As long-term investors, we see risk as permanent loss of capital rather than volatility. For us, avoiding big losses is more important than picking big winners. We are in a period of unprecedented disruption: popularism, the pandemic, the trade war with China, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which are all accelerating a number of structural changes. Highly indebted companies, those with poor corporate governance or with unsustainable business models are especially vulnerable.
Often these risks are not reflected in share prices and it is possible that passive investing is supporting the share prices of companies whose fundamentals do not support current valuations, thus creating price distortions. We believe that by being more selective with our stock selection, focusing on reasonably valued, high-quality companies operating in profitable and growing industries, we can exclude high-risk businesses that would be impossible to avoid when investing through the classic index trackers.
Portfolio balance is the second way that we seek to reduce the risk of permanent loss of capital. Portfolios are tilted to the outcomes we see as the most probable but are always constructed to ensure a spread of exposures that would do well in the event of the unexpected. This has been important during the pandemic and years following, where the effects have been both unpredictable and far reaching.
When considering an appropriate investment strategy, trustees must ask themselves - does allocating capital according to market capitalisation, while concurrently ignoring valuation measures and business fundamentals, really accord with the fiduciary duty of trustees? This is particularly important today as investors adjust to a changing world. We believe we need to retain the flexibility to invest strategically.