Showing posts with label Richard Duncan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Duncan. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Links

Ben Graham Centre interview with Josh Tarasoff [H/T Ian] (LINK) [There are also some other good interviews, and other things, HERE and videos HERE.]

Martin Capital Management 2016 Annual Report (LINK)

Jim Grant on CNBC yesterday (video) (LINK)

Bethany McLean and Herb Greenberg on CNBC discussing Ackman and Valeant (video) (LINK)

2014 article that might be worth reviewing in light of recent events: Bill Ackman's Big Pharma Trade Is Making Wall Street A Very Awkward Place [H/T @Wexboy_Value] (LINK)

2014 CNBC video that might be worth reviewing in light of recent events: Ackman says Chanos wrong on Valeant [H/T @RodBoydILM] (LINK)

If you're in the mood for some macro economics... Richard Duncan's latest public presentation (PDF) (LINK)

Marty Baron: "Digital Innovation at the Washington Post" | Talks at Google (video) (LINK)

Malcolm Gladwell chats with Tyler Cowen (video) (LINK) [The audio and transcript are also available HERE.]

TED Talk -- Carrie Nugent: Adventures of an asteroid hunter (video) (LINK)

Origin Stories podcast: Is there a simple rule behind how animals make group decisions? (LINK)

Monday, September 26, 2016

Links

The Chessboard Fallacy (LINK)

Latticework of Mental Models: Scarcity Bias (LINK) [Also from Vishal: Mental Models, Investing, and You (Special E-Book)]

The Fight to Keep It Simple (LINK)
Related previous post: If it's not simple, then I'm not interested...
Comments on investment philosophy - part one -- by John Hempton (LINK)

The ~30-minute CNBC video interview with Bruce Berkowitz [H/T Will] (LINK)

Why Getting Rich Quick Doesn’t Sound Crazy - by Jason Zweig (LINK)

Self-made billionaire Jim Koch says this book taught him more than Harvard did [H/T Matt] (LINK)
Related book: How to Master the Art of Selling
Peter Diamandis’s 9 Rules For Building A Successful Business (LINK)

Snapchat Releases First Hardware Product, Spectacles (LINK)

What’s the Best Safe Haven for Investors? - by Mark Spitznagel [H/T Jim] (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Structural Growth and Dope Dealers on Speed-Dial (LINK)
Presently, the Shiller CAPE stands at close to 26, which is already well above historical norms, and above anything seen prior to the sequential bubbles (and collapses) of recent cycles. But the CAPE only captures part of the risk, because that 10-year average of inflation-adjusted earnings actually embeds the highest profit margin in history. By accepting the CAPE at face-value, investors are quietly assuming that profit margins will remain at this level permanently. On the basis of normalized profit margins, which systematically produce a more reliable valuation measure across history, the CAPE would presently be at 36.
Richard Duncan posted the final chapter of his book The Dollar Crisis, written in December 2004, which was interesting to read nearly 12 years later (LINK) [And if you want to subscribe to Richard Duncan's Macro Watch newsletter, you should also still be able to use the coupon code 'valueinvestingworld' to get 50% off.]

Exponent podcast: Episode 089 — Move On from the 80s (LINK)

The Cato chronicles, part I: young Cato (LINK)
Related book: Rome's Last Citizen: The Life and Legacy of Cato, Mortal Enemy of Caesar
How To Overcome Addiction And Make Lasting Changes In Your Life [H/T @AdamMGrant] (LINK)

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Links

As Brexit and China worries persist, I keep thinking about this quote from Charlie Munger: "We're emphasizing the knowable by predicting how certain people and companies will swim against the current. We're not predicting the fluctuation in the current."

Over an extended holiday weekend visit to Believeland, I was able to get most of the way through the book Shoe Dog. It is one of the best business biographies I've come across, and I highly recommend it. The qualities of persistence and endless trial-and-error (especially in the early years) that are evident in many of the great business success stories are in full force with the story of Phil Knight. 

CEOs relish 'unique' benefits of being a Buffett-owned business, despite some downsides [H/T @CunninghamProf] (LINK)

The Bezos Effect: How Amazon’s Founder Is Reinventing The Washington Post – and What Lessons It Might Hold for the Beleaguered Newspaper Business [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Bill Gross' July 2016 Investment Outlook (LINK)

Energy limits: Why we see rising wealth disparity and low prices (LINK)

Richard Duncan: Forget Brexit, China’s The Real Crisis (video) (LINK)

Episode 04 of Malcolm Gladwell's Revisionist History podcast (LINK)

The Fascinating Science Of Why We Yawn [H/T @AdamMGrant] (LINK)

The current Audible sale is 50% off the Classics Genre through July 11th at 11:59 PM PT. There are a lot of them, so if you are an Audible member you can take some time to explore them. But here are some that either caught my eye or ones that were already on my wish list that I noticed: 

The Way to Wealth – by Benjamin Franklin

The Autobiography of Charles Darwin

The abridged version of On the Origin of Species read by Richard Dawkins

The abridged version of The Voyage of the Beagle read by Richard Dawkins

The Iliad

The Odyssey

The Complete Essays of Montaigne

The South Sea Bubble and Tulipomania: Financial Madness and Delusion – by Charles Mackay [Two chapters from Extraordinary Popular Delusions and The Madness of Crowds.]

The Complete Stories of Sherlock Holmes, Volume 1

The Complete Stories of Sherlock Holmes, Volume 2

The Age of Reason – by Thomas Paine

Our Constitution: The Complete United States Constitution

The Prince - by Niccolo Machiavelli

As a Man Thinketh - By James Allen

Zorba the Greek

To Kill a Mockingbird

Treasure Island

A Tale of Two Cities

Atlas Shrugged

The Problems with Philosophy - by Bertrand Russell

The Prophet & The Wanderer - by Khalil Gibran

On the Road - by Jack Kerouac

The Dharma Bums - by Jack Kerouac

The Old Man and the Sea - by Ernest Hemingway

Green Hills of Africa - by Ernest Hemingway

A Moveable Feast - by Ernest Hemingway

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - by Mark Twain

Plato's Republic

The Great Courses: Masters of Greek Thought: Plato, Socrates, and Aristotle

The Great Courses: Plato, Socrates, and the Dialogues

The Great Courses: An Introduction to Greek Philosophy

Monday, June 20, 2016

Links

Latticework of Mental Models: Lindy Effect (LINK)

No One Knows What Will Happen (LINK)

Kevin Kelly on EconTalk (LINK)
Related book: The Inevitable
The 2016 BP Statistical Review of World Energy (LINK)

China: Is peak coal part of its problem? (LINK)

Richard Duncan interview discussing China's economy (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

Eric Hoffer and the Creation of Fanatical Mass Movements (LINK)
Related book: The True Believer  
Related previous post: Eric Hoffer videos

Friday, March 18, 2016

Links

Audible Clips... For those who listen to audiobooks on Audible, THIS is a nice new feature.

Japan 10-Year Yield Drops to Record, Below Negative Deposit Rate (LINK)
Investors at home and abroad can’t get enough 10-year Japanese government bonds, driving the yield to an unprecedented minus 0.135 percent. 
Yields sank across the curve Friday after the Bank of Japan’s operation to buy long-term debt met the lowest investor participation on record, spurring what Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategist Shuichi Ohsaki called “panic buying.” The yield on the benchmark 2026 notes sank as much as 8 1/2 basis points Friday to below the minus 0.1 percent deposit rate introduced by the central bank last month, while that on 20-year securities tumbled more than 10 basis points to an unprecedented 0.29 percent.
Europeans, Rejoice! The ECB Is Cancelling Your Debt! - by Richard Duncan (LINK)

The FT's special report on watches and jewellery (LINK)
We have a comprehensive Baselworld guide to the key trends in watches and jewellery, plus the Hatton Garden heist’s untold story, smartwatch legal battles and 3D printing.
Quote of the day, from Doris Kearns Goodwin, Presidential Historian, on Charlie Rose in December 2005 (~4:59 mark):
I think [that] when we look at who we are going to elect for President, we really should look at their temperament...For example, Lincoln had this most amazing set of emotional strengths...He was the kind of person who, when he made a mistake, he learned from it; he acknowledged it immediately. He shared credit with other people when something went well. When something went wrong in the Administration, he would shoulder responsibility for blame. If he were mad at somebody, he'd write a hot letter, wait for his emotions to cool down, and never need to send it...He would say, 'Yes, I've changed my mind on something, I'd like to believe I'm smarter today than I was yesterday.' It's so simple...

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Links

Kyle Bass on Wall Street Week (video) (LINK)

Mutual Fund Observer, January 2016 (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: The Next Big Short: The Third Crest of a Rolling Tsunami (LINK)
Over the holiday, we went with a group of friends to see The Big Short, based on the book by Michael Lewis about the global financial crisis. The film is deeply critical of Wall Street and weak banking regulation, most of which I see as valid. The one thing missing was that the film didn’t clarify why the mortgage bubble emerged in the first place, which I would have liked Margot Robbie to have mentioned while she was explaining mortgage-backed securities in the bubble bath. 
The answer is straightforward: as the bubble expanded toward its inevitable collapse, the role of Wall Street was to create a massive supply of new “product” in the form of sketchy mortgage-backed securities, but the demand for that product was the result of the Federal Reserve’s insistence on holding interest rates down after the tech bubble crashed, starving investors of safe Treasury returns, and driving them to seek higher yields elsewhere. 
See, the Fed reacted to the collapse of the tech bubble and the accompanying recession holding short-term rates to just 1%, provoking yield-seeking by income-starved investors. They found that extra yield in seemingly “safe” mortgage securities. But as the demand outstripped the available supply, Wall Street rushed to create more product, and generate associated fees, by lending to anyone with a pulse (hence "teaser" loans offering zero interest payments for the first 2 years, and ads on TV and radio hawking “No income documentation needed! We’ll get you approved fast!”; “No credit? No problem! You have a loan!”; “Own millions of dollars in real estate with no money down!”). The loans were then “financially engineered” to make the resulting mortgage bonds appear safer than the underlying credits were. The housing bubble was essentially a massive, poorly regulated speculative response to Federal Reserve actions. 
The current, obscenely overvalued QE-bubble is simply the next reckless response to Federal Reserve actions, which followed the global financial crisis, which resulted when the housing bubble collapsed, which was driven by excessively activist Federal Reserve policy, which followed the collapse of the tech bubble. As my wife Terri put it “It’s like a rolling tsunami.”
Richard Duncan warns of weak credit growth ahead for 2016 and 2017 (LINK)
Between 1952 and 2008, every time US credit growth (adjusted for inflation) fell below 2%, the United States went into recession. During that period, the ratio of total credit to GDP rose from 150% to 380%. In other words, credit growth drove economic growth; and when credit did not grow, neither did the economy. 
...Credit growth looks likely to fall back below the 2% recession threshold next year. If the Fed’s inflation forecasts are correct, then credit growth (adjusted for inflation) could fall to 1.6% next year and to only 1.0% in 2017.
[And if you want to subscribe to Richard Duncan's Macro Watch newsletter, you should also still be able to use the coupon code 'valueinvestingworld' to get 50% off.]

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Links

ZUCK'S NOT ALONE: HERE ARE LETTERS WRITTEN BY OTHER MOGULS TO THEIR KIDS [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Nice write-ups on the 3G Culture [H/T Linc] (Part 1, Part 2)
Related book: DREAM BIG
Bottom Keeps Falling for Energy-Debt Investors (LINK)

Elon Musk: Only a Carbon Tax Will Accelerate the World's Exit from Fossil Fuels (LINK)

T. Boone Pickens talks Energy, Security and Shop with Carl Icahn (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK) [If you don't have time for the whole thing, I'd probably start at the 14:24 mark and go from there, which is about the last 10 minutes of the conversation.]

The Absolute Return Letter - December 2015 (LINK)

Richard Duncan Interview: Austrian Economics Would Destroy The World (LINK)

We don't have a position in Westshore Terminals, but it came up on an insider buying screen and after checking out the investor relations site, they have a video from their 2015 Annual General Meeting that gives some interesting info about how coal moves from train to ship (about first 5 minutes of video) (LINK)

If you're looking for book recommendations for the holidays, these are the ones I still think are some of the best to consider:

Charlie Munger and Peter Kaufman recommendations from Poor Charlie's Almanack

The books mentioned by Peter Bevelin in my interviews with him

Monday, November 9, 2015

Links

I will be mostly without internet for the next couple of weeks. I have a few quotes and book excerpts scheduled, but this may be the last compilation of links during that time.

AMA on Charlie Munger: What did Charlie Munger Learn from Phil Fisher? (LINK)

Farnam Street: Lifelong Learning (LINK)

The Root of Wisdom: Why Old People Learn Better (LINK)

Track and Measure (LINK)
If you listed the habits of successful people, tracking and measuring would be near the top of that list. I see it with people, companies, and teams that I work with. I see it in my own behavior.
Ron Baron interviews Elon Musk at the Baron Investment Conference (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)
Related book: Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future
Richard Duncan: Yuan Devaluation Likely (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Psychological Whiplash (LINK)
On a 10-12 year horizon, we expect the total return of the S&P 500 to fall short of 1% annually, and given that more than that amount is likely to represent dividends, it follows that we expect the level of the S&P 500 Index to be lower 10-12 years from now than it is today (recall a similar outcome after the 2000 peak). On a shorter horizon, market action remains unfavorable as well, which leaves prospective outcomes skewed to the downside, but we don’t need to take a particularly strong near-term view. Stocks appear to be in an extended top formation much like 2000 and 2007, so our inclination is more toward patient discipline than aggressive expectations of imminent market losses.
Ray Dalio Talks Meditating With Martin Scorsese (video) (LINK)

Stoic movie review: The Martian [H/T @TimHarford] (LINK)

In 5 Minutes, He Lets the Blind See (article and video) (LINK)

When the Sun Went Medieval on Our Planet (LINK)

Here's a link to a post from earlier this year that I've been discussing among friends, related to position-sizing: A quick diversification thought...

Which also reminded me of this quote from Warren Buffett that I posted around the same time:
"If you are a professional and have confidence, then I would advocate lots of concentration. For everyone else, if it’s not your game, participate in total diversification... If it’s your game, diversification doesn’t make sense. It’s crazy to put money into your 20th choice rather than your 1st choice... Charlie and I operated mostly with 5 positions. If I were running 50, 100, 200 million, I would have 80% in 5 positions, with 25% for the largest. In 1964 I found a position I was willing to go heavier into, up to 40%. I told investors they could pull their money out. None did. The position was American Express after the Salad Oil Scandal. In 1951 I put the bulk of my net worth into GEICO. Later in 1998, LTCM was in trouble. With the spread between the on-the-run versus off-the-run 30 year Treasury bonds, I would have been willing to put 75% of my portfolio into it. There were various times I would have gone up to 75%, even in the past few years. If it’s your game and you really know your business, you can load up."
On Twitter, Ian Cassel also posted a great quote from Charlie Munger:
"Students learn corporate finance at business schools. They are taught that the whole secret is diversification. But the exact rule is the opposite. The ‘know-nothing’ investor should practice diversification, but it is crazy if you are an expert. The goal of investment is to find situations where it is safe not to diversify. If you only put 20% into the opportunity of a life-time, you are not being rational. Very seldom do we get to buy as much of any good idea as we would like to."
Related book to the above (Kelly formula): Fortune's Formula

Book of the day: Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming

Monday, October 5, 2015

Links

For those interested, this course from The Great Courses has been recommended to me by a wise man, and it seems like a good Charlie Munger/worldly wisdom type of course (the video download version is currently on sale for $109.95): The Origin and Evolution of Earth: From the Big Bang to the Future of Human Existence -- Professor Robert M. Hazen

Another interview with Tren Griffin about his book on Charlie Munger [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Ben Bernanke was on CNBC talking about his book, which was released today: The Courage to Act: A Memoir of a Crisis and Its Aftermath

Operant Conditioning, Market Trends, and Small Bets: A 2012 vs. 2008 Case Study (LINK)

While Hussman has been saying similar things for a couple of years, all three of John Hussman, John Mauldin, and Richard Duncan have issued similar recession warnings over the last few days, and think we're basically heading into a downturn in both the economy and a further decline in the market. It's hard to predict anything like this, but all three were fairly accurate about things leading up to 2008, so I thought it was worth a mention, and maybe a reminder to think about how one's investments would fare in another very tough environment, whether or not it actually comes to pass. 

Monday, September 14, 2015

Links

Seth Klarman’s Presentation To Bruce Greenwald’s 2010 CBS Class (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

Tren Griffin joins the a16z Podcast to talk about his book on Charlie Munger (LINK)
Related link: A Dozen Things I’ve Learned from Charlie Munger about Inversion (including the Importance of being Consistently Not Stupid)
Jason Zweig talks with Barry Ritholtz on the Masters in Business podcast (LINK)
Related book: The Devil's Financial Dictionary
James Grant on WealthTrack (video) [H/T Will] (LINK)

Richard Duncan on CNBC (video) (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: The Beauty of Truth and the Beast of Dogma (LINK)
In short, my view is that activist Fed policy is both ineffective and reckless (and the historical data bears this out), and that the Federal Reserve has pushed the financial markets to a precipice from which no gentle retreat is ultimately likely. Similar precipices, such as 1929 and 2000, and even lesser precipices like 1906, 1937, 1973 and 2007 have always had unfortunate endings (see All Their Eggs in Janet’s Basket for a review). A quarter-point hike will not cause anything. The causes are already baked in the cake. A rate hike may be a trigger with respect to timing, but that’s all. History suggests we should place our attention on valuations and market internals in any event.
A review of Robert Hagstrom’s book Latticework: The New Investing (LINK)

WHAT MAKES UBER RUN (LINK)

Matt Ridley: Genetics is good for you (LINK)

How This Cave-Dwelling Fish Lost Its Eyes to Evolution (LINK)

Homo Naledi, New Species in Human Lineage, Is Found in South African Cave (video and article) (LINK) [I loved this quote from the article, which is true in science, investing and many other things as well: "The finding, like so many others in science, was the result of pure luck followed by considerable effort."]

Book of the day: Time, Love, Memory: A Great Biologist and His Quest for the Origins of Behavior

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Links

A Dozen Things Learned from David Einhorn About Investing (LINK)

US Labor Market Observations (via reading public restaurant company transcripts) (LINK)

Richard Duncan talks with The Financial Sense Newshour (audio) (LINK)

Audiobook of the day: When Money Dies: The Nightmare of Deficit Spending, Devaluation, and Hyperinflation in Weimar, Germany

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Links

Sanjay Bakshi: What GEICO’s Customer Acquisition and Associated Costs Taught Me about Business Economics, Management Quality, and Valuation (LINK)

David Einhorn Blames Worst Month Since October 2008 On “Challenging” Market (LINK)

Chris Mayer on why utilities are a sell (LINK)

Darren Gee, President and CEO of PEYTO, is out with his August report (LINK) [Chris Mayer also recently linked to his November report, where he quotes the book The Outsiders.]

Richard Duncan's video warning on China's economy from 16 months ago (~14 minutes) (LINK) [If you're interested in subscribing to his Macro Watch video newsletter, see the mention of it in THIS post to use this blog's coupon code, 'valueinvestingworld'.]

Phil Libin, co-founder and executive chairman of Evernote, on the Tim Ferriss podcast (LINK)

Tim Harford: Worming our way to the truth (LINK)

Monday, June 1, 2015

Links

Meb Faber: 10 Bearish Charts, 1 Bullish Chart (LINK)

Richard Duncan interview with Gordon T. Long of Macro Analytics (video) (LINK) [I was also in touch with Richard over the weekend in regards to the coupon code 'valueinvestingworld' that he generously allows readers of this blog to use for a discount to his Macro Watch newsletter. Previously, that code knocked the first year price from $500 down to $250, and then the recurring (second year and beyond) price went back up to $500. Now going forward, if you use the 'valueinvestingworld' code when signing up, the recurring price will remain at $250 per year for every year that you remain a subscriber. For more on Macro Watch, see my posts HERE and HERE.]

Carl Icahn on Wall Street Week [H/T Linc and ValueWalk] (LINK)

Mutual Fund Observer, June 2015 (LINK)

Nassim Taleb MOOC: The Law Of Large Numbers And Fat Tailed Distributions (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK) [And in case you haven't seen, Taleb and Steven Pinker have been trading barbs lately, relating to Taleb's paper. Pinker replied, and I'm guessing Taleb discusses it more in the MOOC linked to above, though I haven't watched it yet.]

Bank of England finally catches on – mainstream monetary theory is erroneous [H/T @ChrisMayerAgora] (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: When Paper Wealth Vanishes (LINK)

There’s not a single market cycle in the historical record where the ratio of market capitalization to corporate gross value added (GVA) did not fall to about half the level that we observe today (or lower). Our view is that the level of the S&P 500 today is currently higher than the level investors will observe a decade from today, but dividends should make up the difference to provide an expected total return of roughly zero. In a zero return world, some may see this hypervaluation as “fair” – and those investors are free to call stocks “fairly valued relative to interest rates.” But the prospective 10-year return on the S&P 500, from current price levels, is still likely to be zero based on the most reliable valuation measures we identify.  
PBS has a new series called First Peoples that premieres June 24th (LINK)
Related book: Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind  
Related lectures (videos): A Brief History of Humankind
Book of the day [H/T Brad Feld]: Hot Seat: The Startup CEO Guidebook

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Links

Ben Graham on How to Handle Your Money (LINK)

Brian Grazer on Charlie Rose discussing his book, A Curious Mind: The Secret to a Bigger Life (video) (LINK)

Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli on Charlie Rose discussing their book, Becoming Steve Jobs (video) (LINK)

Andy Hertzfeld: Would Steve Jobs Have Liked the New Biography? I Don’t Think So (LINK)

Brainstorming with Marc Andreessen [H/T Abnormal Returns] (LINK)

Grant’s Conference: Jim Grant On The S&P 500 Great Debate (LINK)

Andrew Smithers: The importance of labour participation rates (LINK)

John Kay: We can reform the economics curriculum without creating new disciplines (LINK)

Richard Duncan: QE is Debt Cancellation (video) (LINK)

Religion without God, an excerpt from Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind (LINK)

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Links

Prem Watsa's 2014 letter to shareholders [H/T James] (LINK)

Bridgewater's Ray Dalio Explains the Power of Not Knowing (LINK)

25iq: A Dozen Things Learned from David Tepper about Investing (LINK)

Understanding Succession at Berkshire Hathaway After Buffett [H/T Linc] (LINK)
Related book: Berkshire Beyond Buffett
Jamie Dimon and Warren Buffett’s secret party [H/T Will] (LINK)

NATHAN MYHRVOLD, MYTH BUSTER [H/T Will] (LINK)

Richard Duncan on Financial Sense Newshour (LINK)

The Investors Podcast interviews Tobias Carlisle about his book, Deep Value (LINK)
Related link: Talks at Google: Tobias Carlisle
Rory Sutherland on the Freakonomics Podcast (LINK)
If you’ve never read David Ogilvy’s Confessions of an Advertising Man, do yourself a favor and do so immediately.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Links

Barry Ritholtz interviews Robert Shiller (LINK)

Jason Zweig on value in international stocks (LINK)

Richard Duncan on the McAlvany Weekly Commentary (audio) (LINK)
Related previous post: Richard Duncan: Why The Fed Will Launch Another Round Of Quantitative Easing
How Disney Turned ‘Frozen’ Into a Cash Cow (LINK)

Ryan Holiday on Stoic Week 2014 (LINK)
Related previous post: Stoicism quotes, thoughts, and readings

Monday, September 29, 2014

Richard Duncan: Why The Fed Will Launch Another Round Of Quantitative Easing

As I've mentioned before, I think Richard Duncan's book The New Depression is one of the few macro-related things worth reading. THIS video interview he did earlier this year also does a great job of going over some of his ideas, for those who want a shorter version. 

And as further prelude to the macro-related article below, here's what I had previously written in another post about Duncan's book:
Richard Duncan's book, The New Depression, is one of the best things I've read when it comes to taking a complex topic and simplifying it down to its key variables. His explanation of the role credit plays in our economic world today is the best I've seen so far. And like most people who follow Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger closely, I remain skeptical about the ability to forecast the macro economy with any consistency. Richard has been pretty good so far in his predictions, but I pay attention to him more to help me understand what's going on in the present and how things work than I do to act on any forecasts about the future.

...................

And for an example of the way I think he's helped me understand some things that may or may not be directly useful to buying cheap stocks, consider the 3 slides below, which are from some of his Macro Watch videos.

The first slide pasted below is a slide where Duncan talked about how the Fed, in the 2004-2006 timeframe, raised interest rates but couldn't get the market rates to rise by nearly as much as they had wanted. Alan Greenspan called it a "conundrum" at the time.


The second slide pasted below essentially explains the reason for the "conundrum," at least according to Duncan. The current account deficit had grown increasingly large from 1996-2008, and exceeded the budget deficit by quite a bit. Foreign central banks (especially China) generally purchased U.S. assets with the U.S. dollars they received from running trade surpluses with the U.S. so that they could keep the value of their currencies down. When there weren't enough new U.S. treasuries being issued because the budget deficit was lower than the current account deficit in the U.S., those foreign central banks had to purchase other things, which in general were previously issued  U.S. government debt or those of Fannie, Freddie and private issuers of asset backed securities, as can be seen in the third slide below.



 

In Poor Charlie's Almanack, one of his checklist items is to "Always beware of inflation and interest rate exposures." What Duncan's work has helped me realize is just how complex and how many moving parts there really are that can affect inflation, interest rates and other macro outcomes, and that even those at the top of the world's central banks can have a hard time figuring out what their actions will lead to. 

And getting back to QE, if you look at the second slide above, you see that the budget deficit exploded above the current account deficit when the Great Financial Crisis hit. That is where QE came in and without it, interest rates likely would have moved much higher as there wouldn't have been enough demand for the onslaught of supply of U.S. government bonds without Fed purchases.

One more point that is useful for me is that I try to be as objective and humble as possible when looking at all of this stuff. It is interesting to learn, but also important not to form too strong an opinion on whether certain past actions were right or wrong, and especially important not to use what one learns to forecast what one thinks will happen in an unpredictable future. I think the key is to use knowledge gained to try and think about and identify risk, not forecast. In short, be a risk-identifier, not a forecaster.

Monday, July 28, 2014

Monday, May 19, 2014

Links

Hunter S. Thompson on Finding Your Purpose and Living a Meaningful Life (LINK)
A great excerpt from Shane over at Farnam Street from the book Letters of Note.
Thinking & Writing : The CIA’s Guide to Cognitive Science & Intelligence Analysis (LINK)
A great find from Miguel over at Simoleon Sense.
Marc Andreessen on EconTalk (LINK)

The Liquidity Gauge (LINK)
I think this is one of the more interesting macro models to keep in one's mind. One description of this might be the macro-equivalent of 'in the short-run the market is a voting machine, in the long run it is a weighing machine.' While maybe not something the long-term value investor will worry much about, it is the concept behind why Richard Duncan predicted in 2012 that 2013 would be a great year in the stock market (there was going to be record liquidity in the market). While that correct call was possibly more a result of randomness than economic law, as the macro is so hard to  analyze correctly and consistently, it does make sense to me that the inputs that go into his liquidity gauge is a decent summary of short-term votes. Valuation will rule in the long run, but given that the liquidity gauge is going to finally start turning negative in Q3 and especially Q4 of this year, I think it's something to keep an eye on. Duncan believes this liquidity is going make for a rough market in the second half of the year, and also believes that this roughness is going to lead the Fed to reverse course on its tapering. While I don't think one should make investment decisions depending on this, many other great investors' cash build-up along with this idea makes me think having plenty of cash in one's portfolio may be a useful thing to have the rest of the year. (For more on Duncan's work, see THIS previous post)
The Single Greatest Predictor of Future Stock Market Returns (LINK)
I think some interesting data could come from combining the 'average investor portfolio allocation to equities' data in this post with 'the liquidity gauge' mentioned above, and seeing how they trend and compare to each other and the market over time. If anyone has the time and statistical capability to go ahead and do it, please share when you're done!

Friday, April 25, 2014

Richard Duncan interview

A long and comprehensive interview with one of the few macro guys I pay attention to. As he described this interview on his blog:
For anyone who is interested in understanding my views on the global economic crisis, this is the video I would recommend watching, if I could only recommend one. In it, I am able to address almost all of the ideas I have tried to convey through my books and speeches over the past ten years.
I just recently watched his 2nd quarter Macro Watch videos, which I thought were very good (see the bottom of this post for a link and coupon code to the videos). I also recommend his last book, The New Depression.


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For those that are interested, Richard was kind enough to offer readers of this blog a 50% discount to his video newsletter, Macro Watch, using the coupon code 'valueinvestingworld', which I think should still be valid. While still an expensive service, the discount knocks the first year price from $500 down to $250. When you sign up (using PayPal), you enter into a recurring payment, so if you decide you don't want to keep the subscription after the first year, you can just cancel the service before your first year ends and not be charged any further.