Thursday, March 19, 2026

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: It's Always Volatile in There

 "Not Another Volatile Day" (April 11, 2025) On a day when the S&P 500 dropped 3.5% and the CPI report disappointed, Quince refused to join the panicked herd. Instead of dwelling on the daily noise, he used the post to focus on timeless wisdom, specifically championing "prudence" as the ultimate virtue. It is one of his best pieces because it provides readers with a grounded, stoic checklist for weathering extreme volatility without making self-inflicted mistakes

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: Now I Remember

 "The Market Has No Memory?" (May 14, 2025) This post is a profound look into market psychology and behavioral finance. Quince explores the anthropomorphism of the market, noting that while it isn't a sentient being, its price action is driven by the collective expectations, traumas, and FOMO of its participants. It stands out for its insight that the ghosts of past crashes (like 2008 or the 2020 Covid crash) still dictate how fast we sell or reflexively buy the dip today

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: Both Big and Beautiful

 "One Big Beautiful Blog" (May 23, 2025) This entry serves as a fantastic meta-commentary on Quince's entire writing philosophy. He explains his mission to write "the definitive guide to financial history"—intentionally keeping it lowercase to poke fun at the inflated importance of daily financial news It earns a spot on this list because it perfectly encapsulates his core thesis: trading elusive, useless market predictions for actual perspective, and filtering the market's noise through wit and humility

Monday, March 16, 2026

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: Busy Rating

 "Sorry, Busy Rating Private Credit Deals" (June 3, 2025) This post showcases Edward Quince at his satirical best, taking aim at the booming private credit market. He mocks the idea of a tiny team of analysts assigning investment-grade ratings to thousands of private credit deals, humorously pointing out the cognitive dissonance of assuming a loan carrying a double-digit interest rate is somehow safe It is a brilliant, bite-sized critique of how Wall Street often obscures risk.

Friday, March 13, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Invisible Terrors of the Terminal

It is Friday. The economic data has been digested, the talking heads on CNBC have successfully argued both sides of the exact same trade, and you should probably just close your laptop and go touch grass.

But before you pour your tariffed tequila and start your weekend, I want to explore a philosophical concept that perfectly explains why the smartest people in finance regularly blow up their portfolios.

There is a profound observation in literature that goes like this: "Once terror is identified in this world, it becomes invisible."

In the real world, this describes how humans adapt to living in war zones or under oppressive regimes. The horrific becomes the mundane. The terrifying becomes the daily commute.

But in the financial world? This is the exact psychological mechanism that builds every bubble, fuels every mania, and guarantees every eventual collapse.

The Normalization of the Absurd Think about how markets process fear. When a new threat appears—a pandemic, a sudden spike in inflation, a geopolitical shock—the market panics. The VIX spikes. The "terror" is acute.

But humans, and the markets they comprise, cannot exist in a state of perpetual panic. So, we do what Wall Street does best: we name the terror, we quantify it, we build a dashboard for it, and we assign it a ticker symbol.

We take the terrifying reality of a $35 trillion national debt, or the absolute opacity of the private credit boom, or the existential threat of AI replacing the knowledge economy, and we put it into an Excel model.

And the moment it goes into the spreadsheet, it becomes invisible.

It stops being a "terror" and becomes a "risk premium." We convince ourselves that because we have named the monster, we have tamed it. As we've previously noted Robert Greene diagnosed this perfectly:

"The need for certainty is the greatest disease the mind faces."

We crave certainty so desperately that we will look at a mathematically unsustainable housing market, a wildly levered corporate balance sheet, or a meme-coin with a billion-dollar market cap, and accept it as "the new normal." We slap a "Buy" rating on the apocalypse just because it hasn't happened yet today.

The Danger of the Dashboard Wall Street is obsessed with metrics. But the true terrors—the ones that wipe out generational wealth—rarely announce themselves on a Bloomberg terminal.

Another piece of wisdom comes from Albert Einstein:

"Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted."

The invisible terrors are the unquantifiable ones. It is the sudden evaporation of trust. It is the moment the "smart money" realizes the liquidity they thought they had was an illusion. It is the realization that the models pricing "risk" were entirely built on data from a historically anomalous period of zero interest rates.

When the market is calm, and the VIX is low, investors suffer from what Andrew Haldane called "disaster myopia." We look at the absence of recent volatility and assume the ocean is permanently flat. As Howard Marks constantly reminds us, the perversity of risk is that it is highest precisely when everyone perceives it to be lowest. The turkey’s feeling of safety peaks the Wednesday before Thanksgiving.

The Financial Takeaway: Investing via Negativa If the real terrors are invisible, and our models are inherently flawed, how do you invest without walking blindly off a cliff?

You stop trying to predict the exact nature of the next disaster, and instead focus on avoiding the behaviors that guarantee ruin. We turn to one more quote, this time from Thomas Aquinas:

"we are unable to apprehend by knowing what it is. Yet we are able to have some knowledge of it by knowing what it is not."

This is the principle of via negativa—knowledge through subtraction. You may not be able to identify the exact catalyst of the next market crash (the terror), but you know exactly what isn't safe:

  • Borrowing short to lend long is not safe.

  • Paying 40 times revenue for a cyclical business is not safe.

  • Assuming "this time is different" is not safe.

  • Assuming you can time your exit perfectly before the crowd is not safe.

Don't let the familiarity of today's extreme markets make the underlying risks invisible to you. Build your portfolio with a Margin of Safety so wide that it doesn't require you to possess a crystal ball. Survive the invisible terrors by refusing to play the games where they hide.

Enjoy your weekend. Leave the terminal behind.

 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: Chekhov in the Boardroom

Chekhov's Principle (aka Chekhov's gun)


Playwright Anton Chekhov articulated a strict rule of narrative: If in the first act you have hung a pistol on the wall, then in the following one it should be fired. Otherwise don't put it there.


In finance, that loaded gun is leverage.


The Wisdom Bites:

"A lot of success in life and business comes from knowing what you want to avoid: early death, a bad marriage, etc." – Charlie Munger 


"The need for certainty is the greatest disease the mind faces." - Robert Greene


During the euphoric first act of an economic boom, investors and lenders happily nail loaded weapons to the wall. They structure highly leveraged CDOs, CLOs, and private credit loans because the immediate "optionality" and fee generation feel great. They assume the gun will never go off because "this time is different" and stability will last forever. But as Hyman Minsky taught us, stability breeds instability. Eventually, the economic cycle turns to Act III, the credit window slams shut, and the leverage fires—destroying the equity of anyone standing in its path.


The Financial Takeaway: You cannot introduce massive leverage into a portfolio and expect to permanently escape the consequences. Leverage doesn't add intrinsic value; it merely magnifies both good and bad outcomes, ensuring that a simple mistake becomes a fatal one. Win the long game by avoiding situations with loaded weapons

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: The Vacuum of Noise

 Nature abhors a vacuum.

Aristotle famously declared that nature abhors a vacuum. In the financial world, we can confidently declare that Wall Street abhors silence. Whenever there is a void of actual news or a gap in genuine understanding, it is instantly filled with a deafening roar of punditry, forecasts, and manufactured panic.


The Wisdom Bite:

"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 


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


The financial industry is a machine predicated on a demand by investors to be told what the market is going to do. When the market is flat, or when the Federal Reserve goes into a blackout period, the commentators suffer from "say-something syndrome". They concoct narratives, invent "blue chip forecasts" that are no better than a coin flip, and bombard us with data. But as Nassim Taleb warns, "the more data you get, the less you know what’s going on".


The Financial Takeaway: Do not let the market's abhorrence of a vacuum force you into the "Action Bias". We are conditioned to feel that if we aren't trading, we aren't investing. But the greatest investors know that the big money is not in the buying and selling, but in the waiting. Turn off the terminal, step away from the hubbub, and dare to just sit there.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Edward Quince’s Wisdom Bites: The Bad Trade

 Can you tell the difference between what's important and the price you have to pay?


In our relentless pursuit of growth, we often forget to measure the actual cost of our ambitions. We know the price of a stock down to the penny, but we are remarkably bad at pricing the intangible costs to our peace of mind, our integrity, and our survival.


The Wisdom Bite:

"If you already live a comfortable life, then choosing to make more money but live a worse daily life is a bad trade." – Morgan Housel


 "Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted." – Albert Einstein


In corporate finance, this "bad trade" happens every day. We see it when private equity firms force "dividend recaps" to extract cash from a business, leveraging the balance sheet to the hilt to maximize their Internal Rate of Return (IRR). They make the spreadsheet look brilliant, but the price they pay is injecting massive fragility into the company. They risk the entire survival of the enterprise just to squeeze out a marginally higher metric. Similarly, professionals fall into the trap of "Work for Work's Sake" (W4W), taking on more stress, micromanaging, and destroying their autonomy just to justify their existence or inflate their bank accounts.


The Financial Takeaway: Don't sacrifice your "fixed point" for a fleeting gain. In investing, leveraging a portfolio to turn an inadequate 6% return into a 10% return is a terrible trade because the price you pay is the risk of total ruin. Know what truly counts, and stop sacrificing your Margin of Safety—or your life—for metrics that ultimately don't matter.

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: It's Always Volatile in There

  "Not Another Volatile Day" (April 11, 2025) On a day when the S&P 500 dropped 3.5% and the CPI report disappointed, Quince...