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Decisions made with short-term expedience in mind can result in lingering regrets
Thursday 01 Sep 2022 Author: Tom Sieber

The newly announced energy price cap will have provided a big jolt to many households around the country.

Contained in the current energy crisis is an important lesson about thinking and investing for the long term – a lesson which can be applied across multiple different spheres.

Back in December 2015 we ran a piece in Shares about the UK energy sector.

A then recent event in the UK grid provided us with a useful hook for the article – with a National Grid (NG.) warning of inadequate supply forcing Britain to turn to ‘last resort’ measures.

With back-up generation put into use, the wholesale market price hit £400 per MWh (megawatt hour) which, as we observed then, was around 10 times their usual rate.

We posed the question if this was a sign of things to come. Unfortunately it was. On 23 August the average day-ahead auction power price in the UK hit a record £539.59 per MWh.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine and the subsequent disruption to gas supplies has had a big impact and there have been lots of different factors which have led to this point.

But it was possible to see as long as seven years ago that the UK needed to do more to make its energy sector more resilient.

As we wrote back then: ‘Years of under-investment and delays on energy infrastructure projects mean progress on the Hinkley Point C facility is now a national imperative. Another two projects of roughly the same size as Hinkley would be needed merely to replace the nuclear capacity expected to go offline in the next decade.’

Arguably little has changed in the intervening period. The article also highlighted a likely dependence on gas to bridge the gap between more polluting fossil fuels and renewables.

But Centrica (CNA) and the UK Government decided in their wisdom to close gas storage operations at Rough in 2017 when the supply of gas was plentiful.

This decision is now being hurriedly reversed. But it’s all very short term and a bit late in the day.

A similar example of short-term thinking could arguably be at play among the major institutional investors in some of the London market’s dwindling list of technology companies.

The takeover of chip designer Arm by Japan’s Softbank during a period when a Brexit-inspired plunge in the pound made UK stocks vulnerable is one example where shareholders thought, wrongly, that a bird in the hand was worth two in the bush.

And the recent approaches for software firms Aveva (AVV.) and Micro Focus International (MCRO), assuming they go through, could tell a similar tale.

Your own investing should be conducted with a long-term view of events, assuming you still have the luxury of a decent amount of time before you need to access your investment pot. Don’t make decisions in haste which leave you with lingering regret somewhere down line.

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