willing to chance our powers of prediction.

Investors are understandably anxious after the year we’ve just had and are keen to know what 2023 might look like, so we’ve put together our own (tongue-in-cheek) list of ten forecasts you can count on coming true this year:

Someone will declare that “it’s different this time”.

This one comes up regularly, usually around a crisis. It usually goes hand-in-hand with “the old rules don’t apply” and “everything has fundamentally changed”. And, of course, every crisis is different. But how we deal with it doesn’t have to change at all.

Wall Street will “climb a wall of worry”.

This phrase tends to arise when there are two or three things vexing traders at once – interest rates, oil prices, geopolitical strains. What no one ever says is: that’s just what markets do. They absorb new information into prices, so let them do the worrying for you.

Billions of dollars will be “wiped off” markets.

This is usually the headline when markets fall 3%+ in a day. And it’s true that the prices that day will be much lower than the day before. But that doesn’t matter if you’re not selling. By the way, notice how they never say during rallies that billions were added to markets?

We will be told that the “easy gains have been made”.

After extended gains, it becomes time to “sharpen your pencil” and pick stocks because you can no longer count on “the rising tide that raises all boats”. Hint on this one: if it’s a broker telling you that, and they are mixing their metaphors that badly – run a mile.

Someone will say “more sellers than buyers on the market today”.

This usually comes up when journalists are up against a deadline and struggling to find a narrative to hang the day’s news on. Ask yourself, if the sellers outnumbered the buyers, who were they selling to? If the trade gets made, someone is buying.

Traders will “cast a nervous eye on key economic indicators this week”.

There is always some obscure data release that has everyone hanging on. It could be the second revision of GDP or a purchasing manager’s index. Why any of this should make a difference to people with a horizon longer than five days is never entirely clear, of course.

Traders will “buy the rumour and sell the news”.

You’ll be told ahead of the “pivotal number” that it’s expected to be great economic news. Sure enough, it is good news. Trouble is, the market knew that and sells off. This is why paying attention to macro-economic data as an investor is mostly futile.

A rally will be described as “short-covering”.

In other words, some in the market are bracing for bad news and expecting stocks to go lower but are now having second thoughts and buying back borrowed securities. While this highly technical detail is quite possibly true, it is utterly irrelevant to 99% of us.

You’ll see a news feature on a “market guru” and his “failsafe method”.

This will relate to a self-promoting trader who called the last cycle entirely right after getting the 15 before that entirely wrong. Unfortunately, this plays into an innate public belief that someone out there has a crystal ball.

Someone will refer condescendingly to the “dumb money” and the “smart money”.

The “smart money” in this case usually refers to the market professionals who charge their clients big fees year after year for trying to outguess the market. The appalling long-term record of active managers against indices tells you how smart that is.

We’re confident that all ten of these things will happen in 2023. You read it here first.

If you would like to discuss these themes in more detail, please contact Darren Lees or your usual contact at Carbon.

The value of investments and the income derived from them can fall as well as rise. You may not get back what you invest.

This communication is for general information only and is not intended to be individual advice. It represents our understanding of law and HM Revenue & Customs practice. You are recommended to seek competent professional advice before taking any action.

Tax and Estate Planning Services are not regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.

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