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  • Quarterly Reading – Summer 2024

    June 26, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Here’s what I’ve been reading for the past three months:

    • To Engineer is Human – Engineering innovations are a byproduct of failed designs that create opportunities for improvement and success, while success can bring overconfidence, added risk-taking, and disaster. Henry Petroski’s book goes through the history of engineering failures and lessons learned that led to progress in the design of buildings, bridges, and more.  (Notes)
    • The Greatest Minds and Ideas of All Time – This book is a compilation of Will Durant’s essays and lectures. His personal lists of the greatest thinkers, poets, books, peaks of human progress, and dates offer a journey through world history. (Notes)
    • The First Million is the Hardest: An Autobiography – Arthur Farquhar built a global agricultural manufacturer. He also faced hardship in that process — a factory that burned down twice, multiple depressions, and the Civil War. His autobiography offers a mix of U.S. history, business common sense, and name-dropping. He discusses presidents, politicians, and business leaders he met throughout his life. (Notes)
    • Maxims for Thinking Analytically – Richard Zeckhauser is an economist and Harvard professor. The book uses practical examples to explain 22 of Zeckhauser’s maxims around analytical thinking and better decision-making. Notes to come.
    • The Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie – The latest read is inspired by Farquhar, who viewed Carnegie as the best businessman ever. Carnegie immigrated with his parents to the U.S. at a young age. Carnegie started as a bobbin boy at a cotton factory at age 13. A job as a telegraph messenger boy a year later changed his life. Or so I expect from the man who built a steel empire, became the richest person in the U.S., and proceeded to give almost all of it away. Notes to come after I finish the book.

    Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 6/21/24

    June 21, 2024

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    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    One of the enduring features of the findings in behavioral psychology as it applies to finance, a subject I have discussed many times over the years, is the almost complete inability of those who are aware of them to actually apply them. You can attend Richard Zeckhauser’s seminars at Harvard, read lots of articles and case studies, be reminded of how recency bias, or anchoring, or the representative fallacy, or myopic loss aversion impair clear thinking and skew decision making, and still fall prey to them and others of their ilk the moment you are confronted with real world situations…

    This is not unusual. Warren Buffett has often noted how any knowledgeable analyst would have pegged the value of the Washington Post at about 5x what it traded at in the 1974 bear market, yet no one wanted it at that price. The 2002 bear market saw some similarly amazing prices. AES traded under $1… Yet fear set its price, as it did those of Nextel, Tyco, Corning, Amazon, and a host of other companies at that time…

    I am reminded once again of the quote that sits in the front of Ben Graham’s Security Analysis, from Horace’s Ars Poetica: “Many shall be restored that now are fallen and many shall fall that now are in honor.” (The quote does not say “all” by the way, just “many”). — Bill Miller (source)

    Continue Reading…


  • Buffett’s Lessons from Long Term Capital Management

    June 19, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    The story of Long-Term Capital Management is an interesting episode in financial history. In the midst of the 90’s Internet Bubble, a bailout took place to prevent a ripple effect in the financial sector.

    In September 1998, Warren Buffett played a bit part in the bailout. His offer was eventually turned down. A few weeks later, he was asked about his role by a University of Florida student. Buffett’s answer offers some insight into the lessons of risk, probability, and leverage when math collides with behavior-driven markets. Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 6/14/24

    June 14, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    Most financial principles and theories have a degree of good sense to them. It may be a large degree, but it never comes close to being absolute. None of them ever has the comforting reliability of Euclid’s comment about the length of the hypotenuse of a right-angled triangle. Consider the observable occurrence and reoccurrence of what economists traditionally call the business cycle. It exists, certainly enough. Stocks never go so high that they don’t fall down, and never sink so low that they don’t eventually go back up again. But the duration of this cycle is figured by some at the mystic and Biblical figure of seven years, and sometimes at six. However, there have been periods when it worked out to other numbers of years, such as three, two, or half a year. Or take the period of two and a half years preceding the morning on which these words happen to be written. (Summer, 1949.) While events of world importance have been taking place, the stock market has done nothing but drift listlessly a little lower, from prices which could be considered low to begin with, in view of corporate earnings at that time. Thus the riddle is propounded: can such a pattern be termed predictable?

    It is not likely that this riddle will ever be conclusively solved. It is fair to point out, however, that the tendency of the human heart is to plump for the idea that there is a sensible order in the rise and fall of prices, whether the evidence is good or nonexistent. People do not care for the idea that any important activity which affects them is as beyond their control as a pair of dancing dice. — Fred Schwed Jr. (source)

    Continue Reading…


  • Bernard Baruch’s Biggest Mistake

    June 11, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Bernard Baruch lived a dual financial life early in his career. He remained cautious and ever-watchful over his client’s money but that conservative nature ended where his own portfolio began.

    Baruch tended to overtrade. He also ran a margin account and never left money in reserve. In other words, he liked to bet it all. But since he had little capital, he always put up the smallest margin possible.

    In those days, margin accounts allowed anywhere from 10% to 20% margin. So Baruch could buy a stock using his own money to cover as little as 10% of a stock’s price and borrow the other 90%. Which is exactly what he did. Except, having no money in reserve meant a tiny change in price would quickly wipe him out. And so it went.

    Anytime Baruch came across a stock or bond he felt sure of, he bet everything he had. Almost like clockwork, the market moved in the wrong direction, and he was broke again. It didn’t help that most of his ideas came from gossip and tips. This process repeated numerous times before he finally realized he needed a little bit of money in reserve in case the market moved against him.

    His big turning point, however, came in the spring of 1897. It was the first time Baruch changed his investment approach. He set his eyes on American Sugar Refining. He could afford to buy shares but before doing so he actually studied the company. Continue Reading…


  • Weekend Reads – 6/7/24

    June 7, 2024

    ·

    Jon

    Quote for the Week

    If you can throw your mind, as I can, as far back as 1914, you would be struck by some extraordinary differences in Wall Street then and today. In a great number of things, the improvement has been tremendous. The ethics of Wall Street are very much better. The sources of information are much greater, and the information itself is much more dependable. There have been many advances in the art of security analysis. In all those respects we are very far ahead of the past.

    In one important respect we have made practically no progress at all, and that is in human nature. Regardless of all the apparatus and all the improvements in techniques, people still want to make money very fast. They still want to be on the right side of the market. And what is most important and most dangerous, we all want to get more out of Wall Street than we deserve for the work we put in. — Ben Graham (source)

    Continue Reading…


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