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Deep waves: the quiet undertow of intangible assets

Deep waves: the quiet undertow of intangible assets
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Our definition of assets and their economic value has been changing over time. In the 20th century, machines, factories, and transportation were the assets on a company’s balance sheet. Today, value is dominated by “intangible” assets. Brands, technologies, patents, copyrights, synergies, and business models determine the lion’s share of company worth. At this point, 90% of the capitalization of the S&P 500 Index is accounted for by intangibles,1 a huge jump from 36% in 1985. This paper builds on the technological innovation and taxation themes presented in Deep Water Waves, a paper2 published by the Franklin Templeton Investment Institute, to explore the definition of intangible assets and draws conclusions on the implications for investors. Further, the paper dovetails with the Investment Institute’s Franklin Templeton Thinks Equity Markets piece, Growth or value? For active managers, it can be both.3 All things considered, the evolving treatment of intangible assets may be one of the most impactful trends in the global economy, making them impossible to ignore.

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Reflexivity and the risk of market feedback loops

In periods of expansion, reflexivity supports rising valuations and expanding credit availability; but like leverage, it operates in both directions

Mean reversion: powerful until the regime shifts

Markets often reward patience. Mean reversion has humbled many predictions of a new era. Yet regime shifts do occur. When the base conditions change, the old...

Finding value when momentum runs hot

As AI enthusiasm and speculative behaviour reshape equity markets, John Goetz and Dan Babkes from Pzena Investment Management say advisers should look beyond...

Your brain on red: why the wealth management industry’s crisis playbook is making things worse

The wealth management industry believes market panic is an education problem. In reality, it’s a biology problem.