Investing Under the Influence (of regimes)

Ever wonder how factors such as inflation and gross domestic product (GDP) (also known as macroeconomic influences) affect the markets and investing? They pop up in financial news headlines all of the time, but why should the average investor care about them?

Let’s look at some of these factors, the market “regimes” they form, and how analyzing these regimes is helping us develop our latest pioneering risk-managed investment strategies.

Before I get into discussing the future of Flexible Plan, let me share a bit about the past that shaped it.

The dark ages of data and computing

Back in the 1970s when Flexible Plan’s founder and president, Jerry Wagner, laid the groundwork for our rules-based approach to investing, actionable data of all types was hard to come by. Market data—items such as advancing and declining issues, new highs and lows, prices of indexes, and interest rates—was usually provided by subscription and delivered in hard copy. This meant the data was generally limited and slow to arrive.

The same was true of economic data—items such as GDP, inflation, and unemployment figures. In fact, economic data usually got to reporting agencies and industries more slowly than market data. It was also often significantly revised and trickled out to the public at a snail’s pace. This patchy, slow stream of data meant that most early rules-based investment strategies relied largely on market data.

Further limiting the development of strategies during this time was the computing power available. The computers of the 1970s and 1980s were slow and had limited memory and data storage.