Everyone Believes It; Most Will Be Wrong: Motley Thoughts on Investing and the Economy
Morgan Houselamazon.com
Everyone Believes It; Most Will Be Wrong: Motley Thoughts on Investing and the Economy
In his excellent book Your Money and Your Brain, Jason Zweig shows how powerful this can be. In a survey of 800 people with a net worth of at least $500,000, 19% said that having enough money was a constant worry. For those with a net worth of at least $10 million, 33% felt this way. "Somehow," Zweig writes, "as wealth grows, worry g
... See moreThere are only a few ironclad rules of investing. One is that there's a negative correlation between sentiment and future returns. When the public expects outsized returns, they practically guarantee otherwise. When people won't touch an asset because they think it's toxic, the stage is set for outperformance.
But to quote Buffett again, who once ridiculed a different group of defunct financiers: "To make money they didn't have and didn't need, they risked what they did have and did need. And that's foolish. It is just plain foolish. If you risk something that is important to you for something that is unimportant to you, it just does not make any se
... See moreThere's the old saying, "No one ever dies wishing they saved more money." Maybe true, but plenty live wishing they had.
Swan author Nassim Nicholas Taleb put it best: "The calamity of the information age is that the toxicity of data increases much faster than its benefits."
Economic history can be summed up as the story of impeccably bad forecasting. Busts start when the future looks the brightest, and booms are born when the end looks near, but you never know when those stages hit until they're behind you.
Danger is when something can be stated as fact, without facts backing it up, and still be accepted by most.
Growth isn't slow because of public policies; it's slow because we're deleveraging. Growth won't return when someone else is elected into office; it will return when we're done deleveraging. That won't be this month, next month, or even next year. At current rates, it'll be several years at least. That's why it's so hard to recover today. Don't bla
... See moreIf someone earning $35,000 a year doubles their income to $70,000, they move from the 43rd percentile to the 67th percentile -- a massive move that pushes them ahead of many peers. They've gained social ground. They feel much better off. But then the slope explodes. If someone making $250,000 doubles their income to $500,000, they move from the 97t
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