How Should Investors Handle Iraq?

 | Jun 12, 2014 02:21PM ET

h2 Stunning Advance Brings New Risk For Investors

If top policy makers and military leaders were caught off guard by the military action in Iraq, as reported by The Wall Street Journal , then we can assume the same can be said for many investors. From Reuters:

The stunning advance of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which aims to build a Caliphate ruled on medieval Sunni Islamic principles across Syria and Iraq, is the biggest threat to Iraq since U.S. troops withdrew in 2011. Hundreds of thousands of people have fled their homes in fear as the militants seized the main cities of the Tigris valley north of Baghdad in a matter of days. The security forces of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish north, known as the peshmerga, or those who confront death, took over bases in Kirkuk vacated by the army, a spokesman said. “The whole of Kirkuk has fallen into the hands of peshmerga,” said peshmerga spokesman Jabbar Yawar. “No Iraqi army remains in Kirkuk now.”

Fear Can Be Tamed With Contingency Planning

Events that catch investors by surprise often induce fear and tossing and turning at night. Making investment decisions based primarily on fear is a recipe for stress, frustration, and disappointing performance in the markets. A recent example was the scary 1929 parallel chart that was making the rounds on Wall Street in the first quarter. Rather than liquidating stocks based on the depressing 1929 head-and-shoulders analogy, we penned the following on February 11 as an alternative and more rational approach to portfolio risk management:

If we know the neckline has to break before the 1929 analogy can play out, then we also know as long as the S&P 500 stays above 1,746 and 1,737, then the odds of a 1929-like crash are somewhat limited. Therefore, one way to handle the 1929 scenario in 2014 is to:

  1. Not lose too much sleep as long as the S&P 500 stays above the neckline (1,746 and 1,737 are good reference points).
  2. If the neckline is violated, begin to reduce risk in a pre-determined manner using an IF, THEN strategy.

Did The 1929 Plan Help Reduce Stress?

The before and after charts say the simple and hypothetical “don’t lose too much sleep” strategy was useful from a psychological and investment perspective.