"We think they are days from failure. They think it is a temporary problem. This disconnect is dangerous."
Thursday, October 31, 2024
Daily Economic Update: October 31, 2024
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
Daily Economic Update: October 30, 2024
Tuesday, October 29, 2024
Daily Economic Update: October 29, 2024
Monday, October 28, 2024
Daily Economic Update: October 28, 2024
Friday, October 25, 2024
Daily Economic Update: October 25, 2024
“I define central bank independence in one sentence, it's the ability to raise interest rates when the Treasury doesn't want you to. And the Treasury almost never wants you to, because of the cost of the debt.” – Peter Stella
"The easiest way not to be overly influenced by what other people think is to not be aware of what they think" - Shelby Davis
and that the only way to beat the market (which I'm not saying you should even aim to do) is to diverge from the market:
"the willingness to be lonley, the willingness to take a position that others don't think is to bright. They have an inner conviction that a lot of other people do not have." - Michael Lipper describing Buffett, Soros and Templeton
and lastly that the four most dangerous words in the English language are:
"This time is different."
Thursday, October 24, 2024
Daily Economic Update: October 24, 2024
Wednesday, October 23, 2024
Daily Economic Update: October 23, 2024
“hedge” financing units, in which the buyer’s cash flows cover interest and principalpayments; “speculative” finance units, in which cash flows cover only interestpayments; and “Ponzi” units, in which cash flows cover neither and depend on risingasset prices to keep the buyer afloat."
- In a world where there are so many asset classes, his ephiphany of late is that "at bottom, there are only two asset classes: ownership and debt"
- It's an enormous difference to own vs. to lend. Owners have no promise of return, lenders have a contractual "fixed outcome" assuming the borrower makes good.
- Choosing between the two is the most basic thing investors must decide.
- To anchor the decision, Marks' says you must first indentify a "risk posture", how much emphasis you want on preserving (defense) vs. growing capital (offense). Calling this preservation vs. growth, mutually exclusive and a "inescapable truth in investing."
- The absolute level of risk must be conciously targeted and the level of risk in the portfolio must be well compensated.
- A higher expected return with further upside potential, at the cost of greater uncertainty, volatility, and downside risk? Or a more dependable but lower expected return, entailing less upside and less downside? The choice between the two is subjective, largely a function of the investor’s circumstances and attitude toward bearing risk. That means the answer will be different for different investors.
- Even after investors determine their "normal risk posture", they face a choice: they can maintain that posture all the time or deviate on occassions of market attractiveness.
- As "risk" incrases, not only do expected returns increase, but the range of possible outcomes becomes wider and bad outcomes become worse.
- "All ways of getting to a certain risk level will produce the same expected return." There are no free lunches, in theory. However, Marks' states "in reality, markets are not efficient in the academic sense of always being "right" and gains can be acheived through skill.
- He believes that it's difficult to advocate for investors to depart from their "sweet spot" in terms of risk level because many managers who are believed to possess alpha turn out not to.
- He concludes with a quick plug for investors to conisder the certain of allocations to credit at current levels, which he sees as returns of 7-10% (likely only obtainable in high-yield in private credit in my estimation)
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
Daily Economic Update: October 22, 2024
"They have endured for decades even at massive scale. I don’t see this as a contention but as an observation. Ironically they’ve altered the patterns of stock market return sufficiently that the very utility of the ‘mean’ has been undermined. The mean is now so far above the median stock that our entire notion of the distribution of returns has to be reviewed. The first chance to reassess came with Microsoft over 30 years ago. The investment community has been slow indeed. We can react to economic data or quarterly earnings in seconds but adjusting our world view has proven far harder.
"Are we now forgetting that at virtually every moment of the last 15 years, smart people argued that the market was overvalued, recession was near, hyperinflation was around the corner, the country was bankrupt, the numbers were manipulated, the dollar was worthless, on and on?
I think we forget these things because we now know how the story ends: the stock market went up a lot. If you held on tight, none of those past events mattered. So it’s easy to discount – even ignore – how they felt at the time. You think back and say, “That was so easy, money was free, the market went straight up.” Even if few people actually felt that way during the last 15 years.So much of what matters in investing – this is true for a lot of things in life – is how you manage the psychology of uncertainty. The problem with looking back with hindsight is that nothing is uncertain. You think no one had anything to worry about, because most of what they were worrying about eventually came to pass.“You should have been happy and calm, given where things ended up,” you say to your past self. But your past self had no idea where things would end up. Uncertainty dictates nearly everything in the current moment, but looking back we pretend it never existed.
Concluding with "The past wasn’t as good as you remember. The present isn’t as bad as you think. The future will be better than you anticipate."
And that's about as much optimism as you're going to get from me.
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