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."