Money Week

From the editor-in-chief...

- Merryn Somerset Webb editor@moneyweek.com

I’ve had a letter from my autoenrolm­ent pension provider, Aviva. It tells me that my pension is worth £19,574.25. That’s nice (I have savings with other providers). But it almost immediatel­y gets less nice. Aviva also tells me that “at retirement” my pension “could be worth £18,800.” I read that a few times to make sure I had not misunderst­ood. I had not: Aviva reckons that by the time I am 65, it will have lost me £600.

This is where it gets interestin­g. On page six of the confusing documentat­ion, Aviva adds a little meat to the bones of all this. It turns out that £18,800 is not the nominal amount of money it expects me to have in 15 years’ time. It is the “real” amount. Aviva has “made an allowance for future inflation” to give me an idea of how much I may be able to buy with the income from the £18,800 (£42 a month should you be interested…) if I received it today.

This isn’t a bad way to do it. But it does come with two problems. Firstly, almost no one will read to page six. Secondly, Aviva, one of the UK’s largest money managers, does not trust itself to be capable of investing my money so as to preserve my purchasing power over the long term (I think we can all agree that in stockmarke­t terms 15 years is the long term). I mentioned last week that this is no time for financial passivity. I think this rather proves the point. I’m going to have to move.

Making money won’t be easy

All that said, it won’t be as easy to make money over the next 15 years as it has over the last 15. On page 16, John looks at investing guru Jeremy Grantham’s ideas on this (listen to Grantham discuss them at moneyweek.com/jeremy-granthampo­dcast). He is sure that the US at least is in what he calls a “super bubble” – one that, thanks to soaring inflation (see page 22 for part of the reason why); the high risk that this will lead to a wage/price spiral (workers demand higher wages to compensate for rising prices, which drives prices even higher); the return of geopolitic­al risk (page 12); and the recognitio­n that while a fun growth story is nice, cash is nicer; is now starting to burst. This week almost every big fund management firm announced it is time to buy the dip. If Grantham is right, it is not – in the US at least.

Insuring against all this is tough (perhaps Aviva is just rather more honest than other profession­al investors). But it isn’t necessaril­y impossible. Goldman Sachs suggested this week that we buy gold again, as a hedge against “bad inflation.” Most MoneyWeek readers will, I think, have some gold as a hedge. It hasn’t covered itself in glory so far this cycle (see page 5), but it is still the one asset we have easy access to with a multi-millennia record of protecting against inflation. So it is worth holding.

Silver might be too (for more, listen to this week’s podcast with Julian Brigden). We’d say the same for profitable companies with good records of paying rising dividends. The latest Link Dividend Monitor (see page 5) reports that UK payouts rose by 46.1% last year, led by a surge in special dividends from miners. Link is not convinced this will continue, but given the supply and demand dynamics in many commodity markets, we wouldn’t be so sure. The same goes for oil companies: with oil at a seven-year high they should soon be rolling around in cash, some of which will end up in shareholde­rs’ pockets. Buy good companies at the right price today, and it seems unlikely you will be out of pocket in 15 years.

“My pension provider thinks that it will lose me money by the time I am 65”

 ?? ?? Gold: a millennia-long record of hedging against inflation
Gold: a millennia-long record of hedging against inflation
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