For Claudia Altucher, I hope you survive me if any of these apocalyptic chapters come true.
For Jane Sease, my partner and best friend in good times and bad.
H OW WILL THE WORLD as we know it end? Will it be with a whimper as the last human beings succumb to some viral epidemic sweeping the globe? Or will it be with a bang when an asteroid slams into the planet? No one knows for sure. But what we do know is that there will be some very close calls that will be scary. A pandemic spreads. A terrorist detonates a nuclear bomb in a major city and claims to have more ready to explode. Ice caps melt, coastlines are submerged, and crops wither from drought. Clean fresh water becomes increasingly difficult to obtain. Or maybe it is oil that becomes scarce. Or a global financial panic erupts that regulators cannot contain. Any one of those scenarios could occur in our lifetimes. The one thing they all have in common is that their occurrence will touch off panic and, in some cases, hysteria. As a result, these events will also contain the seeds of profit for investors who stay calm and think rather than panic and run.
That said, one important note before we go any further: while this book deals with some truly frightening eventssome of which will almost certainly happen one daywe arent setting out to worsen your fears. Rather we want to show you, first, how you can overcome those fears by putting many of these events in their proper perspective. Then, we want to explain how to prepare your finances not just to survive an event should it strike, but to prosper as a result. We dont want people to get sick; we dont want another terrorist attack; and we certainly hope the planet doesnt cook itself into oblivion. However, there are people out there thinking about these things very hard and trying to find solutions. Many of those who succeed will become justly wealthy and theres no reason you shouldnt take advantage of their good fortune and make it part of yours. In The Wall Street Journal Guide to Investing in the Apocalypse we want to help you think about these unthinkable events, defend your financial life against their consequences, and maybe even emerge in better shape than before they happened.
What This Book Is About
At the heart of this book lies our observation that historically significant eventsthe assassination of a president or an arch-duke, an economic depression, or a global pandemichave a significant, and observable, impact on investments. We believe that, in the face of apparent cataclysm, the professional traders and money managers, along with hordes of ordinary investors, will lose their nerve and desperately seek the safety of cash or even gold. The mad rush to sell will drive the prices of a broad array of securities and other assets far below any concept of fair value. Prices will reflect the investors assumption of the worst.
But what if the worst doesnt occur? In that case all but the most shaken eventually will return to the financial and other markets. Their purchases will then drive asset prices higher, perhaps back to fair value or beyond. In any event, those who did not assume the worst and bought the assets all the others were selling will stand to profit handsomely as prices rebound. This is contrarian investing in the most basic sense. The opportunities dont come along often, but when they do they can make a huge difference in investment performance for those with a steady hand, an analytic mind, and an optimistic outlook. We call this methodology event-based investing, and this book is a guide to mastering it.
What constitutes an event? In this book, well use that term to refer to anything that threatens to upset the normal ebb and flow of markets and economies. Most people think of an event as something that occurs suddenly, such as the explosion of a terrorist bomb or a political assassination. But events can occur over much longer periods of time, ranging from days to years to decades. The Great Depression that plunged the United States into despair was an event, as was World War II, which saved the world from tyranny and reignited our nations economy at the same time. Viruses that cause pandemics may hover threateningly in the background for years before suddenly blossoming and doing their worst damage. Global warming scenarios will play out over decades.
Also, different events inspire different levels of fear. Terrorism touches off immediate fear, a pandemic creates gradually escalating levels of fear over a period of months and, at least for the moment, few people appear to be even the least bit worried about the looming global shortage of fresh water. How fast or slow an event occurs and what degree of fear it inspires doesnt change the possibility of defending against it and perhaps profiting from it, only the time it takes to make a decision and act on it.
Event-based investing is not for everyone. It requires an ability to anticipate seemingly earth-shattering events and to measure the risks appropriately. It also insists that you think unemotionally about the consequences of both the anticipated event occurring and of the possibility that it wont occur or that the consequences will not be as fearsome as others predict. In The Wall Street Journal Guide to Investing in the Apocalypse we purposely push the concept of event-based investing to the farthest edges of what might be possible. In the coming pages we will closely analyze several potential global threats, the probabilities of their occurring, and the opportunities they might present for the contrarian investor who doesnt fall victim to hype and hysteria. Some of these events will be man-made: financial catastrophe, for example, stems from human actions. Others, such as pandemics, are rooted in nature. Some of the events we discuss are related: global warming and the coming shortage of clean fresh water have common roots in the burgeoning world population. And some are more likely to occur than others. The challenge for investors is how to get ahead of the curve now to reap profits in 2020 or beyond.
While we admit to pushing the envelope in our analysis of potentially apocalyptic events, we firmly believe that the lessons and disciplines that we draw from these chapters are useful for much more likely and much less catastrophic events. No portfolio should be based solely on playing the angles of the days news. Long-term investing with a widely diversified portfolio has been and will remain the core of a successful approach to investing for almost all individuals (and, truth be told, for professionals, too). Nevertheless, an understanding of how to think about the implications of events much less awe-inspiring than the apocalypse can provide a significant performance advantage for investors alert to the possibilities.
Event-based investing need notindeed, should notbe complicated. There is little new under the investing sun and some of those things that are newcollateralized debt obligations and other exotic financial derivativesalmost spelled our doom in 2008. Our approach to apocalyptic investing can be done straightforwardly with simple securities that are easy to understand, such as stocks, bonds, and even mutual funds. Those with a bent for investing may enhance their returns through the use of options. The difference between this and other investing books is that we offer a way to think about investing that, while using simple tools, provides a sophisticated strategic approach that can become an integral part of a broader long-term portfolio of diversified assets.
It is always risky to name stocks in a book intended to serve investors for years, but we take that risk for two reasons. First, there are some companies that should be in any long-term portfolio because of their potential to soar in times of crisis. These are companies that are engaged in worthy and profitable endeavors that will be able to bring expertise and financial muscle to solving the problems that threaten us. Second, we will highlight some companies because they demonstrate how to execute an event-based investment strategy assuming certain conditions. In other words, these companies illustrate our approach, but shouldnt necessarily become part of your portfolio of apocalyptic investments. And in the interest of full disclosure, you need to know that Douglas Sease owns shares of General Electric in a long-term retirement account and that, at the time of publication, James Altucher, or any entity managed by James Altucher, owns none of the stocks mentioned in this book. In the end this book is intended to help investors learn to think about finding the companies and other assets, both large and small, that will be the beneficiaries of various cataclysms.