Good article from a sharp investment advisor:

*Monthly Client Letter *

*February 2020*

Recent outbreaks of the novel coronavirus (a.k.a., COVID-19) outside of
China has raised concerns about the virus’ containment. This heightened
concern sent global stocks quickly lower over a few trading days as
investors assess the potential impact of the virus on the global economy.
While we don’t know how many people the virus will infect, the length of
this viral cycle and what influence it will ultimately have on the economy,
we do know that you may have some questions about how this might impact
your investments.

With that, we want to share three investment-related themes to keep in
mind. First, don’t give in to the urge to take action. The news stories
about the virus can be downright scary, but we need to remember that market
prices react immediately to both good and bad information. To potentially
make money or avoid potential losses, we would need to trade before it is
news. And, of course, we don’t know the future, so any action would be a
guess, and any positive result would be luck.

Second, we need to keep perspective. This isn’t the first new virus we’ve
seen, and this won’t be the last. SARS, Zika, H1N1 and others have all come
and gone. While the concerns at the time were the same (e.g., How quickly
will it spread? Will there be a cure? Will it slow down the global economy?
Will it impact my investments?), our society has figured out how to
overcome past viruses, and markets have done the same.

In fact, markets have short memories regarding epidemics. Markets may
initially react to the uncertainty and fear that comes with any new
concern, but, for the most part, viruses get contained and investors return
to corporate and economic fundamentals. We can see this pattern in the
adjacent table. Market returns generally have been up in the six- and
12-month periods following the outbreak of a virus or disease. While this
is a small sample set, we know that keeping focused on the long-term
helps us keep a level head during
all kinds of storms.

The third and final idea we want to share is to be on alert. Believe it or
not, the Securities and Exchange Commission had to issue a public warning
that fraudsters are attempting to play into our natural emotions of fear
and greed during this period of uncertainty. There have been reports of
social media posts and online ads promising a huge profit by investing in
companies that have supposedly found a cure for the novel coronavirus.
We’re sure we sound like a broken record on this topic, but there are no
sure things or get-rich-quick strategies when it comes to investing.

Before we wrap up this brief, we want to make a couple observations about
the virus. First, one statistic that we haven’t heard much about in the
press is on the number of people that have recovered from the virus.
According to information tracked by John Hopkins University, over 30,300
people have fully recovered from the virus. While it does have a slightly
higher mortality rate than some of the more recent viruses, catching it
doesn’t mean you will perish. The odds are that our immune system will
fight it off. Further, while the number of infected people outside of China
has grown, the overall number of people that are contracting it appears to
be on the decline. This suggests that containment measures and safety
precautions may be working to limit the spread.

Our advice remains the same, to stick to your long-term plan and tune out
the noise. We invest client money in a way that isn’t dependent on lucky
guesses or get-rich-quick schemes. We use investment strategies and prepare
financial plans that assume events like these will come and go. So, please,
stay positive and focus on your family and your health. If you want to
think about the virus, send positive thoughts toward those infected by the
virus.

If 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 here to help you reach your financial life
goals!

Sincerely,


On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 10:02 PM Rick Knoble via Mercedes <
mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:

> > "Blow up your TV, throw away your paper,
> go to the country, build you a home.
> Plant a little garden, eat a lot of peaches, try and find Jesus on your
> own"
>
> Written by Chicago native John Prine. He was very good friends with
> another Chicago native, Steve Goodman.
>
> Both awesome lyricists.
>
> https://youtu.be/oPwq0YoOy4g
>
> Rick
>
>
> _______________________________________
> http://www.okiebenz.com
>
> To search list archives http://www.okiebenz.com/archive/
>
> To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to:
> http://mail.okiebenz.com/mailman/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com
>
>
_______________________________________
http://www.okiebenz.com

To search list archives http://www.okiebenz.com/archive/

To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to:
http://mail.okiebenz.com/mailman/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com

Reply via email to