Today, we explore why the hardest work in finance is not the acquisition of data, but the psychological fortitude required for disciplined non-action.
The Illusion of the High Plateau
"They say the sky's the limit, but the sky's about to fall." This sentiment perfectly captures the "perversity of risk": the reality that risk is highest precisely when participants perceive it to be the lowest. When the horizon is cloudless, prudence is dropped, and "permanently high plateaus" are hailed as the new paradigm.
We see this currently in the compression of investment-grade credit spreads to levels not seen in decades, as if a default cycle will never occur again. Like the "Nifty Fifty" in 1969 or the dot-com gang in 1999, the crowd has once again decided that for wonderful businesses, "no price is too high". But as Howard Marks reminds us, "trees don’t grow to the sky," and they have a nasty habit of falling on inattentive speculators.
The Sunk Cost of "Knowing"
One of the most dangerous traps for the modern professional is the "sunk cost of intellectual capital". As our new theme suggests: "A man can spend several hours sitting cross-legged in the same position if he knows that nothing prevents him from changing it; but if he knows that he has to sit cross-legged, he will get cramps."
In finance, this "cramp" is the Consistency Bias. Once you have publicly planted your flag on a specific macroeconomic forecast or a "must-own" asset class, you become terrified of looking like a hypocrite if you change your mind. You become shackled by your own expertise.
To survive a "sea change" in market regimes—such as the transition from zero interest rates (ZIRP) to a world where money actually costs something—you must be willing to hit reset. You must adopt the "beginner's mind" and be willing to go back to the bottom of the mountain. True wisdom is not accumulating new facts; it is scraping away the barnacles of old, defunct beliefs.
From Default "Yes" to Default "No"
The "finfluencer" culture thrives on the "additive bias"—the urge to solve problems by adding indicators, more leverage, or "features of dubious value". They sell the "I Know" school of investing: loud, fast, and allergic to doubt.
Edward Quince advocates for the opposite: The Art of Subtraction.
The Filter: If it won’t matter in five years, don’t give it five minutes of your attention.
The Default: Shift from a default "yes" to every speculative breeze to a default "no".
The Goal: Success is often the result of surviving when everyone else has been eliminated by their own unnecessary activity.
When you lack clarity, you waste energy on the "trivial many". When you have clarity, you realize that the most profitable move is often to sit quietly in a room alone.
The Financial Takeaway: Build Your Ark in the Sun
History is indeed "one long progression of crazy ideas," and the most dangerous one is that you can time the storm.
Stop Predicting Rain: Forecasting is a fool’s errand; even the experts are less reliable than a coin flip.
Build the Ark: Focus on "Margin of Safety"—that financial buffer that allows you to survive the inevitable low points without risking permanent loss of capital.
Audit for "Hope": Are you holding a position because fundamentals support it, or because you "hope" it returns to your entry price? "Be careful what you do, because the lie becomes the truth." If you fool your shareholders or yourself for long enough, you will eventually believe your own baloney.
Real wealth is not measured in accumulation, but in autonomy. It is the ability to wake up and say, "I can do whatever the hell I want today". To get there, you must pay the "invisible invoice" of patience and emotional control.
The big money is not in the buying and the selling, but in the waiting. Build your ark while the sun is shining.
Do you see any "cramps" in your current portfolio—beliefs you are holding onto simply because you’ve held them for so long?