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.

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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 do...