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  • Charles Ellis on “Winning” at Investing

    August 23, 2017

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    Jon

    Charles Ellis has played a few roles in his life: an investment consultant on Wall Street, chairman of the Yale endowment, professor, and author of several books (17? and counting), including the classic Winning the Loser’s Game.

    I’ve been reading a lot of Charley Ellis’ articles and interviews the past few days. He has a unique way of framing some of the basic tenets of investing success.

    So I’ve pulled some highlights from what I read that help describe what Ellis believes investors need to do in order to “win” at investing.
    Continue Reading…


  • Happy Hour: Valuation Factors

    August 18, 2017

    ·

    Jon

    The latest from James Montier of GMO is a rundown on the current U.S. market valuation. Feel free to read that part, if you want (links are below).

    I want to focus on his explanation of the factors that drive market returns and valuation. Because when you understand the factors, you can reach your own conclusions on where the market stands on valuation.

    There are a lot of factors you can consider when doing this, but most are secondary. Besides, this isn’t rocket science, so let’s over complicate it. It’s best to keep it simple, which Montier’s does: Continue Reading…


  • Howard Marks on Quantifying Risk

    August 16, 2017

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    Jon

    When the stock market’s gone up for several years it’s easy to get complacent and ignore the changing risk in your portfolio. Why sell or rebalance or adjust an allocation when equities are doing so well? Because investing has tradeoffs in risk and return. When you only have a plan for moves higher, you leave yourself unprotected from worse markets.

    Risky events don’t happen on a timely basis. There are no giant neon signs that flash, “It’s time to get out!”

    Instead, we hear pundits droning on about the “risks” from trough to peak. In other words, quantifying risk is hard: Continue Reading…


  • Happy Hour: Caught Up

    August 11, 2017

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    Jon

    I spent most of this week getting caught up on what I missed while on vacation. Non-existant best describes my online access on the trip, which was weird in a good way. On the rare chance I got a connection, I swear I had faster internet speeds in 1997.

    Not having your phone blow up every few minutes with Twitter notifications or email updates is refreshing and relaxing. Thankfully, the world is so vast that we haven’t completely covered it with decent cell reception.

    Something everyone must learn about the market (all news topics really) is the media makes all the noise sound important. Yet the real important stuff happens less often than they’d like you to believe. So you really can take some time off and never miss a beat. Continue Reading…


  • Being Comfortable with Risk

    August 9, 2017

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    Jon

    A big part of investing is understanding that every strategy moves in and out of favor. As the saying goes, the best strategies perform well over time, not all the time.

    The second part to that is understanding that stock prices are in constant flux. The second you believe prices move in one direction is the moment you set yourself up for trouble later on.

    History shows that for some reason – complacency, ignorance, panic, FOMO, greed, envy, whatever – many investors change strategies during a market cycle. Whatever strategy they were using, if they had one, is no longer good enough for the recent price action.

    It’s that chasing of returns versus anticipating a change in those returns that lead to higher risk taking and uncomfortable endings. Continue Reading…


  • Happy Hour: Model Manifesto

    July 21, 2017

    ·

    Jon

    A quick note: Starting next week I’ll be unplugged and on vacation. So no articles for the next two weeks.

    Financial models are meant to be used as good rules of thumb when making decisions. So simpler is usually better with highly complex, uncertain, and adaptive markets. Simplicity allows for flexibility in that type of environment.

    But problems arise when people rely on models to make the uncertain certain or try to attain physics-like perfection. They get rigid complex models in the process. Continue Reading…


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