by Kara Lilly, Investment Strategist, Mawer Investment's The Art of Boring
From our latest discussion paperā¦
I was six or seven when I first came across Alice Through the Looking-Glass in one of the rooms at my grandparentsā home. While the adults spoke over tea, I would sneak away into the backroom and lose myself in a world of peculiar characters.
One sequence always stuck with me. It occurs shortly after Alice meets the Red Queen and asks her age, to which the Queen answers: one hundred and one, five months and a day.
āI canāt believe THAT!ā said Alice.
āCanāt you?ā the Queen said in a pitying tone.
āTry again: draw a long breath, and shut your eyes.ā
Alice laughed. āThereās no use trying,ā she said: āone CANāT believe impossible things.ā
āI daresay you havenāt had much practice,ā said the Queen. āWhen I was your age, I always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes Iāve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.ā
ā Lewis Carroll
It is a subtle exchange that can be easily overlooked. I love it for the outlandish proposition it makes: not only can we think about impossible things, we should do so on a regular basis.
Like Alice, investors today find themselves in a strange world. In the last year, the price of oil halved, Russia invaded Ukraine, central banks responded to the threat of deflation with massive stimulus, and the risk-free rates of Spain, Italy and Portugal fell below the equivalent yield in the United States. Even the yield on some of Nestleās bonds turned negative. In short, many events transpired that were previously considered impossible by some in the investment community. This underscores that much of what is considered āunfathomableā is clearly not impossible.
Kara Lilly, CFA
Investment Strategist
Read the full discussion paper here.