November 6, 2009 6:41 pm

China and gold attract Grice and favour

One of the perks of my job is that I rarely run into boring fund managers trying to peddle a “new” take on equity investing. Maybe the moniker of Adventurous Investor puts them off!

What I do spend time doing is talking to strategists tasked by their investment banks with making sense of complex equity markets. They tend to not be the conventional City types.

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French banking house SocGen, in particular, has become a haven for slight eccentrics. For years, its strategy team – headed by quantitative analyst Andrew Lapthorne, economist Albert Edwards and equity strategist James Montier – won every award going for their value-driven, contrarian views.

Now that Montier has moved to fund manager GMO, he has been replaced by a character with the same potential to provoke discussion: Dylan Grice.

Grice is a strategist who’s happier quoting from history books than pontificating on the future direction of the FTSE. And he’s willing to act on his own views. One example of this willingness to take big bets is his regular purchase of a small amount of gold coins every month.

“The reason I buy gold is because I like history,” he tells me. “And the amazing thing about reading history is that you see how horribly wrong things go. Frequently!”

So what are Grice’s candidates for future disasters? A small amount of probing reveals a couple of concerns: monetary easing and China.

Listen to David interview Dylan Grice: