Premium: The Big Surprise – FT on why stock markets have shrugged off Ukraine war
The article below from our UK partners is a good reminder: Investing in stock markets delivers superior returns, but only because of the short-term risk it carries. In essence, over the long-term, share markets always reward. But participating fruitfully requires built-in mental shock absorbers that enable calmness when turbulence arrives. As it does.
There's an easy test of whether your own mental defences are fit for purpose. Simply put – how well do you sleep? No investment should be sufficiently risky or proportionately big enough to disturb your resting hours. If it does so; if you're stressed by the exposure; reduce it or switch to something with lower risk. Especially now.
As the FT piece elegantly unpacks, the world's financial system has shrugged off Putin's invasion so far. But that's been helped by the Kremlin 'surprisingly' paying a $123m interest commitment to borrowers two weeks ago. A bigger test comes on Monday when a $2bn Russian bond falls due. If that commitment isn't met, insiders warn of a jolt to financial markets, including equities.
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