Most people only notice the South African Reserve Bank when interest rates change. A headline appears, economists debate what happens next, and homeowners immediately calculate what it means for their bond repayments.
Yet those announcements are usually the final step in a much longer process.
During a recent conversation with SARB Deputy Governor Dr Rashad Cassim, one theme appeared repeatedly: the Reserve Bank spends far more time thinking about where the economy is going than where it is today.
For investors, that mindset may be one of the most useful lessons from the discussion.
Track what your money can buy, not just how much you have
Most people measure financial progress using salary increases, portfolio balances or savings account totals. The Reserve Bank measures something different: purchasing power.
A salary increase sounds positive until inflation rises faster than your income. The same applies to investing. A return that looks impressive on paper can deliver surprisingly little progress if the cost of living rises just as quickly.
This is one reason the SARB has shifted towards a 3% inflation target. Lower inflation helps households preserve the value of their income over time.
For investors, it is worth reviewing financial goals through this lens. Rather than asking whether your money is growing, ask whether it is growing faster than inflation. That is the number that ultimately determines whether your future lifestyle improves.
One of the most surprising insights from the discussion was that the full effect of an interest-rate change can take around 18 months to work through the economy.
That means policymakers are not responding to today's inflation. They are trying to influence future inflation.
Investors face the same challenge. Markets spend most of their time pricing expectations about the future rather than reacting to what has already happened.
When reading economic news, it can be useful to ask a simple question: what might this mean a year from now? The answer is often more valuable than understanding what it means today.
Fuel prices rise. Food prices jump. Global conflicts create uncertainty.
The Reserve Bank cannot stop these events from happening, and Dr Cassim explained that policymakers do not automatically react to every shock.
Instead, they focus on whether temporary disruptions are becoming permanent inflation pressures across the economy.
Investors can apply the same thinking. Not every alarming headline deserves a portfolio change. Before reacting, consider whether the event is likely to affect long-term business earnings, consumer behaviour or economic growth. Many headlines disappear long before they have a meaningful impact on long-term wealth creation.
One topic came up repeatedly during the discussion: inflation expectations.
If businesses believe inflation will remain high, they may increase prices. If workers expect inflation to stay elevated, they may negotiate higher wage increases. Those expectations can influence reality.
Markets work in a similar way. Share prices move based on what investors expect to happen next, not simply on what has already happened.
This is why markets sometimes rise during difficult economic conditions or fall while current conditions still look strong.
A useful habit is to pay attention to how expectations are changing. Often the direction of expectations matters more than the latest economic data point.
Perhaps the strongest lesson from the conversation had little to do with interest rates.
The Reserve Bank's job is to think several steps ahead. Policymakers make decisions before inflation becomes obvious, before risks fully emerge and before the broader public sees the need for action.
Investing often works the same way.
The most valuable decisions are rarely the ones that feel comfortable in the moment. They are usually made before the consensus forms, before the headlines appear and before everyone agrees.
You do not need to predict the future perfectly. But learning to think a little further ahead than the news cycle can be one of the most valuable investing skills you develop.
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