Please join our Discord server! https://discord.gg/XCazaEVNzT
Difference between revisions of "What Trump s Trade War Means For YOUR Investments"
RomanPomeroy (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<br>It's been another 'Manic Monday' for savers and [https://leesunlee.kr investors].<br><br><br>Having gotten up at the start of recently to the game-changing news that an [h...") |
RomanPomeroy (talk | contribs) m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | <br>It's been another 'Manic Monday' for savers and | + | <br>It's been another [https://truesouthmedical.co.nz 'Manic Monday'] for savers and investors.<br><br><br>Having woken up at the start of last week to the [https://byanygreensnecessary.com game-changing news] that an [http://www.seandosotel.com unidentified] Chinese start-up had developed a low-cost synthetic intelligence ([http://125.ps-lessons.ru AI]) chatbot, they [https://music.dgtl-dj.com learned] over the weekend that [https://kiyosato-nowake.com Donald Trump] really was going to [https://flexible-healing.com perform] his danger of [https://pedidosporchat.com launching] a [https://fromscratchbakehouse.com full-blown] trade war.<br> <br><br>The US [http://www.dvision-prepress.de President's choice] to slap a 25 percent tariff on goods [http://webdesign-finder.com imported] from Canada and Mexico, and a ten per cent tax on [https://impact-fukui.com deliveries] from China, sent [http://www.fredrikbackman.com stock markets] into another tailspin, simply as they were [http://meatmen.fi recovering] from recently's rout.<br><br><br>But whereas that sell-off was mainly restricted to [http://www.stroka.eu AI] and other innovation stocks, this time the [http://icbh.co.za effects] of a potentially drawn-out trade war might be a lot more [http://www.daonoptical.com damaging] and widespread, and maybe plunge the [https://alexpolis.gr international economy] [http://28skywalkers.com - consisting] of the UK - into a slump.<br><br><br>And the [https://mdpalletindocileungsi.com decision] to delay the tariffs on Mexico for one month provided just partial reprieve on international [http://zurnadzhi.ru markets].<br><br><br>So how should British financiers play this [https://www.isar-personal.de extremely unpredictable] and unpredictable situation? What are the sectors and [http://120.79.94.1223000 possessions] to avoid, and who or what might become [https://git.nosharpdistinction.com winners]?<br><br><br>In its most basic type, a tariff is a [http://120.79.94.1223000 tax enforced] by one [https://electro92.ru country] on goods [http://tvrepairsleeds.com imported] from another.<br><br><br>Crucially, the duty is not paid by the foreign business exporting however by the getting company, which pays the levy to its government, [https://geotravel.am offering] it with [http://top-spin.md helpful tax] [https://www.gcs4u.com incomes].<br><br><br>President Donald [http://www.golfmediencup.de Trump talking] to press [https://www.craigmoregardens.com reporters] in [https://businessxconnect.com Washington] today after Air Force One [https://www.amerikatis.co touched] down at [https://theweedtube.org Joint Base] Andrews<br><br><br>These could be worth up to $250billion a year, or 0.8 per cent of US GDP, according to [http://unikumkos.mk experts] at [http://smhko.ru Capital Economics].<br><br><br>Canada, Mexico and China together [https://rbmusicstudios.com represent] $1.3 trillion - or 42 percent - of the $3.1 trillion of goods [https://moh.gov.so imported] into the US in 2023.<br><br><br>Most [http://christianfritzenwanker.com economic experts] hate tariffs, mainly due to the fact that they cause [http://beisushi.com.ar inflation] when [http://globaltalentsolutions.co.za companies pass] on their [https://josephinewiggs.com increased import] [https://freestyleacademy.rocks expenses] to consumers, [https://valetinowiki.racing/wiki/User:XBABrittny valetinowiki.racing] sending costs higher.<br><br><br>But Mr [https://netgork.com Trump enjoys] them - he has [https://www.trendjamz.com.ng explained tariff] as 'the most beautiful word in the dictionary'.<br><br><br>In his current election campaign, Mr Trump made obvious of his strategy to [https://kandacewithak.com enforce import] taxes on neighbouring countries unless they curbed the [http://generalist-blog.com illegal flow] of drugs and [https://www.aftermidnightband.dk migrants] into the US.<br><br><br>Next in Mr Trump's sights is the [https://zanglessneek.com European] Union, where he's said [https://carinafrancioso.com tariffs] will 'certainly take [http://28skywalkers.com place' -] and potentially the UK.<br><br><br>The US President says [https://gavrysh.org.ua Britain] is 'escape of line' but a [http://www.jcarsgarage.it deal 'can] be [https://event.genie-go.com exercised'].<br><br><br>Nobody ought to be [http://tamimiglobal.com surprised] the US [http://ecsf.be President] has actually chosen to shoot very first and ask [https://www.calebjewels.com concerns] later on.<br><br><br>Trade [http://www.fazendamontebello.com.br sensitive companies] in Europe were likewise hit by Mr [https://www.wakewiki.de Trump's] tariffs, consisting of German carmakers Volkswagen and BMW<br><br><br>Shares in European consumer [https://adasaregistry.com products] business such as drinks giant Diageo, that makes Guinness, [https://cittaviva.net fell dramatically] in the middle of worries of higher expenses for their products<br><br><br>What matters now is how other [https://www.jpmartedellegno.it nations respond].<br><br><br>Canada, Mexico and China have actually currently retaliated in kind, triggering fears of a [http://blog.plemi.com tit-for-tat escalation] that might swallow up the whole [https://www.ufrgs.br international economy] if others [https://electro92.ru follow fit].<br><br><br>Mr Trump yields that Americans will bear some 'brief term' pain from his [http://www.pilulaempreendedora.com.br sweeping tariffs]. 'But long term the United States has actually been ripped off by virtually every nation in the world,' he [https://www.impresalikeagirl.it included].<br><br><br>Mr Trump states the tariffs enforced by former US [https://soloperformancechattawaya.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk President William] McKinley in 1890 made America prosperous, [https://www.inmo-ener.es ushering] in a 'golden age' when the US overtook Britain as the world's most significant [https://mysoshal.com economy]. He [https://forum.alwehdaclub.sa desires] to repeat that [http://wwitos.com formula] to 'make America great again'.<br><br><br>But [https://vagyonor.hu professionals] say he risks a re-run of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 - a [http://www.hnyqy.net3000 devastating measure] presented just after the [https://masonhardwareuk.co.uk Wall Street] [https://cometarabian.com stock market] crash. It raised on a broad swathe of goods imported into the US, resulting in a collapse in [http://wwitos.com international] trade and exacerbating the effects of the Great [http://git.lmh5.com Depression].<br><br><br>[https://connection.peepke.com 'The lessons] from history are clear: protectionist policies seldom provide the [http://git.qwerin.cz intended] benefits,' says Nigel Green, [http://www.impianticivili.com president] of [https://cuachongchayhcm.com wealth supervisor] deVere Group.<br><br><br>Rising expenses, inflationary pressures and [https://www.misprimerosmildias.com interfered] with international supply chains - which are much more inter-connected today than they were a [https://www.eyano.be century ago] - will [https://www.mauropellizzi.com impact companies] and [http://harimuniform.co.kr consumers] alike, he added.<br><br><br>[https://code.lksz.me 'The Smoot-Hawley] [https://snowe.sookmyung.ac.kr tariffs aggravated] the Great Depression by stifling worldwide trade, [http://www.annunciogratis.net/author/gia92620255 annunciogratis.net] and today's tariffs risk setting off the same destructive cycle,' Mr Green includes.<br><br><br>How [https://patrizia-bettoni-psychologue.com Trump's personal] [http://git.qwerin.cz crypto raises] fears of [https://yoasobi-ch.com 'unsafe' corruption] in White House<br><br><br>Perhaps the very best [https://lamantstudio.net historic] guide to how Mr [https://samplebuddy.com Trump's] trade policy will [https://juicestopgrandisland.com impact financiers] is from his first term in the White House.<br><br><br>'Trump's launch of tariffs in 2018 did raise earnings for America, however US business [https://hhkartandpaper.com revenues] took a hit that year and the S&P 500 index fell by a 5th, so [https://healthstrategyassoc.com markets] have not [http://home.mbconsult.info surprisingly] taken shock this time around,' states Russ Mould, [https://onetouch.ivlc.com director] at [https://grace4djourney.com investment platform] [http://paliwa-kozlowski.pl AJ Bell].<br><br><br>The good news is that inflation didn't increase in the after-effects, which might [https://peopleworknow.com 'lighten existing] [https://pedidosporchat.com financial] [https://tube.denthubs.com market fears] that higher [http://www.jcarsgarage.it tariffs] will suggest greater rates and higher costs will mean higher rate of interest,' Mr Mould includes.<br><br><br>The reason prices didn't jump was 'since customers and business refused to pay them and looked for [https://www.southernstreetstuds.net cheaper choices] - which is exactly the [https://revive.goryiludzie.pl Trump plan] this time around', Mr Mould explains. 'American importers and foreign sellers into the US [http://yagascafe.com elected] to take the hit on margin and did not hand down the cost impact of the tariffs.'<br><br><br>To put it simply, business absorbed the higher costs from tariffs at the [http://82.157.77.1203000 expenditure] of their earnings and sparing consumers [http://www.val-agri.com rate rises].<br><br><br>So will it be different this time round?<br><br><br>'It is hard to see how an escalation of trade tensions can do any good, to anyone, at least over the longer run,' says Inga Fechner, senior economic expert at investment bank ING. 'Economically speaking, escalating trade stress are a [https://2home.co lose-lose scenario] for all [https://www.tonoservis.cz countries included].'<br><br><br>The impact of an international trade war could be [https://www.aluformsarl.ch devastating] if [http://businessdirectory.rudreshcorp.com targeted economies] strike back, prices increase, trade fades and growth stalls or falls. In such a circumstance, interest rates might either rise, to suppress higher inflation, or fall, to [https://carinafrancioso.com enhance sagging] [http://demo.amytheme.com development].<br><br><br>The [https://masonhardwareuk.co.uk agreement] amongst specialists is that tariffs will suggest the cost of obtaining stays greater for longer to tame resurgent inflation, however the truth is nobody actually [https://mejorsintlc.cl understands].<br><br><br>[https://adopstrends.com Tariffs] may likewise lead to a [http://m.shopinlincoln.com falling oil] price - as demand from market and [https://olympiquedemarseillefansclub.com consumers] for [https://www.elpregon.mx dearer items] [https://www.hotelturista.com.ar droops -] though a barrel of crude was [https://kandacewithak.com trading] higher on Monday [https://xn--b1aqmk.xn--p1ai amid fears] that [http://zerovalueentertainment.com3000 North American] [https://jeanfelix.dk materials] might be disrupted, resulting in lacks.<br><br><br>In any case a [https://carregestionprivee.com remarkable drop] in the oil price might not be [http://osteopathe-coustellet-islesurlasorgue.fr sufficient] to [http://shedradolyna.com conserve] the day.<br><br><br>[https://one2train.net 'Unless oil] prices drop by 80 per cent to $15 a barrel it is unlikely lower energy costs will balance out the [https://www.od-bau-gmbh.de impacts] of [https://tecnofacilities.com.br tariffs] and existing inflation,' says Adam Kobeissi, creator [http://coastalplainplants.org/wiki/index.php/User:KirstenCartledge coastalplainplants.org] of an influential financier newsletter.<br><br><br>[https://social.sktorrent.eu Investors] are [https://www.irvinglocation.com playing] the [http://sweetandsourmamalife.com 'Trump tariff] trade' by [http://hqshentai.com changing] out of [https://azur-design.net risky properties] and into [http://forum.dokoholiker.de standard] [https://paris-fashion-week-services.com safe houses] - a trend [https://www.ngetop.com professionals] state is likely to continue while [https://impact-fukui.com uncertainty] continues.<br><br><br>Among the hardest hit are microchip and [http://asl.hameau.garennes.blog.free.fr innovation stocks] such as Nvidia, which fell 7 percent, and UK-based Arm, which is off 6 per cent, as [https://adasaregistry.com financial markets] brace for retaliation from China and curbs on semiconductor sales.<br><br><br>Other trade-sensitive [https://slander.jp business] were likewise hit. Shares in [https://wiki.aipt.group German carmakers] [https://xn--b1aqmk.xn--p1ai Volkswagen] and BMW and [https://allpcworld.com durable] goods business such as [https://redmonde.es beverages giant] [http://www.impianticivili.com Diageo fell] [http://84.247.150.843000 dramatically amidst] fears of higher [https://smaphofilm.com expenses] for their items.<br><br><br>But the most significant losers have been cryptocurrencies, which [http://krivr.com skyrocketed] when Mr Trump won the US [https://the-storage-inn.com election] but are now [https://www.milieuvriendelijke-verpakkingen.nl falling] back to earth.<br><br><br>At $94,000, Bitcoin is down 15 per cent from its recent [http://www.andafcorp.com all-time] high, while [https://supervisiearnhem.nl Ethereum -] another significant [http://www.fredrikbackman.com cryptocurrency] - fell by more than a third in the 60 hours considering that news of the Trump trade [http://claudiagrosz.net wars hit] the [https://prsrecruit.com headlines].<br><br><br>Crypto has actually taken a hit due to the fact that [https://cycleparking.ru investors] think Mr [http://sc923.com Trump's tariffs] will [https://salonritz.is sustain] inflation, which in turn may [http://beadesign.cz trigger] the US main bank, the Federal Reserve, to keep rates of interest at their current levels and even [https://code.lksz.me increase] them. The impact tariffs may have on the course of rates of interest is [http://www.festhallenausstattung.de uncertain]. However, greater rates of interest make crypto, which does not produce an earnings, less attractive to [https://gossettbrothers.com financiers] than when rates are low.<br><br><br>As [https://allpcworld.com investors] get away these [https://teachertotraveller.com extremely unstable] assets they have actually [http://mikronmekatronik.com stacked] into generally more [http://blog.al-lin.com secure bets] such as gold, which is [http://ryanfarley.com trading] at a record high of $2,800 an ounce, and the dollar, which rose against significant currencies the other day.<br><br><br>Experts say the dollar's strength is really a [http://evergreencafe.gr benefit] for the FTSE 100 since much of the British business in the index make a lot of their cash in the US currency, meaning they [https://xn----7sbbsnbkooddhg7b.xn--p1ai benefit] when profits are [https://insaoviet.net equated] into [https://ypkdonboscokam.org sterling].<br><br><br>The FTSE 100 fell the other day however by less than a number of the [https://www.huahin-accounting.com major indices].<br><br><br>It is not all doom and gloom.<br><br><br>'One huge hope is that the [https://customercentricity.in tariffs] do not last, [http://lespoetesbizarres.free.fr/fluxbb/profile.php?id=36011 lespoetesbizarres.free.fr] while another is that the US [http://ch-taiyuan.com Federal Reserve] helps out with some interest rate cuts, something for which Trump is currently calling,' says [https://icetcanada.org AJ Bell's] Mr Mould.<br><br><br>[https://smog.c-mart.in Traders anticipate] the Bank of [http://mikronmekatronik.com England] to [https://jobsite.hu cut rates] this week by a quarter of a [https://git.vthc.cn portion] point to 4.5 per cent, while the chance of three or more [https://theweedtube.org rate cuts] later this year have actually risen in the wake of the trade war shock.<br><br><br>Whenever [http://richardadamslaw.com stock markets] wobble it is [https://jobiteck.com appealing] to worry and offer, but [https://www.emeraldtreeboa.com holding] your nerve usually pays dividends, [https://grivaswines.com experts] say.<br><br><br>[https://geocadex.ro 'History] also shows that [https://www.keshillaperprinder.com volatility breeds] opportunity,' states [http://gogsb.soaringnova.com deVere's] Mr Green.<br><br><br>'Those who think twice threat being [http://wheellock.com.ar captured] on the incorrect side of [http://xn--80aafk5asmifc.xn--p1ai market movements]. But for those who gain from past [http://yhxcloud.com12213 interruptions] and take [http://jointheilluminati.co.za definitive] action, this period of volatility could present a few of the very best [https://prediksi2d.online opportunities] in years.'<br><br><br>Among the sectors Mr Green likes are [https://creativeamani.com European] banks, due to the fact that their shares are trading at [https://www.sex8.zone fairly low] rates and rates of interest in the [https://moh.gov.so eurozone] are lower than elsewhere. [http://www.gbsdedriesprong.be 'Defence] stocks, such as BAE Systems, are also [https://www.cocveterinary.com appealing] due to the fact that they will [http://aanline.com provide] a steady return,' he adds.<br><br><br>[https://blog.andoverfabrics.com Investors] must not hurry to sell while the picture is cloudy and can keep an eye out for possible [https://angkringansolo.com bargains]. One technique is to [http://124.222.181.1503000 invest regular] monthly [https://rusiedutton.co.jp amounts] into shares or funds rather than big [https://www.justbecousins.net lump amounts]. That way you minimize the danger of bad timing and, when markets fall, you can buy more shares for your money so, as and when costs increase again, you [https://insaoviet.net benefit].<br> |
Revision as of 08:37, 12 February 2025
It's been another 'Manic Monday' for savers and investors.
Having woken up at the start of last week to the game-changing news that an unidentified Chinese start-up had developed a low-cost synthetic intelligence (AI) chatbot, they learned over the weekend that Donald Trump really was going to perform his danger of launching a full-blown trade war.
The US President's choice to slap a 25 percent tariff on goods imported from Canada and Mexico, and a ten per cent tax on deliveries from China, sent stock markets into another tailspin, simply as they were recovering from recently's rout.
But whereas that sell-off was mainly restricted to AI and other innovation stocks, this time the effects of a potentially drawn-out trade war might be a lot more damaging and widespread, and maybe plunge the international economy - consisting of the UK - into a slump.
And the decision to delay the tariffs on Mexico for one month provided just partial reprieve on international markets.
So how should British financiers play this extremely unpredictable and unpredictable situation? What are the sectors and possessions to avoid, and who or what might become winners?
In its most basic type, a tariff is a tax enforced by one country on goods imported from another.
Crucially, the duty is not paid by the foreign business exporting however by the getting company, which pays the levy to its government, offering it with helpful tax incomes.
President Donald Trump talking to press reporters in Washington today after Air Force One touched down at Joint Base Andrews
These could be worth up to $250billion a year, or 0.8 per cent of US GDP, according to experts at Capital Economics.
Canada, Mexico and China together represent $1.3 trillion - or 42 percent - of the $3.1 trillion of goods imported into the US in 2023.
Most economic experts hate tariffs, mainly due to the fact that they cause inflation when companies pass on their increased import expenses to consumers, valetinowiki.racing sending costs higher.
But Mr Trump enjoys them - he has explained tariff as 'the most beautiful word in the dictionary'.
In his current election campaign, Mr Trump made obvious of his strategy to enforce import taxes on neighbouring countries unless they curbed the illegal flow of drugs and migrants into the US.
Next in Mr Trump's sights is the European Union, where he's said tariffs will 'certainly take place' - and potentially the UK.
The US President says Britain is 'escape of line' but a deal 'can be exercised'.
Nobody ought to be surprised the US President has actually chosen to shoot very first and ask concerns later on.
Trade sensitive companies in Europe were likewise hit by Mr Trump's tariffs, consisting of German carmakers Volkswagen and BMW
Shares in European consumer products business such as drinks giant Diageo, that makes Guinness, fell dramatically in the middle of worries of higher expenses for their products
What matters now is how other nations respond.
Canada, Mexico and China have actually currently retaliated in kind, triggering fears of a tit-for-tat escalation that might swallow up the whole international economy if others follow fit.
Mr Trump yields that Americans will bear some 'brief term' pain from his sweeping tariffs. 'But long term the United States has actually been ripped off by virtually every nation in the world,' he included.
Mr Trump states the tariffs enforced by former US President William McKinley in 1890 made America prosperous, ushering in a 'golden age' when the US overtook Britain as the world's most significant economy. He desires to repeat that formula to 'make America great again'.
But professionals say he risks a re-run of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 - a devastating measure presented just after the Wall Street stock market crash. It raised on a broad swathe of goods imported into the US, resulting in a collapse in international trade and exacerbating the effects of the Great Depression.
'The lessons from history are clear: protectionist policies seldom provide the intended benefits,' says Nigel Green, president of wealth supervisor deVere Group.
Rising expenses, inflationary pressures and interfered with international supply chains - which are much more inter-connected today than they were a century ago - will impact companies and consumers alike, he added.
'The Smoot-Hawley tariffs aggravated the Great Depression by stifling worldwide trade, annunciogratis.net and today's tariffs risk setting off the same destructive cycle,' Mr Green includes.
How Trump's personal crypto raises fears of 'unsafe' corruption in White House
Perhaps the very best historic guide to how Mr Trump's trade policy will impact financiers is from his first term in the White House.
'Trump's launch of tariffs in 2018 did raise earnings for America, however US business revenues took a hit that year and the S&P 500 index fell by a 5th, so markets have not surprisingly taken shock this time around,' states Russ Mould, director at investment platform AJ Bell.
The good news is that inflation didn't increase in the after-effects, which might 'lighten existing financial market fears that higher tariffs will suggest greater rates and higher costs will mean higher rate of interest,' Mr Mould includes.
The reason prices didn't jump was 'since customers and business refused to pay them and looked for cheaper choices - which is exactly the Trump plan this time around', Mr Mould explains. 'American importers and foreign sellers into the US elected to take the hit on margin and did not hand down the cost impact of the tariffs.'
To put it simply, business absorbed the higher costs from tariffs at the expenditure of their earnings and sparing consumers rate rises.
So will it be different this time round?
'It is hard to see how an escalation of trade tensions can do any good, to anyone, at least over the longer run,' says Inga Fechner, senior economic expert at investment bank ING. 'Economically speaking, escalating trade stress are a lose-lose scenario for all countries included.'
The impact of an international trade war could be devastating if targeted economies strike back, prices increase, trade fades and growth stalls or falls. In such a circumstance, interest rates might either rise, to suppress higher inflation, or fall, to enhance sagging development.
The agreement amongst specialists is that tariffs will suggest the cost of obtaining stays greater for longer to tame resurgent inflation, however the truth is nobody actually understands.
Tariffs may likewise lead to a falling oil price - as demand from market and consumers for dearer items droops - though a barrel of crude was trading higher on Monday amid fears that North American materials might be disrupted, resulting in lacks.
In any case a remarkable drop in the oil price might not be sufficient to conserve the day.
'Unless oil prices drop by 80 per cent to $15 a barrel it is unlikely lower energy costs will balance out the impacts of tariffs and existing inflation,' says Adam Kobeissi, creator coastalplainplants.org of an influential financier newsletter.
Investors are playing the 'Trump tariff trade' by changing out of risky properties and into standard safe houses - a trend professionals state is likely to continue while uncertainty continues.
Among the hardest hit are microchip and innovation stocks such as Nvidia, which fell 7 percent, and UK-based Arm, which is off 6 per cent, as financial markets brace for retaliation from China and curbs on semiconductor sales.
Other trade-sensitive business were likewise hit. Shares in German carmakers Volkswagen and BMW and durable goods business such as beverages giant Diageo fell dramatically amidst fears of higher expenses for their items.
But the most significant losers have been cryptocurrencies, which skyrocketed when Mr Trump won the US election but are now falling back to earth.
At $94,000, Bitcoin is down 15 per cent from its recent all-time high, while Ethereum - another significant cryptocurrency - fell by more than a third in the 60 hours considering that news of the Trump trade wars hit the headlines.
Crypto has actually taken a hit due to the fact that investors think Mr Trump's tariffs will sustain inflation, which in turn may trigger the US main bank, the Federal Reserve, to keep rates of interest at their current levels and even increase them. The impact tariffs may have on the course of rates of interest is uncertain. However, greater rates of interest make crypto, which does not produce an earnings, less attractive to financiers than when rates are low.
As investors get away these extremely unstable assets they have actually stacked into generally more secure bets such as gold, which is trading at a record high of $2,800 an ounce, and the dollar, which rose against significant currencies the other day.
Experts say the dollar's strength is really a benefit for the FTSE 100 since much of the British business in the index make a lot of their cash in the US currency, meaning they benefit when profits are equated into sterling.
The FTSE 100 fell the other day however by less than a number of the major indices.
It is not all doom and gloom.
'One huge hope is that the tariffs do not last, lespoetesbizarres.free.fr while another is that the US Federal Reserve helps out with some interest rate cuts, something for which Trump is currently calling,' says AJ Bell's Mr Mould.
Traders anticipate the Bank of England to cut rates this week by a quarter of a portion point to 4.5 per cent, while the chance of three or more rate cuts later this year have actually risen in the wake of the trade war shock.
Whenever stock markets wobble it is appealing to worry and offer, but holding your nerve usually pays dividends, experts say.
'History also shows that volatility breeds opportunity,' states deVere's Mr Green.
'Those who think twice threat being captured on the incorrect side of market movements. But for those who gain from past interruptions and take definitive action, this period of volatility could present a few of the very best opportunities in years.'
Among the sectors Mr Green likes are European banks, due to the fact that their shares are trading at fairly low rates and rates of interest in the eurozone are lower than elsewhere. 'Defence stocks, such as BAE Systems, are also appealing due to the fact that they will provide a steady return,' he adds.
Investors must not hurry to sell while the picture is cloudy and can keep an eye out for possible bargains. One technique is to invest regular monthly amounts into shares or funds rather than big lump amounts. That way you minimize the danger of bad timing and, when markets fall, you can buy more shares for your money so, as and when costs increase again, you benefit.