Friday, March 6, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Radical Middle

 We live in an era of binary takes. You are either a "doomer" predicting the collapse of the fiat currency system by next Tuesday, or you are a "perma-bull" convinced that AI will solve death and taxes by Q3. But today’s wisdom comes from a place that Wall Street often ignores: the center.

The Wisdom Bite:

“Truth is a reconciler of extremes.”

The Manic-Depressive Market As Howard Marks endlessly reminds us, the market is a pendulum that swings between flaws. It moves between "optimism and pessimism," "greed and fear," and "credulousness and skepticism". It rarely spends any time in the "happy medium."

The "extreme" views are seductive. They sell newsletters. They get clicks on X (formerly Twitter). The extreme view says, "This time is different," or "The end is nigh." But the Truth—the intrinsic value of a business or the long-term growth rate of an economy—is usually the reconciler that pulls those extremes back to reality. The truth is the gravity that eventually stops the pendulum.

The Danger of the Edges When you live at the extremes, you become fragile. The extreme optimist leverages up, assuming trees grow to the sky. The extreme pessimist sits in cash, eroding their wealth through inflation because they see a crash around every corner.

The "reconciler" is the realization that most of financial history happens within two standard deviations, even if the "interesting" stuff happens outside of them. The truth reconciles the "boom" and the "bust" into the long-term trend line.

The Financial Takeaway Don’t let the noise of the extremes dictate your portfolio. If you find yourself completely convinced of a single, extreme outcome (hyperinflation or infinite growth), check your premises. The truth is likely boring, messy, and somewhere in the middle. As we’ve discussed, "The less prudence with which others conduct their affairs, the greater the prudence with which we should conduct our own affairs".


Thursday, March 5, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Price of Hope

 Hope is a beautiful thing in life. It is the fuel of the human spirit. But in investing, hope is often the precursor to poverty.

The Wisdom Bite:

“Wherever there is hope there's a trial.”

The Trial of Expectation In financial markets, "hope" usually translates to "high expectations." When we hope for a "bonanza," a "soft landing," or a "Fed pivot," we are setting ourselves up for a trial.

Why? Because markets punish high expectations. As Munger taught us, "The first rule of a happy life is low expectations". When you invest based on hope—hoping a failing company turns around, hoping a speculative asset goes "to the moon"—you enter a trial of volatility and psychological torture.

The "trial" is the gap between your expectation and reality. It is the sleepless nights watching the ticker. It is the "stress" that comes from trying to force an outcome that the market is not giving you.

Hope vs. Probability Professional investors don't hope; they calculate probabilities. They look for a "Margin of Safety" precisely because they know hope is not a strategy. As we’ve discussed regarding the "Idiot Lender Chronicles," the people who get crushed are the ones who lend based on the hope that "rates will come down" rather than underwriting the reality of today.

The Financial Takeaway Audit your portfolio for "hope." Are you holding a position because the fundamentals support it, or because you hope it comes back to your entry price so you can sell? The latter is a trial you don't need to endure. Replace hope with discipline.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: Financial Science Fiction

We often talk about "narratives" driving markets. But have you ever noticed how those narratives are constructed? They aren't vague. They are incredibly specific.

The Wisdom Bite:

“When you introduce things that most readers have never seen before into a piece of fiction, you have to describe them with as much precise detail as possible.”

The Precision of the Con This is a rule for writing convincing science fiction, but it is also the playbook for selling speculative financial products.

When Wall Street introduces something "most readers have never seen before"—like a new derivative, a SPAC structure, or a complex crypto token—they don't describe it vaguely. They drown you in precise, technical detail. They give you "back-tested data" (which is just fiction written with numbers). They use specific jargon to create a "pseudo-scientific veneer".

This precision creates the illusion of truth. We assume that because something is described with decimal-point accuracy, it must be real. We confuse "precision" with "accuracy."

The Narrative Fallacy We love a good story with rich details. It appeals to our brains. But as we discussed regarding economic modeling, these models are often just "rhetoric... a persuasive undertaking" designed to convince you of a text, not a truth.

The more precise the details of the "New Era" or the "Paradigm Shift," the more you should be on guard. They are building a world for you to inhabit, but that world might not actually exist.

The Financial Takeaway Beware the pitch that relies on hyper-specific details about a future that hasn't happened yet. No one knows the future with that level of precision. If a forecast tells you exactly where the S&P 500 will be on December 31st, they are writing fiction. Treat it as entertainment, not advice. 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Complexity Trap

We have a tendency in finance to equate complexity with intelligence. If a strategy involves derivatives of derivatives, offshore structures, and a fee schedule that requires a lawyer to decipher, we assume it must be "sophisticated."

But today’s wisdom suggests that if you don't get it instantly, you probably never will.

The Wisdom Bite:

“If you can't understand it without an explanation, you can't understand it with an explanation.” — Haruki Murakami

The "Black Box" Problem This quote is the perfect razor for slicing through Wall Street's product innovation.

Think about the Great Financial Crisis. How many people truly understood CDOs (Collateralized Debt Obligations) or SIVs (Structured Investment Vehicles)? They required lengthy explanations, intricate flowcharts, and "financial engineering" to justify. As we noted in our retrospective on the crisis, "Simple explanations for thinking about and understanding risk are invaluable... when a simple explanation for the risk of a portfolio does not exist, it can be a sign of trouble".

If someone has to spend 30 minutes explaining why a "yield-farming" crypto scheme isn't a Ponzi, or why a tech company with no revenue is worth billions, you are in the danger zone. As Charlie Munger said regarding EBITDA, sometimes the jargon is just there to mask the bullshit.

The Power of Simplicity The best investment ideas usually fit on a napkin. "The truly big investment idea can usually be explained in a short paragraph".

If you rely on the "explanation"—the 50-page white paper or the pitch deck—you are relying on a narrative, not a reality. You are relying on the "willing suspension of disbelief" that accompanies every bubble.

The Financial Takeaway If you look at an investment and don’t understand the source of the return immediately, walk away. Don’t let a salesperson "explain" it to you until you feel smart enough to buy it. Complexity is often a mechanism to transfer wealth from the client to the manager. Stick to the "simple ideas, and take them seriously".

Monday, March 2, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Machine, The Nervous Breakdown, and The Art of Leisure

 
Welcome back to the digital saloon, where we trade the frenetic noise of the ticker tape for the slow-drip coffee of actual wisdom.

Today we stand at a peculiar intersection: artificial intelligence, the stubborn laws of financial cycles, and the quiet existential tremor running beneath the modern workforce.

In his February 2026 memo, AI Hurtles Ahead, Howard Marks offers a sober look at our technological moment. After consulting with leading technologists and Anthropic’s Claude, Marks concluded that AI is not merely retrieving information — it is synthesizing, reasoning, accelerating.

One contact described it perfectly: AI is not a “faster horse.” It is the automobile.

The scale of capital flooding into data centers and compute infrastructure reflects that belief.

But while the technology is new, the deeper human questions are ancient.

And they have been asked before.

The Capital Cycle and the AI Rush

Every transformative innovation begins with what Hyman Minsky called a “displacement” — a shock that alters expectations and pulls capital forward.

Railroads.
Telecom.
The internet.
Housing.
Now AI.

The pattern is nearly timeless: enthusiasm → capital surge → overbuild → disappointment → consolidation → durable winners.

The capital cycle has not been repealed by code. Excess investment compresses future returns. If AI revenue proves partially circular, or demand lags infrastructure, overcapacity will follow.

As Charlie Munger reminded us: trees don’t grow to the sky.

But beneath the capital cycle lies something more delicate than margins.

It is the question of work itself.

The Nervous Breakdown of Abundance

In 1930, John Maynard Keynes predicted that technology and compounding would eventually solve the “economic problem” — the struggle for subsistence. He imagined his grandchildren working fifteen hours a week.

But he foresaw danger.

If material scarcity disappeared, he asked, what would become of people trained only to strive? Might we suffer a “nervous breakdown” — not from poverty, but from purposelessness?

Nearly a century later, that question feels less hypothetical.

We have built identities around productivity. We measure our worth by output. Our calendars are full. Our metrics are optimized. Our downtime exists to recharge us for further effort.

And now machines are learning to perform measurable tasks faster and better than we can.

If efficiency becomes abundant, what anchors human meaning?

This is not a macro question.

It is a philosophical one.

Leo XIII: Work Is for the Person, Not the Other Way Around

In 1891 — at the height of the Industrial Revolution — Pope Leo XIII published Rerum Novarum. It was not anti-technology. It was not anti-capital. It was a defense of something deeper: the dignity of the human person.

Leo warned that when labor is treated purely as a commodity — when the worker becomes merely an instrument of production — society corrodes. Economic systems must serve the person, not reduce the person to a function within the system.

That warning feels freshly relevant.

AI is extraordinarily powerful. It can optimize, accelerate, compress cost curves. But if we evaluate its success purely by productivity metrics while ignoring its effect on human dignity and meaning, we risk repeating the very error Leo diagnosed during industrialization.

Technology is not neutral. It reshapes incentives. And incentives shape souls.

John Paul II: The Primacy of the Human Person

Nearly a century later, in Laborem Exercens (1981), John Paul II expanded the argument. He insisted that work is not merely a means of survival or economic exchange. Work is one of the primary ways a human being expresses creativity, responsibility, and participation in the world.

He made a crucial distinction: the “objective” dimension of work (output, productivity, measurable results) must never eclipse the “subjective” dimension — the development of the person who performs it.

In plain English: production is secondary. Formation is primary.

If AI reduces the objective dimension of work — performing analysis, drafting text, optimizing logistics — we are left staring directly at the subjective question:

Who are we becoming?

If we define ourselves only by what we produce, automation will feel like erasure.

If we understand work as participation in something larger — as stewardship, as creativity, as responsibility — then automation may free us to deepen that participation rather than replace it.

The crisis is not technological.

It is anthropological.

Leisure as the Basis of Culture

The German philosopher Josef Pieper, writing in 1948, diagnosed a different but related problem: “total work.” In such a society, even rest exists only to restore us for more productivity.

Leisure becomes instrumental. Human beings become functionaries.

Pieper argued that true leisure is not laziness or distraction. It is an inner condition — the capacity to step back, to contemplate, to experience awe, to encounter reality beyond utility.

Without leisure properly understood, culture decays. And without culture, prosperity becomes sterile.

If AI assumes more of the measurable tasks, the competitive advantage of the human person may shift toward precisely what resists measurement: moral judgment, aesthetic sensibility, relational trust, wisdom.

Leisure is not a luxury.

It is the training ground for those capacities.

The Cycle Called Yourself

Robert Pirsig captured this beautifully:

“The real cycle you’re working on is a cycle called yourself. The machine that appears to be ‘out there’ and the person that appears to be ‘in here’ are not two separate things.”

Every technological revolution forces a mirror on society.

The external machine exposes the internal orientation.

If we are fragile, we will panic.
If we are overlevered, we will overbuild.
If we have forgotten why we work, we will feel displaced.

The capital cycle may oscillate every few years.

The human cycle compounds daily.

The Financial Takeaways
1. Embrace the Paradox of Participation

No one can declare definitively whether AI valuations are rational optimism or speculative excess.

Do not go all-in.
Do not stay all-out.

Participate prudently. Respect the possibility of overcapacity. Respect the possibility of transformation.

Balance is not cowardice. It is durability.

2. Invest in the Qualitative Edge

If AI commoditizes data and accelerates analysis, advantage migrates toward:

  • Assessing character

  • Understanding incentives

  • Exercising moral judgment

  • Navigating ambiguity

Machines process information.
Humans must decide what information is for.

That distinction will matter more than ever.

3. Invest in Systems That Preserve Human Dignity

Favor companies that use technology to augment people rather than discard them.

Favor institutions that build trust rather than extract attention.

Favor enterprises that recognize that workers and customers are not disposable inputs but participants in a shared endeavor.

The most durable moats in history have been built not merely on efficiency, but on earned trust — what might be called a seamless web of deserved credibility.

That is not theology.

It is long-term economics.

Closing Thought

AI may indeed be the automobile of our era.

But the more important question is whether we become better drivers — or merely faster passengers.

Leo XIII warned that systems must serve the human person.
John Paul II reminded us that work forms the worker.
Keynes warned of abundance without purpose.
Pieper urged us to reclaim leisure as culture.

Technology will accelerate.

Capital will overshoot.

Markets will cycle.

The deeper regime change is internal.

If we recover a vision of the human person that is larger than output, automation may become liberation.

If we do not, no amount of compute will save us from ourselves.

The cycle called yourself is still the only one that compounds without limit.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Hardest Work is Doing Nothing

 The terminal flashes red. The push notification hits your phone. The talking head on CNBC is screaming that the "market is melting down." Your pulse quickens. Your thumb hovers over the "Sell" button.

Stop.

Today’s lesson comes from 17th-century philosopher Blaise Pascal, and it might be the single most profitable piece of financial advice ever written.

The Wisdom Bite:

"All of humanity's problems stem from man's inability to sit quietly in a room alone."

The Action Bias Humans are evolved to act. When a lion jumps out of the bushes, you run. But in finance, the "lion" is usually a chart, and "running" (trading) is usually the wrong answer. This is the "Action Bias." We feel that if we aren't doing something—adjusting the portfolio, hedging, buying the dip—we are being negligent.

The Art of Sitting on Your Assets But as we learned from the Nomad Partnership letters, "the big money is not in the buying and selling, but in the waiting". Waiting is active. It is a muscular refusal to be swayed by the crowd. It requires what Howard Marks calls "intestinal fortitude". It is the discipline to let compounding work uninterrupted.

The Financial Takeaway: The next time volatility spikes, remember Pascal. Go sit in a room alone. Turn off the phone. Ask yourself: "Has the fundamental thesis changed, or is this just price action?" Usually, it's just price. And usually, the best move is to do absolutely nothing.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Atrophy of Decision

 

We live in an era of "Fed Watchers." We hang on every syllable from Chairman Powell. We wait for the consensus estimate. We wait for the "all clear" signal from the herd. We have outsourced our most vital economic function: the ability to decide.

Today’s lesson comes from the sci-fi epic Children of Dune by Frank Herbert. While writing about a galactic empire, Herbert perfectly diagnosed the modern investor's paralysis.

The Wisdom Bite:

“We’ve lost something vital, I tell you. When we lost it, we lost the ability to make good decisions. We fall upon decisions these days the way we fall upon an enemy—or wait and wait, which is a form of giving up, and we allow the decisions of others to move us. Have we forgotten that we were the ones who set this current flowing?”

Drifting in the Current "We allow the decisions of others to move us." Look at the market reaction to a CPI print. The entire capital allocation mechanism of the world pauses to see what the "others" (the Bureau of Labor Statistics) decide the number is. We are not setting the current; we are driftwood floating in it.

This is the loss of agency. When you buy a stock because "everyone says AI is the future," you have fallen upon a decision like an enemy—reactively, fearfully, without ownership.

Reclaiming Vitality Herbert reminds us that we are the ones who set the current flowing. The market is not an external god; it is the aggregate of our decisions. To reclaim your financial vitality, you must stop waiting for perfect clarity. You must stop waiting for permission from the pundits.

The Financial Takeaway: Originality is the only alpha. If you are waiting for the data to be clear, you are waiting for the price to be high. Reclaim the ability to make a decision based on your own synthesis of value, even if it contradicts the "current." As we’ve noted before, "Worldly wisdom teaches that it is better for reputation to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally." Defy that wisdom. Make your own decision.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Art of Subtraction

We live in the age of Data, Information, and Knowledge—the bottom layers of the DIKW pyramid. We are drowning in it. Every day brings a deluge of financial news, earnings reports, Fed speeches, and "expert" opinions. We feel a compulsion to consume it all, fearing that if we miss one data point, we will miss the edge.

But today’s wisdom suggests the opposite. It suggests that our "edge" comes not from adding more, but from taking away.

The Wisdom Bite:

“statues are carved by subtraction... People think that focus means saying yes to the thing you’ve got to focus on. But that’s not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are.”

The Noise Bottleneck

Nassim Taleb calls this the "Noise Bottleneck": "The more data you get, the less you know what’s going on". This is the "additive bias" at work—we try to solve problems by adding complexity (more screens, more indicators, more leverage) rather than subtracting confusion.

In your portfolio, this manifests as "diworsification". You buy 50 different stocks you don't understand because you think more lines on the statement equals more safety. In reality, you are just diluting your best ideas with mediocrity.

In your life, it manifests as "Work for Work's Sake" (W4W). You fill your calendar with activity to justify your existence, confusing motion with progress.

The Power of "No"

Steve Jobs noted that "Innovation is saying no to 1,000 things". The same is true for wealth. Wealth is built by saying "no" to the thousand speculative urges that cross your mind every year. It is built by saying "no" to the expensive fees of helpers who want to churn your account. It is built by saying "no" to the emotional impulse to sell when the market drops.

The Financial Takeaway

Clarity comes from subtraction. Audit your information diet. If a source hasn't helped you make a better decision in the last year, subtract it. Audit your portfolio. If you don't know why you own it, subtract it.

Be ruthless. The statue of your financial independence is already there; you just need to chip away the noise that is hiding it.

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Radical Middle

  We live in an era of binary takes. You are either a "doomer" predicting the collapse of the fiat currency system by next Tuesday...