The Russian invasion of Ukraine puzzles some observers.

One explanation that has sometimes been heard is that Russian President Vladimir Putin has gone insane.

Ernst Konrad, senior portfolio manager at asset manager Eyb & Wallwitz, sees things differently.

He prefers to explain the conflict using game theory.

This looks at social decision-making situations like a game without round limits.

Cooperation is a good strategy, but blackmail is a more profitable one, if cooperation is repeatedly offered.

Martin Hock

Editor in Business.

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"Russia keeps offering cooperation, for example when gas deliveries to large countries are not stopped or bonds are finally serviced in hard currency," explains Konrad.

Such a strategy requires credible threats.

This is not an immediate German gas embargo, for example, but becoming independent of Russian supplies for months is.

Moscow's approach in this respect is clumsy.

Threats had been made, but not carried out, so that they seemed increasingly implausible.

"The ability to stand up to an enemy is always based on how much you can bind yourself," Konrad quotes the American economist Thomas Schelling as saying.

In this respect, the US strategy of involving Russia in a war of attrition, in which Ukraine should hold out as long as possible, is cynical, but promising.

collapse "at sight"

"Russia will be the big loser, even if it can achieve military success," Konrad is convinced.

He couldn't help but get the impression that Russia, like North Korea, primarily wanted to make itself felt.

Economically, the country has been bleeding dry for a long time because profits from the raw materials business have been largely invested abroad.

Now the war is accelerating the change to green energies, which is making Russia a loser anyway.

"In the near future" Konrad expects the Russian economy to collapse again.

In the current conflict, however, Konrad believes that the compromise of a division of the Ukraine will be reached in the end.

In the end, Putin will be satisfied with limited success.

"Putin has a certain rationality, even if it's a mixture of KGB socialization and the folkish gibberish that you can already read about in Dostoyevsky."

Habituation effect will help stocks

The perspectives for investors that Konrad draws are not very edifying.

“The next six months will be rather difficult.

The goal must be to get through the situation with as little upheaval as possible.” Inflation will remain stubbornly high because on the one hand there will be further upward pressure on energy prices and on the other hand massive public investments leave no room for budget consolidation.

Overall, one to three lean years are ahead for liquid investments.

There will be no money to be made with bonds, but the situation will be somewhat better for shares.

Earnings growth in the United States is still okay, even if the economy will slow down.

With the progression of the habituation effect, there is increasing volatility on the stock exchange on rising share prices.

For hedging, Konrad recommends gold, which offers some protection against inflation.

"But you have to be aware that gold is primarily a hedge and not so much a revenue generator."