NEW YORK:
Investors around the world have retreated from risk before. But this time is
different.
So says Arne
Holzhausen, a senior economist at Allianz, an insurer based in Munich. He says
what's keeping people from returning to taking chances with their money is not
just a fear of loss, but a mistrust of the financial system. His prediction:
Investors will remain cautious for several years to come.
Depending on
your view, Holzhausen is qualified either to understand this new cautious
world, or to exaggerate its impact. A German, he shares with his countrymen a
reluctance to gamble with money even in the best of times. He also has seen the
damage when the appetite for risk swings from one extreme to the other: He
lived and studied in Japan in 1989-1990 when overconfident investors pushed
stock prices to a record, then in 1994-1995 after many had sold at a loss and
the economy had entered a two-decade slump.
Excerpts
below have been edited for clarity and length:
Some
economists talk about ``scarring'' from the financial crisis. What do they mean
by that term?
Holzhausen:
If you have a bad experience in your young, formative years, you don't easily
forget. In the beginning of the (last) decade, there was the tech bubble, then
came the financial crisis. The generations in their 30s and 40s will keep
cautious.
It's not so
much about value. People are deeply skeptical about the fairness of financial
markets, heads the banks win, tails you lose.
People have
been burned before, but they always come back. The `70s were terrible for
investors, yet they ended up buying stocks the next decade, and borrowed more
and spent.
Holzhausen:
After the oil shock of the 1970s, I don't think there was such mistrust. That
was seen as an external shock. (Now) people think something is rotten in the
financial system. People see financial markets as a casino.
When I
started (as an economist) in the `80s, the mood was you have to buy stocks. You
heard it even in China, ``To get rich is glorious.'' Now, people don't feel
that anymore. People want to get as much distance as possible from the
financial system. They want to be in control of their financial matters.
How much
longer do you think households will continue to spend slowly, sell stocks and
shun debt? Is it five years? Ten years?
Holzhausen:
That's hard to predict, but look at the Japanese: They have not been in the
mood (to spend and invest) for more than two decades. That might be an extreme
case, but with low growth in the foreseeable future (in Europe) and a rapidly
aging society, the revival of animal spirits is certainly not around the
corner. Five years at least.
In the US,
investors are starting to inch back into stocks. The Japanese stock market is
up 45 per cent in nine months. Some households there are buying again, too.
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