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  • Lessons from the Best Posts of 2024

    December 11, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    It’s time to wrap up 2024. Every year, I do a quick review of the blog. It’s a way to highlight some things you might have missed and some of the greatest hits that gained the most traction.

    This year, the blog grew by:

    • 68 new blog posts. The most read are below.
    • 12 new book notes. That brings the total to 96 books.
    • 91 new quotes. There are 1,171 quotes in the collection. Peter Lynch and Risk Management quotes were the most popular in 2024. Same as last year.
    • 113 new pieces in the Library.
    • 89 longer quotes from those pieces added to the Notebook. There are now 1,387 sorted by investing topic and author available to members.

    I also joined BlueSky a year ago and started posting recently. It’s the less toxic version of Twitter. Bluesky lets you control the algorithm, for now at least, based on who you follow, block, etc. You have a choice. The algorithm is not forced on you. So far it’s more useful in finding relevant, interesting discussions on investing, finance, and economics without the emotional manipulation pushed into your timeline. Check it out and follow along if you’d like. I plan to be most active there going forward.

    Fifteen years of writing have taught me that it’s anyone’s guess what happens after I hit publish. What post gains traction? Which falls flat? It’s as unpredictable as markets. It’s also a fun surprise to see what you, the readers, find most interesting. So thank you for reading and sharing! Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 12/6/24

    December 6, 2024

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    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    One of the first lessons I heard about pendulums and the swing of investor behavior regarded something I was taught in the early 1970s: the three stages of a bull market. These succinctly capture the essence of investor psychology.

    The first stage comes when a few people begin to realize that there will be improvement. The second stage occurs when most people realize that improvement is already taking place. The third stage comes when everyone thinks that things will be getting better forever. Clearly, the first is early; the last is laughably late. One of my favorite adages – perhaps my favorite of all – is that what the wise man does in the beginning, the fool does in the end. So it’s the buyer in the third stage – who buys when optimism is incorporated, under the assumption that things will always get better – who pays the price. — Howard Marks (source)

    Continue Reading…


  • Charting Markets: A Look at 2024

    December 4, 2024

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    Jon

    The story of 2024 began with worries about market concentration in the Magnificent Seven only to have the least techy sectors stand out by year’s end.

    Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq are up close to 26% year to date. Including dividends adds a couple of percentage points to that. It’s been a phenomenal year for U.S. stocks.

    S&P 500, Nasdaq, international, and emerging market returns year to date 2024

    International (EFA) and emerging markets (EEM) fell short of the US. Both started the year well — exceeding double-digit returns through September. Then came the dip. The disconnect in performance between US and international stocks is ongoing for over a decade. In fact, since 2009 (to 2023) the S&P 500’s total return is almost twice that of the MSCI’s international and emerging market indexes. These things tend to move in cycles, so it will be interesting to see how much longer it continues. Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 11/22/24

    November 22, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    There are myriad feedback loops at work in financial markets at any point of time. Some of them are positive, others negative. As long as they are more or less in balance they cancel out each other and market fluctuations do not have a definite direction. I compare these swings to the waves sloshing around in a swimming pool as opposed to the tides and currents that may prevail when positive feedbacks preponderate. Since positive feedbacks are self-reinforcing occasionally they may become so big that they overshadow all other happenings in the market.

    Negative feedback loops tend to be more ubiquitous but positive feedback loops are more interesting because they can cause big moves both in market prices and in the underlying fundamentals. A positive feedback process that runs its full course is initially self-reinforcing in one direction, but eventually it is liable to reach a climax or reversal point, after which it becomes self-reinforcing in the opposite direction. But positive feedback processes do not necessarily run their full course; they may be aborted at any time by negative feedback. — George Soros (source)

    Continue Reading…


  • Ergodicity: Definition, Examples, & Implications by Luca Dellanna

    November 20, 2024

    ·

    Ergodicity book coverBuy the Book: Print | eBook

    The book offers a crash course on the concept of ergodicity. Through simple examples, the author shows the importance of recognizing debilitating risks from recoverable risks and why survival matters more than performance for long-term success.

    The Notes

    Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 11/15/24

    November 15, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    It is a great mistake to believe that a speculation has been unwise if you lose money at it. That sounds like an obvious conclusion, but actually it is not true at all. A speculation is unwise only if it is made on insufficient study and by poor judgment. I recall to those of you who are bridge players the emphasis that the bridge experts place on playing a hand right rather than on playing it successfully. Because, as you know, if you play it right you are going to make money and if you play it wrong you lose money — in the long run.

    There is a beautiful little story, that I suppose most of you have heard, about the man who was the weaker bridge player of the husband-and-wife team. It seems he bid a grand slam, and at the end he said very triumphantly to his wife, “I saw you making faces at me all the time, but you notice I not only bid this grand slam but I made it. What can you say about that?” And his wife replied very dourly, “If you had played it right you would have lost it.”

    There is a great deal of that in Wall Street, particularly in the field of speculation, when you are trying to do it by careful calculation. In some cases the thing will work out badly. But that is simply part of the game. If it was bound to work out rightly, it wouldn’t be a speculation at all, and there wouldn’t be the opportunities of profit that inhere in sound speculation. It seems to me that is axiomatic. — Ben Graham (source)

    Continue Reading…


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