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Ruffer LLC
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The K is not OK

The consensus is that we are in a K-shaped recovery – that means winners and losers. We are not all in this together.

Duncan MacInnes
Fund Manager

The unique shape of the covid-19 crisis and accompanying recession has meant some industries have thrived whilst others have dived. In caricature, everyone now uses Zoom and Peloton, while offices and gyms were forced to close.

What does the K mean? Online shopping wins, traditional retailing loses. Commercial property such as offices and shops lose, but logistics warehouses thrive. City apartments struggle, suburbs with gardens boom. The digital economy beats everything.

Size too has been an important factor – large companies with access to the corporate bond markets have been able to take advantage of easy money policies. Smaller companies and start ups surviving on a shoestring have been starved of the oxygen of cash flow. As a result, the big have gotten bigger.

Unfortunately, the K applies to people too. Those least able to bear the burden have carried the cost of the covid crisis. Low earners have had a 25% hit to earnings.1 Most readers of the Green Line will be educated, digital native, knowledge workers who mostly have seen their earnings unaffected.

The economic costs have been greater for the young, the unskilled, minorities and working mothers. Covid has also badly disrupted education which is perhaps the key driver of social mobility.

Lockdown was a different experience in a tower block. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast close to 90 million people globally will fall below the extreme income deprivation threshold of $1.90 per day because of covid.2 Everywhere winners and losers.

And this has come after a decade in which the main effect of quantitative easing was to benefit asset owners rather than those who were trying to become asset owners.

So the K is not OK – it will crack – it is intrinsically unsustainable. The K is not OK because it leads to a hollowing out of the economy and as we are observing it will exacerbate inequality and cost far too many jobs. And because governments can read the mood of voters too, this will ultimately lead to government intervention and antitrust. The first signs are showing with talk of student debt forgiveness and a $15 minimum wage in the US.3

But does the vaccine challenge the K? Yes. We think a vaccine breaks the K because it offers a lifeline to the less fortunate. Government intervention, and we expect lots more, will become stimulus rather than life support.

The Ruffer equity portfolio is filled with stocks primed to do well in a vaccine led normalisation of economic activity – Vinci, Aena (airports), American Express, Land Securities.

Despite the large rally in these stocks since the Pfizer/Moderna announcements these investments are still deeply out of favour and yet the prospect of recovery is that much more tangible. The debate has moved from ‘if?’ to ‘when?’.

If this value rotation is for real, it has far more than just days left to run. From a portfolio perspective, there is a clear opportunity in such stocks. There might be bumps in the road, but things are looking up for 2021.

2020 Q3 Investment Review
October 2020: Whatever one’s outlook, there have been times in 2020 when the markets seemed to echo one’s innermost thoughts, and times when we shout out like Falstaff, that the whole world has gone mad.
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Remind me why you own bonds
November 2020: The future looks even more uncertain than usual. Normally uncertainty translates into lower asset prices. But not this time. And with the prices of all assets buoyed by abundant liquidity, we fear a traditional ‘diversified’ portfolio is not going to be much protection in the next market convulsion.
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Election 2020
October 2020: All elections are equal. But some elections are more equal than others. In the latest episode of Ruffer Radio, Dr Tim Smith and Alexander Chartres discuss the 2020 race to the White House.
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  1.  US employment, deviation from January 2020. Source: Paychex, Earning and Intuit. Aggregated and seasonally adjusted estimates

  2.  IMF World Economic Outlook, October 2020: A Long and Difficult Ascent 

Past performance is not a guide to future performance. The value of investments and the income derived therefrom can decrease as well as increase and you may not get back the full amount originally invested. Ruffer performance is shown after deduction of all fees and management charges, and on the basis of income being reinvested. The value of overseas investments will be influenced by the rate of exchange.

The views expressed in this article are not intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any investment or financial instrument, including interests in any of Ruffer’s funds. The information contained in the article is fact based and does not constitute investment research, investment advice or a personal recommendation, and should not be used as the basis for any investment decision. This document does not take account of any potential investor’s investment objectives, particular needs or financial situation. This document reflects Ruffer’s opinions at the date of publication only, the opinions are subject to change without notice and Ruffer shall bear no responsibility for the opinions offered. Read the full disclaimer.

Minds over matter
Whilst technology has transformed stock markets over the centuries, they are underpinned by human traits like fear and greed, which remain unaltered. But one key recent change has been to markets’ purpose, and this risks severe instability.
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Investment Review
April 2024: Jonathan Ruffer discusses the stock market’s seemingly invincible summer. This has created distortions in both debt and equity markets, and with them, opportunities to benefit from a change in the season.
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Out of sight, out of mind
April 2024: Markets today are very different to the pre-2008 era. But has systemic risk been removed or relocated?
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London
Ruffer LLP
80 Victoria Street
London SW1E 5JL
Paris
Ruffer S.A.
103 boulevard Haussmann
75008 Paris, France
New York
Ruffer LLC
300 Park Avenue
New York NY 10022
Edinburgh
Ruffer LLP
31 Charlotte Square
Edinburgh EH2 4ET