A $736 billion investor that survived the stock-market crash of a lifetime has 3 simple pieces of advice for everyone who's just starting out
- The collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 tolled the bell for the global financial system as we knew it.
- Martin Gilbert, the co-CEO of Standard Life Aberdeen, a $736 billion asset manager and the largest active manager in the UK, helped his firm survive the crisis by spotting the red flags early enough.
- He recently shared with Business Insider three things that investors can learn from that experience - especially those who weren't there.
Every September for the rest of time, Wall Street will reflect on the surreal crisis of 10 years ago.
It will mark the anniversary of the demise of Lehman Brothers, the giant investment banks that folded as America's housing market and several investment products tied to it collapsed. Like Bear Stearns, many other firms were forced to make deals or shut down.
Aberdeen Asset Management, now Aberdeen Standard Investments following a merger in 2017, was one of the firms that survived that period.
It can partly thank its CEO, Martin Gilbert, for his decision to sound the alarm on collateralized debt obligations before the risky financial product helped plunge the global financial system into chaos.
"I have to say though, the atmosphere in the office was not one of panic," Gilbert, now co-CEO of the $736 billion asset manager, told Business Insider of the days after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy on September 15, 2008.
He added: "It was stressful and intense, but it was all about keeping a cool head in those days and weeks in the immediate aftermath."
Gilbert recently shared with Business Insider via email three things he learned from that tumultuous time, particularly for investors who were not professionals then:
"Don't sell at the point of maximum pain. The scale of the great financial crisis was really something else but there are common threads running through all crises. Markets have a habit of bouncing back and you have to do whatever you can to take a step back.
Another lesson is to stick to the basics. Invest in what you understand, spread your risk and know that if something looks too good to be true, it almost certainly is. The products that the banks were churning out in the run-up to the crisis were ever more complex and built on even shakier fundamentals.
This relates to another lesson, and that is that the nature of a globalized economy makes neatly apportioning blame very hard.
Banks have rightly taken a lot of the blame for the crisis, but it was a failing at all levels by governments, regulators, investors, rating agencies, and the banks. When the crisis hit, each party spent quite some time pointing the finger at everyone else. No one party was to blame, but they were all culpable."
Now read:
- JPMorgan studied decades of market history and compiled a playbook for guarding against losses in the next recession
- A fund manager who's crushing nearly all of her peers breaks down 3 under-the-radar stocks driving her strong performance
UBS details all the possible outcomes of the midterm elections and why a so-called blue tsunami could be the most devastating for stocks