There arrives a point at which our gaze lifts beyond the immediate chaos of politics, beyond the maelstrom, to the line of sight beyond, to calmer waters. We are there now, the US election (on November 5th) no longer matters much to how we trade out the year. The next administration can’t start enacting policies until January, the State of the Union speech and the new Congress.

In the UK, we have had a phoney war since July, awaiting a budget, due the day before Halloween. Budgets are (or should be) a process, albeit leaky. Sadly, most of the leaks and badly flown kites, to date, are predictable, telling of a cash strapped government desperate to pay off their supporters, by ever higher taxes. They hope markets won’t notice. Some chance.

Globally inflation is falling based on goods deflation, a fair bit of which is out of China. The ongoing normalisation of energy supply, post Ukraine, also contribute, and is offset by regulatory rises in labour costs, stagnant productivity, and out of control welfare. None of that changes.

Meanwhile investment and necessities are now the areas being squeezed hardest, and business confidence is elusive.

From this OECD update

So where are the dangers for investors?

One has been to ignore gold, a long running afterthought in our in-house momentum portfolios, at a steady one sixth weighting. Some afterthought!

A more dangerous mirage is fixed interest, because it has been priced for a massive set of rate cuts for far too long, and all you get is a speedy convergence back to negative real interest rates.

Indeed, for a lot of investors, service inflation, not goods, is already the pain point, and service inflation and post-tax interest rates have already converged.

Although with the internet, net interest margin for the banks is not as volatile as of old. There are no longer big pots of locked in money in current accounts. So, falling rates are not hurting bank earnings much, indeed the danger is more of elevated rates causing defaults. But is that denting profits? Not really. Banks are getting good at holding their margins.

Another dangerous deceit has been the flow into value and into emerging markets, that trend has lifted prices, has been doing so all year, but again quite slowly, while some sectors and markets, like aerospace and Latin America, have been pretty vile.

Both Value and Emerging Markets have now had an awful lot of false dawns. Those too feel like a mainly 2025 trade now.

Europe – where next?

Europe seems genuinely to be struggling. I notice credit default swaps on French debt remain elevated after Macron’s summer failures. While Germany still relies on China and the motor industry too much. Without peace in Ukraine, it will struggle, although the arrival of lower energy prices and more tariff protection against Chinese dumping, will slowly help.

We are (nearly) all protectionists now.

So? Well, what has worked, likely still works, and while October might (yet again) be seeing a leg higher, it feels hard to get too excited, until after November 5th.

Private Equity

Two other 2025 themes are private equity and competition.

Private equity is just about holding its own. Those big, expected, discount compressions are not yet happening, so conflicting market views persist. The bears who, judged by the discounts, are still winning, see overstretched balance sheets, unaffordable debt, at any likely refinancing rate and a closed IPO exit market. So, a lot of stale assets.

The latter is both a reflection of how thoroughly investors felt ripped off in the last IPO boom and the bypassing of over regulated, backward looking public stock markets. For hot stocks, in particular, capital is still easier to raise off market. You can buy into AI without buying IPO’s.

However some mid-market managers are quite happy to use trade sales instead, and those will pick up, once politics gets out of the way and interest rates get more sensible.

Some smaller tech areas, which never relied on debt, nor expected an IPO exit, are starting to look quite frisky, as recent buys have not been at such high prices and they have ridden the post COVID technology expansion well.

And tech has been moving very fast of late. So, buying debt free, post 2020 investments, as they now start to exit, can be pretty good, and decreasingly offset by the collapse of lockdown casualties.

Competition

On competition both Draghi and then Lagarde are saying loudly that competition policy in Europe, which has been seen as being by national market alone, will continue to weigh on productivity. Instead, the competition view must now be pan-European, and on that metric, for example, we have far too many telcos and banks. We now have a new EU Competition Commissioner, but also a desire for a “new approach to competition policy” clearly stated by the EU President in July.

So whatever nativist German noises there are, if Commerzbank has an Italian suitor, that deal is still possibly good for Europe. If Vodafone wants a merger in the UK (or any other) mobile market, that should be fine too. Indeed, clear evidence exists globally that low prices cripple investment in the telecom sector, and to keep investing, keep advancing, sensible returns are now needed.

Of course, that goes quite contrary to the idea of competition authorities (and regulators) as agents of social change and protectionism, but it is being said very loudly now by the ECB. This comes with clear warnings about the need for spending cuts, to get Euro budgets under control, aimed notably at France, presumably as Italy is deaf and Spain is behaving.

Yes, we have heard it before, but the clash between cheap services (but no investment, no stability) and a sensible return (with investment, and stability) is getting far clearer.

Lower inflation will at last allow the rates of basic services to rise, to give a sensible return, to create a real market.