Showing posts with label Chris Cole. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Cole. Show all posts

Friday, April 17, 2020

Links

Charlie Munger: ‘The Phone Is Not Ringing Off the Hook’ (LINK)

"The Practice of Value Investing" by Li Lu (November 2019 speech, translated) (LINK)

Has This California Lab Fixed America’s Covid Test Problem? - by Michael Lewis (LINK)

Who Pays For This? - by Morgan Housel (LINK)

Rob Arnott: Why the Stock Market Hasn't Even Gotten Cheap Yet (video) (LINK)

The NBA and Microsoft - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

Mohnish Pabrai and Francis Chou Q&A with Harvard class (podcast) (LINK)

Value Investing with Legends Podcast: Dan Davidowits & Jeff Mueller – Compounding with Polen Capital (LINK)

MacroVoices Podcast #215 - Chris Cole: Dragon portfolio revisited in the eye of the storm (LINK)
Related paper: "The Allegory of the Hawk and the Serpent"
The Peter Attia Drive Podcast: #107 - John Barry: 1918 Spanish flu pandemic—historical account, parallels to today, and lessons (LINK)
Related book: The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History

Thursday, February 20, 2020

Links

Note to the hardcore Berkshire and investing readers: Warren Buffett's letter to shareholders will be released on Saturday and, as we've done for the past few years, Chris Bloomstran's annual letter will also be released here on the blog tomorrow. Chris was hoping to keep things much shorter than the 112-pager from last year, but it's looking like it'll come in a bit longer than that for this year. So make sure your printer is full of paper and ink, and check back here during the second half of the day tomorrow for the Semper Augustus Investments Group 2019 Annual Letter. 

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"Conservatism may cause investors to refrain from making some investments that in hindsight would have been successful, but it will also prevent some sizable losses that would ensue from adopting less conservative business valuations." --Seth Klarman

The Best Thing You Can Do for Your Work Is Take a Walk - by Ryan Holiday (LINK)

The Knowledge Project Podcast: #76 Frank Stephenson: Pushing the Limits of Innovation (LINK)

Superinvestors and the Art of Worldly Wisdom Podcast: #32: Christopher Cole On Appreciating Risk (LINK)

Walter Isaacson reviews the book Franklin & Washington: The Founding Partnership by Edward J. Larson (LINK)

How often do severe solar storms pummel the Earth? - by Phil Plait (LINK)

A Huge Discovery in the World of Viruses - by Ed Yong (LINK)

What's Next for COVID-19? [H/T @Atul_Gawande] (LINK)
Containment of the coronavirus would make an enormous difference to health around the world. Is it still possible?

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Links

"The cost of every deal we do is measured by the second best deal that’s around at a given time, including doing more of some of the things we’re already in." --Warren Buffett (2001)

"Charlie and I always figure that our cost of capital is what could be produced by our second best idea. And then our best idea has to exceed that." --Warren Buffett (2014)

Twenty Years of Owning Berkshire Hathaway (LINK)

Broyhill 2019 Annual Letter (LINK)

Risk and loss aversion in ergodicity economics (LINK)

The a16z Marketplace 100 (LINK)

The Cutting Room Files, Part 7: Europe - by Peter Zeihan (LINK)

Bob Iger on The Bill Simmons Podcast (LINK)

Ben Thompson on The Bill Simmons Podcast (LINK)

The Acquirers Podcast: Dylan Grice (LINK)

Macro Voices Podcast: #206 Chris Cole: Optimizing portfolio construction for changing times [22:02 mark] (LINK)

Capital Allocators Podcast: Dan Rasmussen (LINK)

Acquired Podcast: Sequoia Capital Part II (with Doug Leone) (LINK)

Sir William Osler’s Advice to Students: Practice Concentrating on Hard Things (LINK)

The Cascading Consequences of the Worst Disease Ever - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Monday, February 10, 2020

Links

Famed investor Charlie Munger shares insights into the ‘basic math of life’ at Redlands Forum [H/T @robertmackenzie)] (LINK) [Hopefully a video of this conversation, as well as the Daily Journal Annual Meeting occurring later this week, will become publicly available.]

The Gates Foundation's 2020 Annual Letter from Bill and Melinda Gates (LINK)

The Coming Retirement Crisis Part II - by Raoul Pal (video) (LINK)

Why We're in the Biggest Financial Bubble in History (w/ Steve Bregman & Mike Green) (video) (LINK)

Odd Lots Podcast: Why The Rise of Passive Investing Might Be Distorting The Market (w/ Mike Green) (LINK)

Hidden Forces Podcast: The Hundred Year Portfolio: How to Grow & Protect Generational Wealth | Christopher Cole (LINK)
Related paper: "The Allegory of the Hawk and the Serpent"
EconTalk Podcast: Marty Makary on the Price We Pay (LINK)
Related book: The Price We Pay: What Broke American Health Care--and How to Fix It
The Ezra Klein Show (podcast): Tim Urban on humanity’s wild future (LINK)
Related link: "The Story of Us"
In Praise of Irrationality (LINK)
Related book: Alchemy
Mental Models in Space (LINK)
Related book: An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth
Yuval Noah Harari Gives the Really Big Picture (LINK)
Related book: Sapiens

Friday, January 24, 2020

Links

"How ought one navigate an environment such as today’s? With great patience and strict discipline. Every position in the portfolio must offer the prospect of compelling rewards for the risks incurred. One must be vigilant to spot adverse developments and identify flawed theses, and be unemotional in taking appropriate action. One must sell when prices become full, even when there is nothing immediate to buy as a replacement. One must be willing to hold cash, but also positioned to move quickly to take advantage of opportunities that develop. Prudent portfolio diversification is necessary, but there must also be a willingness to concentrate in the best opportunities. One must avoid speculating, or chasing the latest investment fads. An investor must be wired for deep intellectual honesty and self-assessment, determined to get smarter and learn from experience, focused on where an edge is present, while moving out of strategies where one is not." --Seth Klarman (January 2020)

Artemis Capital Management: The Allegory of the Hawk and the Serpent (Research Paper, Audio)

How to Survive the 21st Century | DAVOS 2020 (Yuval Noah Harari - video) (LINK)

Satya Nadella, Microsoft CEO: An Insight, An Idea | DAVOS 2020 (video) (LINK)

Clayton Christensen, guru of disruptive innovation and Latter-day Saint leader, dies at 67 (LINK)

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Links

"We think the best way to minimize risk is to think." --Warren Buffett (2004)

Brookfield to Buy 62% of Oaktree Capital Management (LINK)

Daniel Kahneman in conversation with Sam Harris (podcast) (LINK)

Where [Elizabeth] Warren’s Wrong - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

Adam Smith, Loneliness, and the Limits of Mainstream Economics - by Russ Roberts (LINK)

Prem Watsa on PM Modi, elections and Fairfax’s India investments (LINK)

The Decivilization of Venezuela - by Peter Zeihan (LINK)

The College Admissions Scandal Is About More Than Just Bribery - by Tyler Cowen (LINK)

Hallucination vs. Vision, Selling Your Art in the Real World: Brian Koppelman Interviews Marc Andreessen (LINK)

The Acquirers Podcast: Chris Cole chats with Tobias Carlisle [from last month] (LINK)
Related paper (July 2018): "What is Water in Markets?"
Invest Like the Best Podcast: Michael Mayer – Pseudonymous Social Capital and Bottomless Coffee (LINK)

Raghuram Rajan talks with Tyler Cowen (podcast) (LINK)

Big Questions with Cal Fussman (podcast): Simon Sinek: The Infinite Game (LINK)
Related book (June release date): The Infinite Game
The School of Greatness with Lewis Howes (podcast): The Power of Digital Detox with Cal Newport (LINK)
Related book: Digital Minimalism: Choosing a Focused Life in a Noisy World
This Is a Truly Lousy Experiment About Evolution - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Book of the day [H/T Tom Russo]: The Monk of Mokha

Friday, January 11, 2019

Links

"It makes more sense...to buy a wonderful business at a fair price, than a fair business at a wonderful price.... I’ve changed my focus...over the years in that direction.... It’s not hard when you watch businesses for 50 years...to learn a few things about them, as to where the big money can be made. Now, you say when did it happen? It’s very interesting on that. Because what happens, even when you’re getting a new, important idea, is that the old ideas are still there. So there’s this flickering in and out of things. I mean, there was not a strong, bright red line of demarcation where we went from cigar butts to wonderful companies.... But we moved in that direction, occasionally moved back, because there is money made in cigar butts. But overall, we’ve kept moving in the direction of better and better companies." --Warren Buffett (2003)

Rob Vinall's 2018 investor letter [registration required] (LINK)

Brent Beshore on the Tropical MBA Podcast (LINK)
Related book: The Messy Marketplace
David Marcus: Great Owner-Operators in Europe (audio) (LINK)

Notes From Sohn London Investment Conference (LINK)

Why Some Platforms Thrive and Others Don’t [H/T @FourFilters] (LINK)

Blockchain Can Wrest the Internet From Corporations' Grasp - by Chris Dixon (LINK)

Misunderstanding Liquidity, Misunderstanding QT [H/T @modestproposal1] (LINK)

You Can’t Debunk MMT - by Cullen Roche (LINK)

Bob Rodriguez: Recent Market Turmoil a 'Preamble' to Bigger Crisis [H/T @jessefelder] (LINK)

RA Conversations: The Flattening Yield Curve (LINK)

Chris Cole on the Macro Voices Podcast (LINK)

Exponent Podcast: Episode 158 — A Significant Shift (LINK)

What’s Next for Education Startups (LINK)

Recode Media with Peter Kafka: Harvard’s Susan Crawford on the importance of fiber internet (podcast) (LINK)
Related book: Fiber: The Coming Tech Revolution―and Why America Might Miss It
High-performance medicine: the convergence of human and artificial intelligence - by Eric J. Topol (LINK)

Edge #525: Judith Rich Harris: 1938 - 2018 (LINK)

Plants Can Hear Animals Using Their Flowers - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Thursday, December 20, 2018

Antifragile investments

Given the volatility of the market lately, I've been thinking a lot about Nassim Taleb's book Antifragile. One of the major ways it impacted me is that it helped me think about the types of businesses I'd want to own when market valuations are high but some stocks start to look cheap. 

As Chris Cole of Artemis Capital Management has been talking about over the last few years, a large part of the market, value investing included, is implicitly a big short volatility trade. As Cole said in a 2017 interview with Real Vision:
There's nothing wrong with shorting vol if it's done intelligently.... I think the problem is that people don't always understand the risks that they're taking on. 
...I think the problem, at the end of the day, is we're all short volatility. Every institution in the world is. The question is: are you short convexity, or are you massively short convexity? And do you understand that you are because, you know, we have a finite amount of life. At the end of the day...if you have a portfolio of value stocks, in some ways you're implicitly shorting correlation and betting on mean reversion. 
That's a form of short vol. But the margin of safety can be attractive at the right points in time. The question is: do people really understand the risk they're taking on? I think when institutions are entering into a lot of these different strategies, and today this is just indexation to a certain extent, I don't think they...really have a pure conceptualization of all the risks that are going on. 
Now, value investing, if done correctly, is the intelligent way to implicitly be short volatility, but Taleb's book also made me think more about the types of businesses that can turn whatever volatility may come into existence into opportunity. Or in other words, what types of businesses actually create value in tough environments? So as an investor, as long as you have the endurance to hold through whatever Mr. Market may have in store on the downside, you can actually come out on the other side in better position because of the work you did buying right beforehand. Examples from the 2008-2010 time frame would be things like Berkshire Hathaway on the large cap side of things, and Cambria Automobiles on the micro cap side of things.

I'm thinking more about this lately because while markets have come down a bit, they are still at lofty valuations. But I'm seeing more interesting things to look at that seem like they could be very cheap than I have in a long time, which is a bit ironic given that I just exited from the investment business and am not currently managing outside capital. 

At any rate, while I was still at Boyles, we wrote the excerpt below in a 2014 investor letter after finishing Taleb's book, and I think it still reads fairly well, so I included it here for those that are interested. 

**********

Estimating intrinsic value based on cash flows, private market values, and liquidation values is something that should be familiar to those that follow a value philosophy; as is considering one’s downside in a worst-case scenario.  And because these are estimates—and small changes in certain variables can have large impacts on expected values—it’s important to be conservative in those estimates.  Or to use a phrase from Seth Klarman, it’s important to make those estimates “by compounding multiple conservative assumptions.”

Things start to get tricky when it comes to estimating probabilities, which one can’t really do with any degree of accuracy.  It is too hard and too close to guesswork, especially when we consider that, according to Sir John Templeton, “No security analyst is ever going to be right more than two-thirds of the time.”

So if we can’t accurately estimate our probability of winning and losing, what can we do?  What we believe an investor can do is determine whether or not the odds are likely to be in one’s favor.  There are certain things that can increase one’s chance of not losing money on an investment, and certain things that increase the chance of losing should something unexpected or disruptive occur.

In Nassim Taleb’s book, Antifragile, he separates things into three categories:
1) Fragile
2) Robust
3) Antifragile
The fragile is harmed by certain shocks, randomness, and stressors.  The robust is neither harmed nor helped by them.  And the antifragile grows and improves from them.  As Taleb says, “...the idea is to focus on fragility rather than predicting and calculating future probabilities…” 

So while we can’t accurately predict probabilities, what we can do is think about and identify traits that will increase our chances of winning and decrease our chances of losing under a range of scenarios.  And by trying to avoid fragile traits and invest in situations that are more robust or, preferably, antifragile, we decrease our chances of making mistakes due to estimation error.  Below are some examples of these traits among businesses and investments:


“...the fragile wants tranquility, the antifragile grows from disorder,
and the robust doesn’t care too much.” –Nassim Taleb

When the positive traits overwhelm the negative traits, we can be fairly confident that the odds are in our favor. But figuring out which traits are really present and which are illusory takes a lot of work; as does coming up with a proper and conservative estimate of intrinsic value and a worst-case scenario.  The math behind the Kelly Criterion gives a good framework for thinking about the questions: (1) Is my probability of winning greater than my probability of losing?; and (2) Is my upside greater than my downside?  But there is a lot of work that needs to be done in order to answer those questions with decent accuracy.

“It’s not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid.” –Charlie Munger

Using the Kelly framework to explain our current outlook on the investment climate, we can say that we see plenty of things with attractive upside ($W), but the main issue is that we also think there is plenty of downside ($L) in those investments.  To optimize one’s capital over time, one should consider more than just the upside if things go right.  One must be in the game long enough for the odds to work out favorably over time.  The main reason we have so much cash today is that we see a lot of downside coupled amongst the upside.

We look for situations where, if we ran through the Kelly Criterion using conservative assumptions, it would tell us to take large position sizes.  Our actual position sizes will, in practice, be much smaller than Kelly, as we manage risk and account for the uncertainties and errors that come with investing.  But the idea behind taking big positions in one’s best ideas—especially when one’s downside is well protected—is one in which we firmly believe. 

In the Ed Thorp article mentioned earlier, he also wrote that “Computing [F] without the context of the available alternative investments is one of the most common oversights I’ve seen in the use of the Kelly Criterion. Because it generally overestimates [F] it is a dangerous error.”  And as we contemplate our alternatives to cash, we think not just about the current opportunity set, but also about opportunities that may possibly develop over the next several months.  We’ve been and are still close to buying several things; and we continue to build our list of prospects.  While we can’t know when Mr. Market will give us the opportunity to put our cash to work, we are ready to move in quickly when we think the odds and payouts are overwhelmingly in our favor.

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Links

"Study the past, if you would divine the future." --Confucius 

Berkshire Hathaway Reduces Home Capital Investment (LINK)

Investing Ideas That Changed My Life - by Morgan Housel (LINK)

The 2018 Stratechery Year in Review - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

A new way to look at Leonardo - by Bill Gates (LINK)

Chris Cole talks with Meb Faber (podcast) (LINK)

Daniel Kahneman talks with Tyler Cowen (podcast) (LINK)

Why Do These Dinosaurs Have Long, Twisted Tubes in Their Heads? - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Friday, February 9, 2018

Links

Michael Mauboussin on the Future of Active Management (LINK)

Polleit & Riechert Investment Management's H2 2017 Letter (LINK)

Why Competitive Advantages Die - by Morgan Housel (LINK)

Has Anyone Seen the President? - by Michael Lewis (LINK)

Latticework of Mental Models: Hot Hand Fallacy (LINK)

Jimmy Buffett Does Not Live the Jimmy Buffett Lifestyle (LINK)
He’s so rich that he’s done a 23andMe DNA test with Warren Buffett because in addition to sharing a last name, the mutual ability to sustain such mind-boggling wealth is so otherworldly that it could surely only be the result of the same extremely rare and fortunate genetic mutation. The test showed no biological relationship, but they stayed friends. Jimmy calls Warren “Uncle Warren” and Warren, who has been a business mentor to Jimmy, calls him “Cousin Jimmy.” 
Uncle Warren gave Cousin Jimmy some advice while he was growing the Margaritaville empire: “Management in place,” he said. Find a good business that makes sense, and make sure there are good people running it. Jimmy Buffett didn’t just want to license his name around. He wanted to work only with people who would give the customer a great experience: “If you like what I do in goods and services, if we make you feel better after a hard day of work and you want to come blow off some steam and you pay for that, I’m going to give you your money’s worth and have a good time doing it.”
Amazon to Launch Delivery Service That Would Vie With FedEx, UPS ($) (LINK)
Amazon.com Inc. is preparing to launch a delivery service for businesses, positioning it to directly compete with United Parcel Service Inc. and FedEx Corp. 
Dubbed “Shipping with Amazon,” or SWA, the new service will entail the tech giant picking up packages from businesses and shipping them to consumers, according to people familiar with the matter.
Facebook’s Desperate Smoke Screen (LINK)

The Rise of China and the Fall of the ‘Free Trade’ Myth [H/T @ProfSteveKeen] (LINK)

Natural gas: the longest bear markets with the greatest over-supply always lead to long bull markets with shortages. (LINK)

Macro Voices Podcast: The week short vol imploded (LINK) [Chris Cole, whose interviews and papers I've linked to the last couple of days, also joins the show for an update, at the 50:38 mark.]

Exponent Podcast: Episode 140 — The Products They Built Along the Way (LINK)

Talks at GS – Jonathan Haidt: The Psychology of Partisanship & Ethical Leadership (video) [H/T Tamas] (LINK)

What Scientists Learned From Putting 3-D Glasses on Praying Mantises - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Thursday, February 8, 2018

Links

Taking the Long Road with Volatility | Chris Cole Real Vision Video [filmed before the volatility of the past week] (LINK) [See yesterday's post for related links.]

Why American Workers Aren’t Getting A Raise: An Economic Detective Story - by Jonathan Tepper [H/T @Valuetrap13] (LINK)

Why Expedia or Priceline Might Just Be the Next Great Hotel Brand [H/T @JohnHuber72] (LINK)

Freakonomics Radio (podcast): It’s Your Problem Now (LINK)
No, it's not your fault the economy crashed. Or that consumer preferences changed. Or that new technologies have blown apart your business model. But if you're the C.E.O., it is your problem. So what are you going to do about it? First-hand stories of disaster (and triumph) from Mark Zuckerberg, Steve Ballmer, Satya Nadella, Jack Welch, Ellen Pao, Richard Branson, and more. (Part 4 of a special series, "The Secret Life of C.E.O.'s.")
Steven Pinker on The Joe Rogan Experience (podcast) (LINK)
Related book: Enlightenment Now
Crushed wood is stronger than steel (LINK)

The islands of yesterday and tomorrow - by Phil Plait (LINK)

The White Darkness: A Journey Across Antarctica - by David Grann (LINK)

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Links

Inside Wall Street's $8 Billion VIX Time Bomb (LINK)

The MacroVoices Podcast‏ discussion between Erik Townsend and Chris Cole that was released on January 25th (and related article and presentation) is a great overview of some of the things that have happened over the last few days (and the risks still inherent as a result of short-volatility trades) (Audio and Show Notes, Transcript)
Erik: There’s a lot of people that are very concerned just about the explicit part of this. The people that are essentially profiting from the contango and the VIX term structure by either the XIV ETF or similar strategy implemented by rolling forward short futures contracts. 
And a lot of people are very worried about the blowup of that trade. You know, I think the statistic is if the VIX doubles overnight that could completely wipe out the XIV ETF, or something like that. 
You’re saying that, really, that’s the least of our problems. So, aside from the Target manager who’s made a bunch of money by shorting the VIX, what is the full scope of what could go wrong here? And how would it likely go wrong? 
Would it start with, say, a change where the share buybacks dry up because the interest rates no longer support them? Or what do you think the catalyst might be? And what could the potential blowback be if this were to start to unwind in the other direction? 
Chris: There’s a lot to talk about on that topic. First of all, on the short VIX trade, I think it’s interesting, because now it’s become very popular to talk about that. I think if you go back and read Artemis’s research, dating back as far as 2014, we talked about how, really, just a 65% move in the VIX could be all that it would take to wipe out those products. We actually presented our numbers years ago on that. I think it’s become a very popular thing to talk about today. 
I think these short-vol products, these ETMs – you know, Artemis runs a hedge fund – the regulators are going to require you to be an accredited investor and pass all these tests to invest in a hedge fund that trades volatility in a risk-controlled and smart manner, and it’s largely going long-vol in an intelligent way. 
Meanwhile, anyone on the street can go out and buy a double-levered VIX ETN or a short-biased VIX ETN. So there’s a great irony to this. And I think that these products are a class-action lawsuit waiting to happen. It’s not a matter of “if” – it’s a matter of “when.”  
But, are they a systemic risk to the system? Not so much, compared to the larger short-volatility trade.
.....
...Well, what common knowledge today will be proven wrong in the future? We only need to look into the past actually, empirically, to understand what that is going to be. It’s going to be the fact that stocks and bonds are anti-correlated with one another. 
In my entire life and trading career, and the trading career of almost anyone who is managing money today, stocks and bonds have experienced incredible anti-correlation. And when stocks  sell off, central banks ease and bonds perform. And risk parity funds have found ways to short that correlation in order to generate excess returns.
That’s all a risk parity strategy really is. A dispersion trading desk coupled with data exposure to the underlyings. It’s not that complex. The excess Alpha comes from a short correlation bet.
Well, the problem – and that has been a very good return in an environment where interest rates have dropped and dropped and dropped and dropped.
But what’s interesting is that, if you look at financial history – and I have a graph in “The Volatility and the Allegory of the Prisoner’s Dilemma,” which is a paper from 2015 and we talk about this at length – and also in the latest paper, “Volatility and the Alchemy of Risk” – if you look at the relationship between stocks and bonds over the past 120 years, they’ve actually spent more time correlative with one another than they’ve spent anti-correlative with one another.
What’s terrifying about this is that the entire modern asset management business is built on the short correlation trade of stocks and bonds. 
***

Inflation Is About to Appear ‘With a Vengeance,’ Paul Tudor Jones Says (LINK)

Beware When Studying Greatness - by Sean Iddings (LINK)

Masters of Scale Podcast: How To Build Your Company To Last — with Fiat's John Elkann (LINK)

A nice, short tribute video to SpaceX's maiden Falcon Heavy Launch (LINK)

Here’s what’s next for SpaceX after Falcon Heavy’s first flight (LINK)

This Mutant Crayfish Clones Itself, and It’s Taking Over Europe [H/T David] (LINK)

How to Survive Being Swallowed by Another Animal - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Monday, May 15, 2017

Links

For Audible members, Audible's latest 2 for 1 sale has some good titles. (LINK) [If you're not a member yet, and haven't yet done a free trial, you can get a free trial and 2 free audiobook credits by signing up HERE. And given the 2 for 1 sale, you could get 4 free books instead of 2 with the free trial. I got through about half of Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage on a car trip over the weekend, and it's both great so far and included in the Audible sale.]

The transcript from Warren Buffett's appearance on CNBC late week [H/T Peter and Eli] (LINK)

How I Built This podcast -- Whole Foods Market: John Mackey (LINK)

Taking the bull case for Valeant seriously - by John Hempton (LINK)

Amit Wadhwaney's letter at Moerus Funds from a few months ago [H/T @chriswmayer] (LINK)

Grant's Podcast: Vol’ is the only asset class -- The ABCs, and the XYZs, of volatility with Christopher Cole of Artemis Capital Management (LINK)

Why Amazon is eating the world (LINK)

Retail Ripe For And Resistant To Disruption (LINK)

Aldi raises stakes in US price war with Wal-Mart [H/T Matt] (LINK)

WannaCry About Business Models  - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

Book of the day (updated for 2017): The One Hour China Book