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Writer's pictureRobin Powell

Young investors are more cautious than you think


A generation of super-savers





The survey’s authors attributed this trend to this generation growing up in the wake of the global financial crisis, fiscal austerity and a more uncertain job market.

This trend has only been amplified by COVID-19. The 2020 version of the same survey found “next-generation” investors are placing a greater priority on diversification, hedging, liquidity and defensive assets.

Causes for caution

There are fundamental reasons for this defensive turn among the young. One is that unemployment during the pandemic has taken a higher toll on those in their late teens and early 20s, a generation over-represented in service industries like restaurants and travel-related industries hard hit by the shutdowns.

Data from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development show the Gen Z age cohort of the labour market have been the worst affected by the pandemic, with an unemployment rate in developed economies nearly twice as high as that of older generations — Baby Boomers, Gen X and the Millennials.

Younger people are also comparatively harder hit by housing affordability in many countries as spiralling asset price inflation puts home ownership increasingly out of reach. In the UK, research by Institute for Fiscal Studies shows the share of young people owning their homes has collapsed in the past 20 years.

A third driver of caution is debt, a factor that is most pronounced in the US, where younger people carry onerous student debt burdens often into middle age. Going into the financial crisis in 2008, Generation X members (those born from the mid-60s to around 1980) were roughly the same age as millennials living under COVID-19 today, yet the former group had on average twice the assets the millennials have now.

Belief in the future

So how to connect the worsening macro-economic climate for the young and the attraction of trading apps and short-term speculation among some? One theory is that the sheer hopelessness that many feel only encourages high-risk trading. If you feel you have few viable choices, you are more likely to roll the dice.

Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority warned in March this year that the accessibility of low-cost trading apps, together with slick marketing, were encouraging increasing numbers of people, many of them young and desperate, into crypto currencies, so-called hot stocks and foreign exchange trading.

Of course, this could end up exacerbating the trend toward risk-aversion as the bulk of young investors who speculate in exotic instruments watch the inevitable losses of their more reckless cohort. And this latter group may be even less likely next time to consider investment, even if offered a diversified, long-term strategy.

But Morgan Housel says we do a disservice to the young by lecturing them about investing and not appreciating that they live in a different era with different pressures. And any case, older investors aren’t necessarily any smarter.

“A lot of blunders come from investors who lived through one era expect the current era to play out in an identical way,” Housel says. “When it doesn’t, frustration often comes through by claiming the younger generation is oblivious to a lesson your generation learned the hard way.”

The answer to this starts with appreciating the environment that young people live in now is completely different to what their elders experienced. Work is more insecure, new technology is obliterating jobs, education costs are higher, debt burdens ore onerous, housing is more unaffordable, social safety nets are thinner and the pandemic has only added to the uncertainty. Of course, this is even before we consider the implications of climate change for the next generations.

So we need to listen and we need to learn. Investing for the future is easier to do if one feels there is a viable future awaiting.





Picture: Goh Rhy Yan via Unsplash
© The Evidence-Based Investor MMXXI
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