Credit Impulse Update: France’s best days are already behind us

Tour de Finance: Six things Pogačar vs Vingegaard can teach every investor

Jacob Falkencrone 400x400
Jacob Falkencrone

Global Head of Investment Strategy

Key points:

  • Investing is an endurance event: Focus on long-term goals, not short-term market fluctuations or quick wins.
  • Diversification is critical: A strong portfolio—like a strong cycling team—combines various strengths to navigate all market conditions.
  • Proactive risk management matters: Managing risk in advance prevents setbacks from becoming catastrophic losses, ensuring you reach your financial goals safely.

The grand départ for your money

When Tadej Pogačar, Jonas Vingegaard and the rest of the peloton roll away from Lille on 5 July, they'll face exactly 3,338.8 kilometres of winding French roads, climbing a daunting 52,500 vertical metres, and surviving on just two rest days before reaching the Champs-Élysées in Paris. This race is no place for sprinters masquerading as mountain climbers—just as investing isn’t for those chasing quick thrills or overnight gains.

Just as calm endurance guides riders through treacherous crosswinds, patience enables your investments to compound through turbulent market cycles. Here are six clear, vivid lessons every investor can learn from this year’s epic battle for cycling’s ultimate prize.

“You don’t win the yellow jersey on Stage 1, and you don’t fund a comfortable retirement in a single bull run.”

1. Endurance over quick wins

The Tour de France consists of 21 stages. You don’t win the Tour by claiming a single stage victory, nor by winning most stages. It’s a long, aggregate race where consistent performance over time decides the champion. Julian Alaphilippe famously wore the yellow jersey for 14 days in 2019 but ultimately finished outside the podium. Meanwhile, Egan Bernal quietly secured overall victory without winning a single stage.

Investing similarly rewards those who look beyond short-term market excitement and focus instead on consistent, disciplined execution of their long-term strategy. Short-term market fads, meme stocks, or hot sectors might appear attractive, but genuine wealth accumulation thrives on consistent returns, patience, and disciplined contributions. Investors who fix their eyes firmly on long-term objectives rather than daily market movements are the ones who truly win.

"Winning at investing isn't about chasing daily victories—it's about patiently executing your long-term plan."

2. Pain is unavoidable—accept volatility

This year’s Tour includes brutally steep climbs, notably the Col de la Loze at 2,304 metres—the highest point of the race. No cyclist escapes the inevitable pain, yet champions like Pogačar and Vingegaard push through discomfort without abandoning their strategy.

Investing carries its own unavoidable pain—sharp downturns, corrections, bear markets. Recall how global equity portfolios sank dramatically in early April, during covid or the financial crisis of 2008, only to rise significantly thereafter for those who held on. Investors need the emotional discipline to accept these inevitable setbacks and avoid panic-selling. Staying invested through downturns and maintaining a steady approach to risk ensures that temporary declines don't become permanent losses.

"Volatility is to investing what mountains are to cycling—painful, inevitable, but conquerable."

3. Diversification: no single discipline wins alone

Winning Tour teams are built around superstar riders like Pogačar and Vingegaard—but importantly, these stars are surrounded by strong teammates with diverse skills. No cyclist is a master of every discipline—climbing, sprinting, time trials, and endurance all require specialist strengths. The eventual winner is not necessarily the absolute best in any one discipline but rather the rider who manages all terrains well and minimises losses in weaker areas. Fail badly in mountains or time trials, and overall victory slips away.

Investing mirrors this precisely. A robust portfolio isn't built solely around one star stock or single market theme. Rather, it blends equities with bonds, cash, and alternatives. When one investment struggles, another helps stabilise your portfolio, ensuring you remain competitive in every market condition.

"A portfolio built around a single 'star' stock is as fragile as a cycling team overly dependent on one rider. Diversification builds resilience."

4. Marginal gains compound quietly

The Tour is often won through tiny incremental gains—ceramic bearings, aerodynamic helmets, gram-perfect nutrition—accumulated day after day. These seemingly trivial improvements, repeated consistently, decide victories.

Investors have their equivalent marginal gains: fee reductions, tax efficiencies, dividend reinvestments, and disciplined, automated contributions. While individually small, together these decisions compound significantly. Diligently optimising your portfolio’s fees, taxes, and efficiency might lack glamour, but over the course of years, these small improvements can significantly enhance your financial outcomes.

"A 1% fee cut seems trivial until it buys your retirement an extra rest day every week."

5. Selective attacks—not perpetual breakaways—generate alpha

In cycling, fewer than one in ten breakaways successfully reach the finish line. The lone rider who attempts a long solo escape usually gets caught, losing both energy and morale.

Market equivalents—such as speculative stocks or trendy sectors—share similarly low probabilities of sustained outperformance. Investors should limit speculative bets to a small portion of their portfolio to ensure a failure won’t sink their long-term plans. Carefully manage your speculative investments, sizing them conservatively and reviewing them frequently. A prudent investor maintains a disciplined approach to speculative opportunities, ensuring their core financial goals are never put at unnecessary risk.

"Treat speculative investments as though their odds of reaching Paris are in single digits."

6. Risk management is critical on the descent

Cyclists meticulously plan and carefully execute high-speed descents. Recklessness might gain a few seconds but often leads to crashes and catastrophic consequences. Riders constantly assess their speed, position, and road conditions.

Investors must manage risks with similar care. After strong market rallies, portfolios can become overly risky unless proactively rebalanced. Regularly trimming winners and restoring your intended risk levels is essential. It might seem counterintuitive to reduce holdings that have recently outperformed, but proactive risk management helps investors avoid potentially devastating market downturns. Like precise braking on a descent, disciplined rebalancing prevents unexpected setbacks from derailing your long-term financial plans.

"Risk management isn’t a brake on returns; it’s the helmet and brakes allowing you to survive market downturns."

Finish-line checklist for investors

  1. Define your jersey clearly: Growth, income, or capital preservation.
  2. Embrace endurance: Long-term goals matter more than daily market swings.
  3. Accept inevitable volatility: Don’t panic during market downturns.
  4. Diversify intentionally: Blend assets to thrive across different market conditions.
  5. Optimise marginal gains: Reduce fees, taxes, and reinvest dividends.
  6. Be selective with high-risk moves: Limit speculative bets and size them carefully.
  7. Manage risks proactively: Regular rebalancing protects your gains.

Rolling into Paris—and beyond

When the peloton finally speeds down the Champs-Élysées on 27 July, millions will cheer the yellow jersey’s triumph. Yet, experienced investors appreciate that behind that glory lies months of disciplined effort, proactive risk management, incremental improvements, and thousands of strategic choices.

Your investment journey spans far longer than any three-week Tour. Embrace the climbs patiently, coast strategically through the flats, descend cautiously, and above all, remain steadfast in your investment plan’s saddle. The Arc de Triomphe rewards those who complete the full course.

This content is marketing material and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options..

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