Home  >  articles  >  macro  >  investing in the age of discontent

Investing in the Age of Discontent

Simon Turner - Head of Content (CFA)
Simon TurnerHead of Content (CFA)
Wed 4 Feb 2026
7 min read

If you’re a news reader, you’re probably feeling like the world is engulfed in a crisis with no end date in sight. It sure feels like that as bad story after bad story is channelled toward news consumers around the world. Take your pick of which one matters most. Trump’s latest offensive tweet, the housing shortage, the cost of living, the system, the list goes on.

This is all happening whilst global macro data tells a very different story of a world defined by growing wealth, less poverty, and better healthcare outcomes. Despite these generally positive evolutions, it’s hard to argue with the fact that people en masse are angrier than ever before.

This is an important point for investors to understand when trying to make sense of markets which are no longer neatly explained by the usual macro indicators.



A Glaring Expectations Gap

Markets tend to be remarkably good at pricing in the future, most of the time.

But what happens when investors’ subjective impression of reality starts to diverge from a more objective version because they’re wearing jade-coloured glasses?

If that’s the case, as it appears to be of late, it may be that this collective global discontent is transitioning from a social story into a market pricing issue which is impacting the rules of the investing game.

The fundamental issue here is that people don’t benchmark their wellbeing against the human population’s wellbeing in the 1970s, or some other date in the distant past. They benchmark it against what they think they were promised, and against the lives they see around them.

Political scientists have long described this as ‘relative deprivation’, a perceived discrepancy between what people feel entitled to and what they believe they can achieve.

In a world in which most of us are constantly comparing our position with those of others (thanks in part to social media), rising expectations are outpacing rising incomes and net worths.



It’s Similar Albeit Slightly Different in Australia

Australia is an interesting example of this global trend, albeit one in which there’s been a closer match between reality and perception than in many countries.

Real household disposable incomes have risen over the long-term, although the trend has turned decidedly negative since the pandemic. More importantly, from a comparison perspective, the OECD average is now higher than before the pandemic, and has significantly outperformed the Australian numbers.



True to the global trend, household stress levels are rising in Australia, particularly since 2021.


This speaks to the comparison and regency bias that’s at the heart of the age of discontent. Australian household disposable income has recently taken a hit on both an absolute and relative basis, so the improving long-term trend isn’t front of mind for most people.

The majority are benchmarking their financial wellbeing against what they think they were promised, and against the lives they see around them: in this case, the rest of the developed world.

Explore 100's of investment opportunities and find your next hidden gem!

Search and compare a purposely broad range of investments and connect directly with product issuers.


The Clustering of Resentment

Now, let’s delve into where the above-mentioned stress and resentment tends to cluster.

First, housing. When the cost of the ‘entry ticket’ to the dream of home ownership rises faster than wages, many people experience it as a broken promise, even if their consumption basket is objectively fuller than past generations. So housing is an area which attracts a lot of discontent for those who aren’t on the ladder yet.



Second, education and its old-school perception as a ‘mobility engine’. Recent research suggests that the university wage premium may be a thing of the past, and that educational standards and their signalling have deteriorated, turning what felt like a near-guaranteed pathway to a successful career into a riskier bet. That’s a source of resentment for many younger people who feel betrayed by the system.

Third, trust. Low trust is rocket fuel for populist policy. Edelman’s 2026 Trust Barometer shows there’s been a marked shift from grievance to insularity, with a large portion of the global population reluctant to trust those who are different to them, and with widening trust gaps between higher- and lower-income groups.



Source: Edelman


All this points to one likely sociological direction: a lower-trust world with more policy surprises, higher risk premia, and more frequent market regime shifts.

In other words, buckle up.

Subscribe to InvestmentMarkets for weekly investment insights and opportunities and get content like this straight into your inbox.


The Investment Implications

So what does investing successfully look like in the age of discontent?

There are three important investment implications to be aware of:


1. Treat political risk as structural, not cyclical.

With the social challenges building, the global policy backdrop is likely to keep oscillating between intervention, regulation, and adaptive industrial strategies.

This backdrop favours portfolio construction that’s robust to multiple market regimes rather than optimised for a continuation of a single outcome.

In practice, that means global diversification may generate better risk-adjusted returns than a portfolio focused on the Australian market, or any home market for that matter.

For example, ETFs such as Vanguard MSCI International Shares ETF (ASX: VGS) provide low-cost, well-diversified exposure to global equities. And if you’d like to manage your currency risk, currency-hedged global ETFs such as JP Morgan Global Select Eq (Hdg) Act ETF (ASX: JHLO) provide exposure which is hedged back to AUD.

2. Time to hedge against policy-driven inflation and fiscal dominance risk.

Discontent often expresses itself through expensive fiscal promises that require a step-change in government spending. Even when governments do the right thing socially, markets may still demand compensation for the larger deficits, tighter labour markets, or supply-side constraints that are par for the course these days.

And the higher inflation associated with this direction of events is likely to impact which sectors out- and under-perform in the coming years.

So building portfolio resilience against this risk is arguably more important than ever.

That means investing in funds and ETFs positioned to thrive irrespective of macro developments, and which are protected against inflation.

For example, iShares Government Inflation ETF provides inflation protection by investing in a portfolio of Australian inflation-linked government bonds. Gold is also a classic hedge against inflation as well as policy error, geopolitical shocks, and a loss of confidence in institutions. ETFs such as Global X Gold Bullion ETF (ASX: GXLD) and iShares Physical Gold ETF (ASX: GLDN) provide diversified exposure to this sector.

3. Back the real economy capex that governments will subsidise regardless of ideology.

When societies are unhappy, politicians often rollout headline-grabbing projects to steady the ship in areas such as: energy security, grids, ports, defence supply chains, local manufacturing, housing, infrastructure, and climate change adaptation and mitigation projects.

Investors can benefit from this trend by investing in funds and ETFs focused on infrastructure and commodities.

For example, ETFs such as iShares Core FTSE Global Infrastructure (AUD Hedged) ETF (ASX: GLIN) provide exposure to infrastructure, while BetaShares Energy Transition Metals ETF (ASX: XMET) provides exposure to the producers of metals used in electrification and decarbonisation.



A Macro Factor with Significant Market Implications

The age of discontent has surely arrived. It’s showing up as policy volatility, trust erosion, and shifting fiscal priorities. Moreover, it’s the underlining reason so many investors are cynical these days.

It may be that the most prudent response is building portfolios that assume the social temperature remains high and volatile. Globally diversified equities, commodities and real assets are likely to outperform if that scenario continues to play out longer term.



Funds Mentioned

Vanguard MSCI Index International Shares ETF seeks to track the return of the MSCI World ex-Australia (with net dividends reinvested), in Australian dollars Index, before taking into account fees, expenses and tax.

Retail Investor
Objective
Growth and Income
Category
ETFs
Min. Investment
$1
Liquidity
Listed
Availability
N/A
Funding Stage
Listed
Structure
ETF
View

The fund aims to provide investors with the performance of the Bloomberg AusBond Inflation Government 0+ Yr IndexSM, before fees and expenses. The index is designed to measure the performance of a segment of the Australian bond market comprised of inflation-linked fixed income securities.

Retail Investor
Objective
Income
Category
ETFs
Min. Investment
$1
Liquidity
Listed
Availability
N/A
Funding Stage
Listed
Structure
ETF
View
Global X Physical Gold Structured (ASX: GOLD)

Discover Australia’s pioneering gold investment opportunity.

Retail Investor
Objective
Growth
Category
ETFs
Min. Investment
$500
Liquidity
Listed
Availability
Open for investment
Funding Stage
Listed
Structure
ETF
View

The Fund aims to provide investors with the performance of the FTSE Developed Core Infrastructure 50/50 100% Hedged to AUD Net Tax Index, before fees and expenses (including the cost of hedging). The index is designed to measure the AUD hedged performance of global developed market infrastructure securities.

Retail Investor
Objective
Growth and Income
Category
ETFs
Min. Investment
$1
Liquidity
Listed
Availability
N/A
Funding Stage
Listed
Structure
ETF
View

XMET aims to track the performance of an index (before fees and expenses) that provides exposure to a portfolio of global companies in the Energy Transition Metals (‘ETMs’) industry. ETMs are raw materials that are essential to the transition to a less carbon-intensive economy. XMET provides exposure to global producers of copper, lithium, nickel, cobalt, graphite, manganese, silver and rare earth elements.

Retail Investor
Objective
Growth
Category
ETFs
Min. Investment
$1
Liquidity
Listed
Availability
N/A
Funding Stage
Listed
Structure
ETF
View


Disclaimer: This article is prepared by Simon Turner. It is for educational purposes only. While all reasonable care has been taken by the author in the preparation of this information, the author and InvestmentMarkets (Aust) Pty. Ltd. as publisher take no responsibility for any actions taken based on information contained herein or for any errors or omissions within it. Interested parties should seek independent professional advice prior to acting on any information presented. Please note past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

 

Author

Simon Turner - Head of Content (CFA)
Simon Turner
Head of Content (CFA)

Simon Turner is an ex-fund manager with 20 years investing experience gained at Bluecrest, Kempen and Singer & Friedlander who now writes educational content about investing and sustainability. He's also the published author of The Connection Game and Secrets of a River Swimmer.

Related Articles

The Bigger Picture - May 2026

April confirmed what markets had begun to suspect: the global macro backdrop has changed. Higher geopolitical risk is now structurally entrenched. Markets have quickly adjusted to this unfortunate new reality across all asset classes. Geopolitical risk has reasserted itself as a primary driver of energy prices, inflation expectations, and capital flows. Investors still anchored to the old world of low inflation, cheap money, and frictionless globalisation risk being structurally mispositioned.

3 May 2026
 · 5 MIN READ

The Bigger Picture April 2026

Buckle up. Markets are undergoing a structural shift. The era of easy gains driven by liquidity and exposure to US big tech appears to be fading. In its place is emerging a more selective environment defined by rising geopolitical risk, elevated inflationary pressures, and widening dispersion between companies, sectors, and asset classes.

5 Apr 2026
 · 5 MIN READ

Recent Articles

View all articles

Winning the Investment Game: 6 Powerful Rules That Remove Emotion from the Process

If you’re like most investors, you’re probably overwhelmed by the constant availability of real-time data, macro narratives, and algorithmically amplified sentiment. It’s a lot, and it’s coming at us twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Worse, our emotions drive us to react to all this noise by sabotaging our investment plans at exactly the wrong moments.

7 June 2026
 · 7 MIN READ

Franking Credits Explained

If you want the possibility of a bonus tax refund, or a discount on your tax, then don’t forget to check your franking credits. If that concept sounds vaguely familiar, it should be – it’s an integral part of being an Australian income investor, particularly if you are a retiree.

4 June 2026
 · 5 MIN READ