Here’s why they are related
The financial advice industry is known for having strong opinions. Politics is like that too. Especially these days. To be clear, this is NOT a political commentary. I direct you to a zillion other locations on the internet for that.
Likewise, it seems to me that people within 10 years either side of retirement (hoping to retire within 10 years or retired within the last 10 years) are bombarded with confident (dare I say arrogant?) opinions from my industry. Whether it is the future direction of the stock market, the economy, political winds, etc., it is a lot to take in. And now, impeachment of a U.S. President is top of the news. What should we make of that?
Left, right and blue?
If you are right-leaning politically, you think impeachment is a hoax, or at least over-hyped. If you are left-leaning, you think its about time, and that it needs to happen. And, naturally, there are plenty of folks in the middle. I don’t care about any of that here and now. What I care about is what you should as well. Specifically, to size up the potential impact on your retirement lifestyle of whatever happens. This is not just an attitude I possess about impeachment, or politics in general. And, I am not a bull or a bear on markets. I am realist, and a historian of sorts. More than anything, I am determined to strike a balance. That balance is between the potential pursuit of growth and income (a.k.a. the good stuff) and the realistic risk of major loss in value (the bad stuff). The latter is what can ruin all the work you have done for decades to set yourself up to retire as you wish. So, with impeachment as the news topic de jour, here is my take on striking that balance. It is more deductive reasoning than shouting at whoever disagrees with me. I hope you find that refreshing.Impeachment and market history
I will skip over the impeachment of Andrew Johnson. If you don’t remember, he was the one who reluctantly replaced Abraham Lincoln after the tragic assassination of our 16th President. Markets are just a bit different today, so we’ll ignore what happened then.Nixon
The impeachment of Richard Nixon is known today as a case of a crime and a cover up. The latter is what did the damage. Back then, we had a functioning U.S. Congress. So once the information became available about what had actually happened, the process was followed, and Nixon resigned before he could be convicted. Gerald Ford became U.S. President, and the country slowly recovered from the psychological impact. In 1974, the 10-year U.S. Treasury Bond yield was in the 7-8% range. As I write this, it is at 1.52%. So, bonds as a long-term retirement portfolio anchor are just not there. The markets were roiled from that, and the threatening economic conditions that preceded it. The result was one of the worst stock bear markets in recorded history, from 1973-1974. Interest rates were much higher then, as was inflation. Still, I would say that one of the key long-term retirement cushions of that era does not exist today.Clinton
Then, there was the impeachment of Bill Clinton. That occurred in October, 1998. The S&P 500 was around 1,000. Short-term, the stock market went much higher. This was the late stages of the Dot-Com era. The peak around 1,500 occurred about 17 months later. However, as of the summer of 2010, nearly 12 years after Clinton’s impeachment, the S&P 500 was again around that same 1,000 level. Naturally, a lot happened in between. But, my point is that if you are setting up for a long-term use of all the wealth you accumulated over decades, you can’t just do it in a “pot-shot” manner. Its not impeachment, though that is one of many factors that can impact market psychology and confidence. And that, after all, is what takes modest market moves in both directions, and turns them into major ones. So, we can’t ignore impeachment, but we do have to account for it.A short list of “must care abouts” for retirees
Here is where your focus should be right now:Income investing: think differently
- High-quality bond interest rates are low, and the bond market is filled with companies whose credit quality is suspicious. BBB-rated bonds now occupy about half the assets of corporate bond funds. That is twice the rate of a decade ago. That’s scary if you own those. Once the default phase of the cycle begins, the bond portfolio you counted on could be your worst enemy.
- You need to consider income-producing methods that are more balanced from a reward/risk standpoint. To me, this means being more tactical, not falling in love with the income-producing securities you own, and identifying a combination of quality, stability and yield that can get that job done. It is harder than before, since investors have been trained (unfortunately) to think that higher current yield is better. Its not, its just higher. Look deeper, know what you own!