The cost of living is going up and investment returns are going down, so now is the time to make sure our finances are strong enough to withstand any shocks
Rising interest rates. Inflation. Recession. Stagflation. It’s a nasty list of potential challenges for our finances. From the post-Covid boom that no one expected us to have, the economic situation seems to have gone pear-shaped fast
Just last year, the Reserve Bank was telling us there would be no need for interest rate rises until at least 2023. High inflation was something we hadn’t dealt with in decades, and the economy was bubbling along.
Now we have inflation set to rise to around 7% by year’s end, interest rates are on the way up and there are concerns those rising rates will slow economic growth and push us into recession.
No one can say for certain what’s ahead, but at times like this it pays to take stock of your situation and ensure your finances are structured to withstand what gets thrown your way.
“These are very uncertain times,” says Richard Dinham, Fidelity International’s head of client solutions and retirement. “For most of our lifetimes inflation hasn’t been a problem and interest rates have been falling.”
But he says supply problems, widespread labour shortages and the spike in oil and other prices caused by the war in the Ukraine are all feeding into an inflation shock.
“It will probably be short term, but it may be around for a year or two,” he says. “And that has led to central banks putting up interest rates to try to control it.”
While there have been rate rises in recent decades, Dinham says most people have never seen rises of the magnitude we’re now seeing.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2022-Ausgabe von Money Magazine Australia.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2022-Ausgabe von Money Magazine Australia.
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