November 2020 Client Newsletter

Article Courtesy of Buckingham Strategic Partners

This year isn’t the first time Election Day has come and gone without a confirmed winner. Think back to the “hanging chad” in Florida that caused a weeks-long examination of the results in that presidential race. Of course, a different set of circumstances is driving this year’s election uncertainty.

Because of the global COVID-19 pandemic, Americans mailed in millions more ballots this year than ever before. Uncertainty around tallying those and other votes coupled with anxiety surrounding the fight against COVID-19 make us as investors — and as human beings — feel the same about what is in store for our portfolios and our livelihoods. But the good news is … markets don’t behave like we do. This November has offered us an excellent example of how markets behave around election year uncertainty.

Contrary to what most of us would expect, U.S. markets shot up the morning of Election Day and finished it with positive performance. Stock futures were mixed overnight on Tuesday, pointing to a potential market decline as a handful of states had yet to announce their election results. This led to perhaps an even larger surprise in that markets went on to continue their upward trajectory, at least through the close of election week.

Looking further back, as results from the 2016 election cycle were coming in on the night of November 8, stock market futures seemed to point to a large stock market decline once the market opened the following morning. Markets tend to dislike unexpected change, and as it became clear that we’d have a shift in the political party of the presidency, market futures attempted to price that change in until ultimately opening up instead of down — despite what many “experts” were predicting.

Why? Because markets aren’t about politics or policy, or even the economy. We believe market prices simply represent the sum of all available information. They comprise the major companies of the world, all of which have a vested interest in efficiently and profitably producing the goods and services we need.

The good news: Your portfolio has exposure to many different companies and depending on the specific portfolio that could be close to 10,000 companies spread across 48 different countries and 38 different currencies. And the bonds in your portfolio are higher quality and short term and are intended to help provide a buffer when markets are volatile.

It is good to remember that we don’t stop buying toothpaste because of a down market or who sits behind the Resolute desk. We don’t stop watching TV or doing home-improvement projects or going grocery shopping — which means that the great companies that make all these things should continue to grow and prosper over the long term.

The future, as always, is unknowable. But a portfolio built for the long term is just as valid today as it was at the beginning of the year. As investors, if we can avoid trying to time the market, resist the impulse of emotions, and hold a globally diversified portfolio constructed through an evidence-based lens, we can enjoy a higher probability of achieving our goals.

When you have any questions about your investments, need to inform us of family or work-related changes, or want to discuss your financial planning needs, please reach out. We are ready to help.

November 2020 Client Newsletter

HMV Wealth Advisors, LLC is a registered investment advisory firm. We have included a number of third-party articles on this Site that may be of interest to visitors. These articles are being provided for informational purposes only, do not constitute investment advice and do not necessarily represent the opinions of HMV Wealth Advisors, LLC. HMV Wealth Advisors, LLC does not provide any guarantee, expressed or implied, that the information presented is accurate or timely, and does not contain inadvertent technical or factual inaccuracies. The past performance of securities is no guarantee of their future result. The value of any investment may fall, as well as rise, and investors may not receive the full amount of their principal at the time of redemption if asset values have fallen.

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