On the Fence About a Robot Lawn Mower? This Service Lets You Rent One


Today’s robot lawn mowers are better than ever, with superior, often wire-free navigation and the ability to tackle more complex yards. The downside is that the best robot lawnmowers can cost you anywhere between $1,000 to $3,000, with top-tier models going for as much as $5,000. 

That’s what makes Volta‘s “Robot-as-a-Service” model so interesting. Instead of buying the robot mower outright, you lease it via a monthly subscription fee until you’ve fully paid it off, at which point you can choose to continue paying a lower subscription rate for remote functionality or halt the subscription entirely.

If you’re subscription-weary, this may not be appealing, but as someone who didn’t want to spend thousands on a robot lawnmower that couldn’t handle my large, complex lawn, I found it made sense. I deployed the Volta in a real-world setting to see if subscription robot lawn care is the wave of the future or an unfortunate blip.

What is Volta?

Volta lawn mower on my lawn

The Volta lawn mower mowing circles on my lawn. The pattern is a little erratic, but it gets the job done.

Alan Bradley/CNET

The Volta Smart Robot Lawn Mower or, more cheekily, the Volta Lawn Companion, is a compact, AI-driven mower that relies on Global Navigation Satellite System and built-in sensors to navigate your lawn. The company emphasizes that the system doesn’t requires any cumbersome buried wires, antennas or other boundary markers to guide the bot, which is designed to learn and evolve with each mowing session on your property. 

This isn’t necessarily groundbreaking; many of our top picks tested at CNET now support lidar navigation, vision or wireless RTK to help you cut the cord. However, in Volta’s case, the system is iterative. Instead of one major mowing session each week, the robot makes a series of smaller, frequent passes to keep your lawn exquisitely trimmed without building up excessive grass clippings. Volta’s Lawn Intelligence system will gather data about your lawn’s grass, terrain and microclimates over time and learn how your lawn responds to rain, heat, shade and mowing patterns, then automatically refine its behavior in response. 

That’s all a long-winded way of saying that it’s using AI to improve mowing over time, which is what a lot of robot lawn mower manufacturers are doing these days. The key that makes or breaks them is how well this works in practice, which is what I set out to test. 

How the Volta subscription model works

Volta on the lawn from a side profile

The Volta comes with three different subscription tiers, or you can buy it outright. 

Alan Bradley/CNET

Unlike other robot mowers, you don’t buy the Volta outright. Instead, a 24-month commitment is required, after which you fully own the robot. The company told us that after the financed period (typically 18 or 24 months), the customer keeps the Lawn Intelligence membership (PRO/ULTRA) for free. 

The subscription model is broken into three tiers:

Pro (the entry tier)

    • $79 a month during the 24-month commitment; $1,656 list price.

    • It includes core AI learning, standard mowing schedules, weekly path optimization, basic lawn health insights, GNSS Basic positioning, and monitoring.

    • After 24 months, the price drops to $16 a month for continued Pro service.

    Ultra (the company says this is the most popular tier)

      • $89 a month during the 24-month commitment; $2,136 list price.

      • Ultra includes remote AI learning, real-time path optimization, AI-powered Q&A called “Lawn Chat,” personalized lawn reports, Digital Twin lawn modeling, GNSS Ultra with anti-theft GPS and weather-adaptive optimization.

      • After 24 months, the price drops to $59 a month.

      Ultra 2X

        • $119 a month during the 24-month commitment. $3,999 list price.

        • Covers up to half an acre, supports two robots and two charging stations, multi-robot coordination, VIP support and advanced features.

        • After 24 months, the price drops to $99 a month.

        Traditional robot lawn mowers require a single upfront purchase of the hardware, typically between $1,000 and $5,000, depending on the model. 

        Compare this to Volta’s hardware totals: at the Pro tier, you’ll pay $1,656 before fully owning the mower, up to $3,999 at the Ultra 2x tier. While you’ll pay less upfront and in smaller increments, you’re not getting an overall discount by choosing the subscription route over other manufacturers.

        Warranty support

        Volta lawn mower dimensions

        The Volta is one of the more compact robot lawn mowers in terms of dimensions, about the size of the Eufy E15. 

        Alan Bradley/CNET

        Volta offers ongoing customer support through remote help and email, plus local dealer assistance for installation, battery work and repairs. It also says confirmed defects are replaced or reshipped at no extra cost. Higher-tier Ultra plans add “Infinite Care” full-unit replacement as long as the service stays active. The company also bundles 24 months of Lawn Intelligence service with the mower, after which the service can be renewed at reduced rates or the mower can continue in autonomous-only mode, so it does involve an active service commitment for the full feature set rather than just a one-time purchase. 

        Compared with a standard manufacturer’s warranty, the big advantage is that Volta combines warranty coverage with service, remote diagnostics and — in some cases — replacement coverage that extends beyond basic defect repair. The downside is that many of those benefits depend on keeping the service active, making it more of a hardware-plus-service package than a traditional warranty alone.

        Using the Volta

        Volta from the front with sensors illustrated

        With its onboard sensors and AI, the Volta should get smarter and more familiar with your yard over time.

        Alan Bradley/CNET

        I began testing Volta in a small subsection of my lawn where the terrain is relatively flat and there are few obstacles, and slowly expanded its area of operation over several days, experimenting with its scheduling features and other options. My lawn is large and complex, with lots of bushes and trees, raised beds, other obstacles and uneven terrain, including several (fairly gentle) slopes. Taken as a whole, it comes in at around 17,000 square feet. 

        Setup wasn’t as easy as I hoped

        Volta getting set up with its charger and accessories

        The setup for the Volta wasn’t as simple as I would have liked. But once I got over the hump, it was up and running. 

        Alan Bradley/CNET

        First, let’s start with the Volta App. The setup was immediately problematic when the QR code provided with my mower led to a dead link. This, it turns out, was emblematic of an issue plaguing the entire app, which is riddled with dead links. For instance, the “Chat with Us” option under support returns a baffling “Oops: There was an issue with launching WhatsApp” error. And the link to data about your account from the Service and Warranty page returns a 404 error, for example. I also had issues getting the app to connect to my Volta and the Volta to connect to Wi-Fi during the initial setup phase, which led me to restart the process multiple times.

        Wi-Fi connectivity, it turns out, is absolutely essential for the Volta to perform properly. I have a large lawn, and initially the base was in an area not covered by my network. Attempting to run it under those conditions made the bot unusable: It mowed erratically, sometimes circling the same patch of grass interminably or stopping at random spots far from the dock. To resolve the issue, I had to install a Wi-Fi extender and ensure the base was fully within the network coverage.

        After the Wi-Fi issue was resolved, however, the bot performed fairly well. It attaches to a small charging dock that you place somewhere in your lawn, and despite my initial misgivings about leaving the entire apparatus exposed to the elements, it’s proven very durable, despite heavy rain on several days after installing it.

        The weather can complicate things

        Volta lawn mower on the grass

        Volta doesn’t have a manual mode, so you’re relying on its AI smarts to mow your lawn without missing spots.

        Alan Bradley/CNET

        However, the rain presented a separate issue. It led to several areas of my lawn being quite sodden, and even to some standing water. In fairness, the Volta marketing materials are clear that the bot is intended for well-kempt lawns that are relatively simple and flat, and indicate that it will struggle in rough terrain. While it avoided areas of standing water, it also steered clear of softer sections of the lawn that should still have been serviceable, sometimes in erratic patterns that didn’t seem to match the moisture levels. 

        However, the bot did a very solid job of avoiding obstacles such as tree trunks, a wood pile behind my home, bushes and shrubs and my large driveway. There were two occasions when it bumped into the side of the house and seemed unable to extricate itself, forcing me to shut it down and manually return it to the dock. 

        These issues are particularly worrisome because the Volta lacks a manual control mode. You have to trust the bot’s AI navigation entirely and allow it to operate completely autonomously, which is frustrating when you watch it fail to deal with issues in real time, or want to give it more specific guidance about which parts of an area belong to you and where the neighbor’s lawn begins.

        “Volta is built to maintain a healthy lawn, not to recover a neglected one,” Volta CEO Silvio Revelli explained to me over email. “It expects a lawn that’s already cared for, and from that baseline it takes over — every day, gently, where the lawn most needs it. The way I describe it internally: the Companion ‘massages’ the lawn where it most needs care, and leaves alone the parts that are doing well on their own. It learns to tell the difference.” 

        Revelli went on to say that the Volta needs several weeks in order to reach full effectiveness. “This kind of agronomic awareness takes a little while to emerge — depending on the size of the area and how much continuous activity it sees. After one to two weeks, a ‘Lawn Report’ appears on your app homepage: that’s the moment the Companion has built up enough of a model of your specific lawn to start practicing real per-cell care, rather than just covering ground.  

        Quiet, consistent performance and solid obstacle avoidance

        Volta near the edge of the asphalt while mowing

        Obstacle avoidance is quite good, even if its pattern seems erratic. 

        Alan Bradley/CNET

        On the upside, the Volta is incredibly quiet; beyond a few yards, you can barely make out the sound of its motor or blades. It’s also lightweight and seems fairly rugged, though it won’t reach speeds where collisions would pose much of a threat to the chassis. 

        After resolving the Wi-Fi issue, the mower did an excellent job of avoiding large obstacles, including the walls of buildings, and with the “Edge Precision” setting enabled, it mowed very snugly along the perimeter of those obstacles.

        Its mowing patterns are pretty erratic; instead of just consecutive vertical or horizontal passes, it often moves diagonally, sometimes seemingly without any obvious reason. That said, while the individual strips it mows are quite narrow, it does a thorough job of evenly cutting the entire assigned area. The grass looks trim and neat afterward, and there’s no real visual evidence of how erratically it maneuvers. 

        “[W]hat can read as erratic movement is actually the opposite — it’s per-cell agronomic decision-making,” said Revelli over email to explain the behavior I was seeing. “Volta makes a very very precise agronomic map of your lawn. The Companion chooses where to mow based on what it sees the lawn needs that day, not a preprogrammed pattern. On a lawn that’s still recovering, or after heavy rain when sections are soft, that intelligence has less to work with and the behavior looks less coherent than it is — what looked like ‘steering clear of softer sections’ is exactly that awareness kicking in.” 

        The company did inform me that because my lawn is split at the entrance, with sections on either side, a feature that might help is to tap “add crossing” on the path between the two sections, and the Companion will move directly between them instead of going around the house. I haven’t had a chance to try this yet, however.   

        Is the Volta Smart Robot Lawn Mower worth renting?

        A top view of the Volta mower at work.

        The subscription model may make sense if you aren’t sure if a robot lawn mower can handle your yard. 

        Alan Bradley/CNET

        For smaller, simpler yards, I’d recommend the Volta, particularly since you could probably get away with the Pro tier without missing many of the advanced features in the more expensive offerings. Even if your lawn has a fair number of larger obstacles, I think the Volta is a good fit in this scenario, as long as you give it a good initial trim before you start the Volta’s regular maintenance schedule.

        The company did, however, make it explicit to me that the Volta isn’t for everyone: 

        • Not for steep lawns (handles occasional 40% grades, but not a hillside)
        • Not for neglected lawns, uneven terrain, or heavy recovery work on damaged grass
        • Not for people who want manual control or remote control — Volta learns on its own, and once it knows the garden, it tells the user what to do, not the other way around. Users who want that kind of control should look elsewhere. 

        I’d also add that for any larger lawn with a lot of irregular terrain, rough or sandy areas, sharp changes in elevation or other challenges, you’re better off with a robot mower with more manual control options — or one that’s better suited to difficult terrain. While the Volta’s AI features are reasonably impressive, no amount of learning can overcome its small, low-profile, low-torque frame. Also, if you’re unable to ensure that at least the base of the unit is fully covered by reliable Wi-Fi, the Volta isn’t the mower for you.

        Buying vs. renting a robot lawn mower

        Volta lawn mower from the front

        The wire-free navigation is a big selling point for the Volta, but there are now many models that have the same capability. 

        Alan Bradley/CNET

        How the price shakes out depends largely on which subscription model you choose, but the Volta generally compares pretty well to competitors, including the Eufy E15 or the Ecovacs GoBot A3000, in terms of capabilities and features. All three models offer wireless navigation and generally similar smart features and capabilities. 

        If you eschew the long-term subscription model for the Volta and just pay cash upfront, the lowest tier is $999 after the discount; the mid-tier option is $1,299; and the highest tier is $2,299. 

        By contrast, the Eufy E15 is usually $2,300 (currently on sale for just $1,000), while the Goat A3000 is $3,000. The Goat A3000 might be a slightly better choice for lumpier yards, while the Eufy model may be a better option if you’re obsessed with presentation and want clean, parallel lines. 

        However, in my experience with the Volta, it performs well in the type of lawn and environment it was designed to handle, and can be had for less if you’re willing to sacrifice some of its advanced features. Ultimately, if you’re uncertain about whether a robot lawn mower can handle your lawn, the Volta isn’t a bad way to take one for a test drive without a commitment. But in the long run, with the subscription fees tacked on, you’ll eventually be spending more on the Volta after 24 months than you would just buying a similar device such as the Eufy E15 up front — especially when it’s substantially discounted at the moment. 





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The Paradox of Preppers Who Want Stock Tips

I’ve had some rather paradoxical conversations in recent weeks. One second, I’m standing there talking to people about prepping—buying water, hand-crank radios, and whatnot. Then two minutes later, they’re asking me, “Lars, which shares should I buy?” There’s something deeply contradictory about that, isn’t there?

This captures the strange moment we find ourselves in. Drones are flying over Copenhagen, jet fighters are scrambling over Danish airspace, and yet many Danish investors have made substantial money on their shares in recent years. The disconnect between our anxieties and our investment behaviours has never been more pronounced.

We’re facing what I’d characterise as three dark clouds hanging over the investment landscape. These aren’t merely theoretical concerns—they’re real, measurable risks that could fundamentally alter the investment environment we’ve grown accustomed to over the past decade.

Three Dark Clouds Over the Financial Markets

The Sovereign Debt Crisis: My Greatest Concern

Let me be absolutely clear: the sovereign debt crisis is my greatest concern. The United States has public debt exceeding 100% of GDP. Britain faces similar challenges. We’re seeing massive deficits—in America, it’s somewhere between 6 and 8% of GDP this year, depending on how you calculate it. France has major problems. Japan has major problems. Italy has major problems.

The American federal government’s interest payments will soon reach 5% of GDP. That’s more than the Americans spend on defence. Think about that for a moment—roughly a quarter of all federal tax revenues will go to servicing debt. If interest rates rise, you can see how this becomes extremely difficult to manage.

Here’s the crucial calculation: if interest rates are higher than nominal GDP growth, you get an explosive development in debt as a percentage of GDP. Let’s say the American economy grows at 2% in real terms with 2% inflation—that’s 4% nominal GDP growth. If the interest rate on government debt is 5%, the debt burden will simply grow and grow and grow.

Donald Trump has talked extensively about growing out of the debt problems with all his brilliant ideas that will boost growth. Unfortunately, there’s little evidence this is happening. We got labour market figures last week that further confirm the American labour market is cooling, and GDP growth in the first half of the year is below one and a half percent annualised. The economy isn’t booming.

But there’s another way to get nominal growth up—create inflation. Every Danish homeowner who owned property in the 1970s can tell you this story. The high inflation of the 1970s ate away homeowners’ debt. And if you’re a government that creates inflation, perhaps by ringing up the central bank and saying “print some money,” well, that solves one problem whilst creating another.

The temptation to let the printing press run becomes greater and greater if you don’t want to make difficult decisions. We’ve seen Donald Trump at war with the Federal Reserve. He’s talked about firing Lisa Cook, who sits on the Federal Reserve Board—though last week the American Supreme Court told him, “You can’t do that, Donald. You need to argue your case better.” That’s been kicked to the corner for now. But the pressure is there. He’s said he won’t reappoint Jerome Powell when his term expires next year. He’s appointed Stephen Rennenkampf to the FOMC, the leading monetary policy body at the Federal Reserve. Rennenkampf, you’ll recall, voted for a half-percentage-point rate cut rather than the quarter-point cut we got at the last FOMC meeting. These are all signs of politicisation.

Geopolitical Uncertainty: The Highest in 35 Years

The geopolitical situation must be described as unstable and frightening—probably the highest level of uncertainty in at least 30 to 35 years. We’ve had the drones over Copenhagen, the entire situation in Europe, and recently there’s been speculation about whether the Chinese might make moves regarding a possible invasion of Taiwan. We have the conflict in the Middle East—Iran, Israel, Gaza—which creates concerns.

As I write this, we’re not far from Forum Copenhagen where we recently had a major European summit. I must be honest there was a lot of police around. Many helicopters in the air. We’ve heard a jet fighter or two. I have children asking about all this. What’s all this about? It’s rather uncomfortable on a practical level.

When this starts affecting air traffic, potentially sea transport, our supply chains, company earnings, and economic development, it becomes negative for markets. So far, markets have taken it remarkably calmly, but the threat is there.

We’ve agreed in Europe that we need to increase our defence spending because there’s a genuine threat from Putin’s Russia. There’s much talk about why there wasn’t drone defence around Copenhagen Airport and other Danish airports. Because there hasn’t been a need for it – it was completely unthinkable just a few years ago, but suddenly it’s something we must consider.

Drone defence isn’t free. I don’t know what it costs to send an F-16 fighter jet up to fire missiles at drones over Copenhagen Airport, but it’s not cheap. And whilst I hope it doesn’t come to that, it’s a stark illustration that we need to spend more on defence in Denmark and Europe in general.

If we already have weak public finances in Europe (much less so in Denmark), this pushes the problem further. We need more money, which pushes interest rates up. More government bonds need to be issued, and governments must pay those interest costs. If doubts arise about their willingness to pay, inflation expectations start rising too.

The Ukrainians are currently having some success pressuring the Russian economy by hitting oil refineries, oil storage, and other targets that push up petrol prices. Russian petrol prices have risen 40% this year. Petrol rationing has been introduced in many parts of Russia. We’re seeing images from Russia of kilometre-long queues because of rationing. It’s hitting the Russian economy.

There are probably quite a few Russians who are thoroughly fed up with this. We’re talking about Russian losses on the front over the past three years approaching a million men dead or wounded. So it’s not certain the war is quite as popular as some might wish. Perhaps someone would like to remove Putin. And let’s say that happens, and there’s a positive regime change in Russia. The geopolitical situation would change immediately, and perhaps we could reduce our fear that we need to spend 3-4-5% of GDP on defence. That picture changes if we’re facing a different Russia.

The Tech Concentration Risk

If we look at how the global equity market is constructed, somewhere between 70 and 80 percent of the global equity market – perhaps even more – consists of American shares. And a very large portion of that is just six or seven tech shares that dominate to an enormous degree.

So in reality, when you think you’re buying the whole world, you’re perhaps getting massive exposure to Nvidia, for example, or Tesla, or Microsoft. You’re exposing yourself enormously to American technology shares. And then you haven’t spread your risk—you think you have, but you haven’t really done so.

If these shares are overvalued – and it’s my personal opinion that they appear to be – then you haven’t spread your risk. You’ve actually taken on relatively high risk.

Let me give you an example of the timing problem. If we look at the situation in 1998 and examine the American stock market, we can see that American technology shares were extremely expensive at some point. If we look forward five years, we can see that was correct, and technology shares actually fell significantly during that period.

But here’s the problem: we need to find indicators that get us in and out of markets at the right time. I’ve done this exercise many times. Could we find indicators, such as price-earnings ratios—the share price relative to company earnings? Could we say that if price-earnings rises above a certain level, we should sell, and when it falls below another level, we should buy?

If we do this in connection with the tech bubble in the late 1990s, you’ll see it’s nearly impossible to find an indicator that would have got you out of the market at the right time and back in at the right time in real-time. The problem is that most indicators were already telling you to leave the market from 1995-1996. But if you left the market then, you’d have missed the entire upswing, and you’d be sitting there waiting for the market to come back down to where you started.

The best would be to stay in the market, even though it’s become too expensive, and then exit at the top. But if you don’t have an indicator for that, it’s useless. And so whilst I can sit here and say I think tech shares are really, really expensive now, and they’ve become very concentrated, that makes it very difficult to act on.

Governance as an Investment Strategy

When I talk about governance, it’s really about what we want when there’s uncertainty—trust. Something we can rely on. Perhaps in 2018 or 2019 or 2020, Russian shares looked very attractive. They were cheap, and there were some good stories. But there was also a dictator in Russia. A dictator who could suddenly just invade a neighbouring country and essentially confiscate all businesses. Hardly anyone would want to have invested in Russian shares today.

This governance theme has been really important in recent years. Countries where there’s respect for property rights, where there’s press freedom, where there’s a low level of corruption, where agreements are honoured, where the legal system ensures agreements are honoured—these are countries that have performed relatively better than those where we think, “Hmm, perhaps there’ll be a military dictatorship tomorrow, or the military dictator might confiscate some businesses.”

We can think of countries like Turkey, Russia, China. We’ve seen very clearly that this theme has dominated the pricing of Chinese shares. President Xi might decide to confiscate a business or introduce capital controls. And some of the things we’ve talked about regarding Donald Trump—that’s what we could broadly call governance. Because Donald Trump has said, “I didn’t write the rulebook. It doesn’t apply to me.” And something happens there.

Donald Trump constantly tests these checks and balances. He’s done it in trade, with the central bank, with defence, with states’ autonomy. He’s sent the National Guard into various states. He constantly tests this. And something we’ve talked about in various forms—whether we believe in these checks and balances—that there’s no problem, he can’t do anything. But he tests it. And he tests it extensively.

The countries that score highly on governance include lovely, peaceful, beautiful Denmark. If we look at various measures of economic and political freedom, all the Nordic countries, but especially Denmark, score very highly on economic freedom. We have relatively low levels of regulation, which might surprise some people. We have well-protected property rights. What pulls us down when we talk about economic freedom is that we have high tax levels in Denmark. But overall, we have relatively unregulated product markets, relatively unregulated labour markets.

Other countries could be Ireland, Singapore, Switzerland, the Netherlands—they typically score highly on these measures. These are countries where we’d also feel safe if we flew there. We won’t just be arrested on the street for nothing. That’s a large part of European countries, but not all of them.

There are also countries that have clearly moved in the right direction. If we look at all countries in Central and Eastern Europe, 35-36 years ago we had communist dictatorships in Poland, in the Baltics, for example. And we must say they’ve moved enormously regarding these governance questions, becoming free, democratic nations with respect for property rights.

If we look at emerging markets over the past five years, it’s been very clear that the emerging markets with most respect for institutions, property rights, contractual freedom, and free trade are the ones that have performed well. That could be Poland, the Baltics. But countries that have moved away from this—Russia, China, Turkey—have taken proper beatings in the stock market.

Chile and Uruguay are countries in the emerging markets world that belong at the top of the class. Botswana is interesting—I believe Botswana gained independence in 1966 and has been a democracy since independence. It’s actually the only country in Africa that can boast of this. It’s had enormous economic and political stability, democracy, and well-protected property rights. It’s a fantastic success story that we don’t talk much about.

The All-Weather Portfolio

What we need to consider is what’s sometimes called an all-weather portfolio – an investment portfolio that performs well in different weather conditions. When the economy is doing well, when it’s doing poorly, when there’s inflation, deflation, stable inflation, high growth, volatile growth. How do you manage?

It’s about spreading risk, of course. It’s also about having shares or assets that can handle these scenarios. My encouragement to investors sitting out there having made really good money on their shares would be: perhaps you should sit down and say you haven’t spread your risk. You thought you had because you just bought the S&P 500 index. But now you’ve become enormously exposed to basically five or eight American tech shares.

Perhaps you should reduce that exposure, buy some bonds, buy some commodities. It could be gold. It could be gold mining shares. It could be different types of bonds. It could be focusing on inflation risk—buying inflation-indexed bonds to remove some of that inflation risk. Spread the risk.

Saying “I have five different shares” isn’t enough if you’ve bought five different shares within the same sector—you haven’t spread the risk. You need different countries, different assets, bonds, shares. In reality, what you should do if you’re sitting there thinking you’re a bit worried things have become expensive, or you’re considering spreading risk, is to spread it across many more assets.

For the average Dane (or anybody else globally), the most significant exposure in their portfolio is the property or flat they own. It’s interesting that whilst we sit here with drones over Copenhagen, uncertainty, trade wars, and all sorts of things worrying us, Copenhagen property prices are up 20% over the past year. That tells a story about how the property market and stock market are insurance – partial insurance – against high inflation.

Where it’s not insurance is if central banks do something about inflation. If they say inflation is rising too much and we need to kill it by raising interest rates sharply, then the property market dies, the stock market dies. So we can’t just say we shouldn’t worry and should buy shares and bonds. What I’m trying to say is that when we start getting high inflation expectations, some of these markets begin to behave differently than we’re used to.

My Final Message: Don’t Panic, But Do Check Your Risk

My main message is: don’t panic. Use these crisis considerations to sit down calmly. Whether you’re an institutional investor, pension fund, or individual investor, sit down and ask: how am I actually exposed? Have I really achieved the risk diversification I think I have?

Because there are people who don’t need risk diversification. But sit down and do a crisis check, a risk diversification check on your portfolio. Don’t do anything desperate. Don’t think you know which crisis share or weapons share will rise. Don’t try to beat the market, but sit down and consider whether you have the risk diversification you think you have.

If you think you’ve spread your risk by just buying a global equity index, my message is: you haven’t spread your risk. You might feel like you have, and it’s actually performed really well. But this crisis might be a good reason to take that check. And don’t rush it. You never get anything good from that.

I’d like to be in a situation where I’d want to buy weapons shares because I’m worried—yes, there’s that too. I’m probably in the worried camp relative to how the market is. But if I’m constructing a portfolio, I need to create one where I don’t constantly have to time things correctly.

If your portfolio has risen 30% annually for the past three years, perhaps it might be good to spread some risk, get some bonds, get some commodities. That’s not investment advice in the sense that I don’t know what individuals have as exposure. I don’t know individual private economics, but this is what economic and financial theory textbooks say: spread your risk, consider the correlation between assets.

Sometimes you think, “I’m in this and I’m in that—they’re completely different things.” But if you see that nine out of ten days these two assets move in the same direction, you’ve essentially bought the same thing. So consider that. I think this is a healthy opportunity to do a reality check on your portfolio.

This article is based on the latest episode (“Investering i en krisetid) of my podcast “Makropuls” (in Danish). See links to the podcast here (Spotify and Apple podcast). The podcast is produced in cooperation with Howden Denmark.





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