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  • Write It Down Redux

    March 13, 2020

    ·

    Jon

    What a week! The range of emotions felt over the last four days must stretch from kid in a candy store to panic attack. I’m guessing, for most people, the candy store sensation is absent.

    But some of us feel it. And it’s just as hard for opportunity seekers not to act rashly as it is for panicky investors. That dopamine hit after every buy order clears can be just as addicting…until you’ve burned through the cash set aside for times like these.

    Patience and discipline are just as important for opportunistic investors as it is for everyone else in extraordinarily volatile markets.

    As the saying goes, the best time to buy stocks is when things seem bleakest. I don’t think we’ve reached that point yet (nor do I know where it is).

    But some time, like five years from now, few will remember how they felt and reacted during this crash but everyone will agree it was a wonderful buying opportunity.

    My suggestion: write it down! Continue Reading…


  • Peter Lynch on Volatility

    March 11, 2020

    ·

    Jon

    With all the volatility in the stock market lately, I thought it would be a good time to point out that this is only natural. Sometimes it’s uncomfortable. It’s stomach churning. It’s downright painful. Scary, even. But it’s all part of the experience.

    So if those feelings sound a little familiar, I thought Peter Lynch’s perspective might offer some reassurance to help settle your nausea:

    I love volatility…I think volatility is terrific.

    Okay, maybe that’s not the most helpful for a queasy stomach.

    Lynch saw volatility as an opportunity. Others might see it as a burden. It all depends on your perspective. Continue Reading…


  • Deep Dive into a Correction

    March 6, 2020

    ·

    Jon

    Out of all the 2020 market predictions, nobody suspected a virus. The future can be unpredictable like that.

    But that’s why a plan is so important. Your investment plan may not have foreseen what would hit the markets, but it should have prepared you for a hit of some kind.

    As we’re finding out, Mr. Market can get wild at times. While the S&P 500 is down 10.8% from its 2020 high, it’s only down 6.4% on the year. That brings it back to the same level it was at four months ago — November 2019.

    If it feels worse, it’s because the fall happened so quickly. Seven trading days, and a 12.8% decline, separate the February 19th high from the February 28th low.

    And it’s been highly volatile since. So far, March saw the S&P move: 4.6%, -2.8%, 4.2%, -3.4% over its first four consecutive trading days.

    Of course, that only tells part of Mr. Market’s story. What about the stocks inside the S&P 500? Just because the S&P is down doesn’t mean every stock in the index is down (it’s a convenient example of the benefits of diversification in times like these). Which happens to be the case YTD: Continue Reading…


  • England’s First Market Bubble: The Mania of 1692

    March 4, 2020

    ·

    Jon

    The year was 1688. The mood in England was optimistic. People were flush with cash and had few places to put it. The environment was ripe for a mania.

    The East India Company was one of a handful of joint-stock companies trading at the time. Trading is a loose use of the term. Few people were willing to part with their East India shares since they were so lucrative and the company refused to issue more. The demand for shares needed to be supplied…

    About 100 new joint-stock companies schemes would be born over the next four years — insurance, fisheries, tanning, swords, diving, and more. Stories would be woven about the future prosperity of each endeavor.

    And like all bubbles, investors ate it up. What started as a need to earn a decent return, morphed into a get-rich-quick greed as the price action and large gains took hold. It would fuel the mania until something — supply for shares exceeded demand — caused the collapse.

    If this sounds familiar, it should. It was repeated again in 1720. Twenty-eight years later the South Sea Bubble would birth (and wipe out) a similar list of companies. And that’s just the next market bubble, in a long list of bubbles that mirror it.

    The bubble that began in 1688 was mostly forgotten until Lord Macaulay retold the tale almost 200 years after it popped (added paragraph spacing for easier reading): Continue Reading…


  • Inverting the Investment Process

    February 28, 2020

    ·

    Jon

    Charlie Munger held court at the DJCO annual meeting a few weeks ago. One issue with Munger’s (and Buffett’s) popularity is the Q&A session at these meetings get repetitive. Anyone watching past sessions or reading through old transcripts will hear the same questions and answers annually.

    Now, every so often, Munger changes up the answers.

    This year, he expanded on a trick he calls the inversion process. It’s the idea of flipping a problem (or question) on its head. It has wide uses, including in investing: Continue Reading…


  • Lessons from the 2019 Berkshire Letter

    February 26, 2020

    ·

    Jon

    Warren Buffett began his 2019 Shareholder Letter with a review of a short but groundbreaking book. The findings would change what the author, and everyone along with him, believed ever since.

    Edgar Lawrence Smith set out to prove a theory that bonds were better investments than stocks during periods of deflation, while stocks were better than bonds during inflation.

    Instead, he found that stocks were better investments all around. His work, Common Stocks as Long Term Investments would be published in 1924. The ideas didn’t catch on until John Maynard Keynes popularized the book with a written review in May of 1925.

    Smith’s findings completely upended the widespread view that bonds were “safe” and stocks were speculative. And the book would go on to play a role in the ensuing market bubble that burst in 1929. Continue Reading…


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