Friday, April 10, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Art of Subtraction and Self-Reliance

We live in the Information Age, sitting at the bottom of the DIKW (Data, Information, Knowledge, Wisdom) pyramid. We check our terminals, refresh our feeds, and hang on every syllable uttered by the Chairman of the Federal Reserve. We suffer from the delusion that if we just consume enough data, or ask the right experts, the future will reveal itself to us.


The Wisdom Bites: "'Never ask for anything. Never for anything, and especially from those who are stronger than you.'" - Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita


"To attain knowledge, add things every day. To attain wisdom, subtract things every day." - Lao-tzu


The Financial Parallel: Stop asking the market, the pundits, and the macroeconomic forecasters to give you certainty. They do not have it. Forecasting the future is a fool's errand, and relying on "those who are stronger than you" (the Wall Street consensus or the central banks) to guide your portfolio is a recipe for disaster. The financial services industry is built on supplying the demand of investors who want to be told what the market is going to do.


If you want to move from mere data to actual wisdom, you must practice the art of subtraction. Turn off CNBC. Ignore the daily ticker. Stop worrying about the exact timing of the next rate cut. The greatest investors—the ones who truly understand the "I don't know" school of investing—succeed because they filter out the noise and focus only on what is knowable and essential.


The Financial Takeaway: Clarity comes from subtraction. Stop asking the experts for the silver bullet. Subtract the daily noise, detach yourself from the crowd, and cultivate the intellectual humility to admit what you cannot know. Wisdom in investing is found in silence, not in the hubbub of the herd.


"Acquiring knowledge is easy, the hard part is knowing what to apply and when. That’s why all true learning is 'on the job.' Life is lived in the arena."

 

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Anchor in the Storm

In investing, as in life, we are bombarded with distractions. There is always a new geopolitical crisis to fear, a new macroeconomic data point to decipher, or a new "must-own" asset class making your neighbor rich. If you chase every breeze, you will eventually drown in the middle of the ocean.


The Wisdom Bites: "If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favorable." - Seneca


"If by giving up a lesser happiness a greater happiness could be found, a wise person would renounce the lesser for the greater" - The Dhammapada


The Financial Parallel: Myron Scholes reminded us that we must have a "fixed point"—a core purpose or non-negotiable value. In finance, this is your Investment Policy Statement, your true time horizon, or your ultimate financial goal. If you don't know to which port you are sailing, every dip in the S&P 500 or every headline out of the Federal Reserve will feel like a hurricane throwing you off course.


Achieving that long-term destination requires profound delayed gratification. You must renounce the "lesser happiness" of short-term dopamine hits—the thrill of day trading, the excitement of chasing a hot stock, or the comfort of following the crowd—in order to secure the "greater happiness" of long-term compounding. The ability to operate without external, immediate gratification is the true socio-economic advantage. You have to be willing to look like an idiot in the short term to be a genius in the long term.


The Financial Takeaway: Define your port before you leave the dock. Set your long-term goals and ruthlessly ignore the daily market noise that tries to blow you off course. Renounce the lesser happiness of short-term action for the greater happiness of uninterrupted compounding.

"The best way to spend money is to buy time."

 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Eternal Grift of Human Nature

 Every few years, the financial industry invents a new paradigm. We’ve seen CDOs, SPACs, meme coins, and algorithmic stablecoins. The technology changes, the jargon evolves, and the pitch decks get slicker. But underneath it all, the operating system running the market is the same one that has been running for millennia: human nature.


The Wisdom Bites: "They're people like any other people...They love money, but that has always been so...Mankind loves money, whatever it's made of." - Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita


"'Can there be crooks among the Muscovites?' The barman smiled so bitterly in response that all doubts fell away; yes, there were crooks among the Muscovites." - Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita


The Financial Parallel: Whenever there is a surplus of liquidity and a desperate search for yield, charlatans will gladly supply the public with the illusion of risk-free wealth. Low interest rates breed greed, and greed breeds fraud. It is human nature to want something for nothing, and Wall Street is perfectly designed to package that desire and sell it back to you for a 2-and-20 fee.


This is the psychological trap of the "febezzle"—Charlie Munger's term for the pleasant illusion of wealth created during a boom, where both the asset manager extracting fees and the investor watching their statement go up feel virtuously richer. Until the tide goes out, everyone ignores the crooks among the Muscovites. The fundamental nature of mankind doesn't change; when the financial scene starts reminding you of Sodom and Gomorrah, you should fear practical consequences even if you want to participate.


The Financial Takeaway: Do not put your faith in complex financial engineering or the sheer brilliance of the latest fund manager. Financial history is rife with crooks and frauds who thrived simply because mankind loves money. Maintain your skepticism, especially when everyone around you is getting rich effortlessly.


"Some people, you'll never know that they're lunatics unless they get very rich."


Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Necessity of Shadows and Cycles

 We live in a financial culture that hunts endlessly for the silver bullet—the magic asset class that provides equity-like returns with treasury-like safety. Investors want the upside of the market without the agony of the drawdowns. But the universe does not hand out rewards without an invoice.


The Wisdom Bites: 'Kindly consider the question: what would you do if evil did not exist, and what would the earth look like if it disappeared from it? Shadows are cast by objects and people. Trees and living beings have shadows. Do you want to skin the whole earth, tearing all the trees and living things off it, because of your fantasy of enjoying bare light?' - Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita


"Many shall be restored that now are fallen and many shall fall that are now in honor." - Horace


The Financial Parallel: Investors constantly fantasize about enjoying the "bare light" of a market without volatility, uncertainty, or downturns. But as Fisher Black noted in his 1986 paper Noise, uncertainty is a necessary condition of financial markets; without it, no one would trade, and liquidity would vanish.


Risk and volatility are the shadows cast by the objects of capitalism. If you try to skin the earth of all risk, you strip the market of its risk premium. It is precisely the uncertainty of the future that allows superior investors to get an edge and earn a return. Furthermore, these shadows ensure the cyclicality of the market. As Horace noted—and as Benjamin Graham highlighted in Security Analysis—markets are a pendulum. The high-flyers of today (the "Nifty Fifty," the dot-com darlings, the AI darlings) will inevitably stumble, and the despised, fallen assets of today will be restored to honor when the cycle turns.


The Financial Takeaway: Do not fear the shadows of volatility; they are the very things that create mispricings and future returns. A market without risk is a market without profit. Embrace the cycle, and remember that what the wise man does in the beginning, the fool does in the end.


"Everything in life is volatility times time... But what we care about is the validity of the fixed point."


Monday, April 6, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Reckoning of Permanent Capital

 Welcome back to the digital saloon, where we trade fleeting forecasts for the only currency that matters: reality. Today, we look at the destructive nature of short-termism and the inevitable invoice that markets eventually issue to those who treat investing as a casino game.


The Wisdom Bites: "People don't just die when their time comes. They gradually die away, from the inside. And finally the day comes when you have to settle accounts. Nobody can escape it. People have to pay the price for what they've received. I have only just learned that truth" - Haruki Murakami, 1Q84


"This basic building block of society is broken when those with their hands on the permanent capital change their minds with their underwear." - Nick Sleep


The Financial Parallel: In the financial world, companies and portfolios rarely collapse overnight. As Hyman Minsky taught us, stability breeds instability. The rot starts slowly. It begins when management decides to take on excessive leverage to fund a dividend recap, or when investors succumb to prioritizing frantic trading over long-term ownership.


Equity is designed to be the permanent capital of a balance sheet; it is there to weather the storms and earn the rewards of enterprise. Yet, modern institutional investors treat equity like a hot potato, swapping seats every few months in the name of liquidity and efficiency. When investors change their allocations as often as they change their underwear, they disrupt the very foundation of wealth creation. They extract short-term gains, slowly hollowing the business out from the inside. But the market always settles accounts. The leverage eventually fires, and the price for those short-term decisions must be paid.


The Financial Takeaway: Stop playing musical chairs with your portfolio. Treat equity as what it is: permanent ownership in a business. If your investment strategy requires you to constantly jump ship before the reckoning comes, you are not an investor; you are a speculator hoping to outrun the bill.


"The big money is not in the buying or the selling, but in the waiting."


Friday, April 3, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Techno-Utopian Trap

We are constantly sold the utopian dream of frictionless convenience. But we must remember that behind every soaring, trillion-dollar tech valuation is an assumption about human malleability.


The Wisdom Bite:

"To transform human nature, not just describe it, has always been the dream of social engineers, as today it is that of the techno-utopians. It is the foundation of the doctrine of progress. But how far can it, or should it, be pressed, before humans cease to exist in a recognizable form? And is there something irreducibly human which will resist the ambitions of the engineers of the soul?"


"They dispense culture the better to rule. Beauty? They promote the beauty which enslaves. They create a literate ignorance - easiest thing of all. They leave nothing to chance. Chains! Everything they do forges chains, enslaves. But slaves always revolt." — Frank Herbert, Dune Messiah


The Engineering of the Consumer 

We are told that the latest app, the newest crypto token, or the most advanced AI will liberate us. But as Frank Herbert warns, these systems often dispense a culture that creates a "literate ignorance". We know all the buzzwords—we can confidently debate the merits of LLMs, spatial computing, or Web3—but we remain entirely ignorant of how these platforms are systematically extracting our data, attention, and wealth.


The techno-utopians do not just want to sell us a product; they want to "transform human nature" to better fit their monetization models. We see this in the modern corporate trend of "enshittification," where users are lured into closed digital ecosystems, only to be transformed from sovereign customers into captive, monetized audiences. The "beauty" of a seamless user interface is often the very thing that "enslaves" the user's attention and leaves "nothing to chance".


The Irreducibly Human Reversion But here is where the limitless growth thesis of the techno-utopians will eventually hit a wall. As the source asks: "is there something irreducibly human which will resist the ambitions of the engineers of the soul?". Herbert reminds us of a fundamental law of history: "slaves always revolt".


Eventually, consumers tire of being relentlessly optimized. They rebel against algorithms that dictate their choices and platforms that strip away their autonomy. We are already seeing the early stages of this resistance forming in the pushback against constant digital surveillance, the desire to disconnect, and the deep, unquantifiable yearning for authentic, un-engineered human connection.


The Financial Takeaway: Beware of investing in companies whose entire valuation rests on the premise that they can permanently engineer and control human behavior without consequence. Businesses that treat their users merely as data points to be manipulated, rather than human beings to be served, are building incredibly fragile empires. The most durable economic moats of the next decade will not belong to the social engineers who try to forge digital "chains". They will belong to the companies that respect the "irreducibly human" spirit, offering genuine value and autonomy rather than a gilded cage.


"If we strive to be happy by filling all the silences of life with sound, productive by turning all life’s leisure into work, and real by turning all of our being into doing, we will only succeed in producing a hell on earth." - Thomas Merton

 

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Rhetoric of the Spreadsheet

 There is a running joke in corporate finance: "More fiction has been written in Excel than in Word." We view economic models as hard science. We look at a 14-tab spreadsheet projecting a company's earnings out to 2030 and assume it represents objective reality.


It doesn't. It is just a story told with numbers.


The Wisdom Bite:

"Rhetoric is the art of the incomplete argument, a 'heuristic' device, or story, to point the mind in the right direction. In a sense all the social sciences are rhetorical. This simply means that the conditions required to make them universally true do not hold, or only hold under special conditions. They are only partially true."  - Robert Skidelsky


"From this perspective, economic modeling is a persuasive undertaking: it does not aim to discover truth, it tries to persuade people of the truth of its own 'text'. All reality is 'socially constructed'"  - Robert Skidelsky


The Persuasive Undertaking 

When an investment banker brings you a pitch deck, or a central banker publishes an economic forecast, they are not handing you a blueprint of the future. They are handing you a rhetorical device. Economic modeling is a persuasive undertaking designed to convince you to buy a stock, approve a merger, or accept a policy.


Because the conditions required to make these models universally true do not exist in the real, messy world, they are only ever partially true. They rely on the assumption of rationality—an assumption that is wildly flawed.


The Financial Takeaway: Stop viewing financial models as the discovery of truth. View them for what they are: marketing documents. When someone shows you a model proving a business is undervalued, ask yourself: What narrative are they trying to construct? What variables did they conveniently omit to make the math work? Protect your capital by bringing extreme skepticism to any spreadsheet that claims to have perfectly charted the unknown future.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Algorithm's Evolutionary Dead End

We are currently drowning in the hype of the AI revolution. Wall Street analysts are convinced that large language models and machine intelligences are going to entirely replace human capital allocation, rendering human intuition obsolete.


But what if the exact opposite is true?


The Wisdom Bite:

"Man and his machine intelligences. Which is a parasite on the other? Neither part of the symbiote can now tell. But it is an evil thing, a work of the Anti-Nation. Worse than that that, it is an evolutionary dead end" - Dan Simmons


"Safety in stagnation. Where are the revolutions in human thought and culture and action.." - Dan Simmons


The Parasite of the Model 

If every trading desk, every hedge fund, and every retail investor utilizes the exact same machine intelligences to parse the exact same datasets, what happens? We achieve perfect efficiency, which sounds great in a textbook, but in reality, it creates a perfectly fragile monoculture. It leads to an evolutionary dead end.


When algorithms trade against algorithms, liquidity evaporates the second an event occurs outside their training data. We seek "safety in stagnation" by trusting the machines, but in doing so, we strip away the human revolutions in thought and action that actually drive progress and market opportunities. The symbiote of man and algorithm becomes parasitic because no one is actually doing the fundamental, messy, ground-level work of true price discovery.


The Financial Takeaway: If your entire investment thesis relies on an AI scraping the web faster than another AI, you have no moat. The real edge in the coming decade will belong to the investors who step away from the machine. Cultivate deep, idiosyncratic human insight. Seek the revolutions in culture and human action that a backward-looking algorithm fundamentally cannot predict.


The best test is simply, does it solve real world novel problems? If not then it's not intelligent.

 

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Art of Subtraction and Self-Reliance

We live in the Information Age, sitting at the bottom of the DIKW (Data, Information, Knowledge, Wisdom) pyramid. We check our terminals, re...