Showing posts with label Steve Keen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Keen. Show all posts

Friday, December 8, 2017

Links

"It has been my experience that there is no substitute for time where thinking is concerned. Why is it so? The answer seems to be that in many cases to think means to be able to allow the mind to stray from the task at hand. The mind must be able to be 'elsewhere.' This needs time." - Eric Hoffer

Peter Kiewit – The Story of Warren Buffett’s Mentor (LINK)
Related book: Intelligent Fanatics: Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
Ray Dalio talks with Barry Ritholtz (podcast) (LINK)
Related book: Principles
The regulatory case against tech giants: What path will lawmakers choose? (LINK)

Scott Galloway on The James Altucher Show (podcast) (LINK)
Related book: The Four
Exponent Podcast: Episode 134 — Human Problems (LINK)

LinkedIn co-founder and Greylock partner Reid Hoffman on the Recode Decode Podcast (LINK)

Steve Keen on the FT Alphachat Podcast (LINK)
Related book: Can We Avoid Another Financial Crisis? [For my thoughts on the book, see the bottom of THIS post.]
StarTalk Radio (podcast) -- Cosmic Queries: Mysterious Cosmology, with Sean Carroll (LINK)
Related book: The Big Picture: On the Origins of Life, Meaning, and the Universe Itself
How to Tell If a Dinosaur Is Fake - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Today's Audible Daily Deal ($0.99): On Power by Robert A. Caro

Monday, June 5, 2017

Links

"There's no such thing as analysis of what's coming. We don't know anything about the future, and you can't prove anything about the future. But if you've been in business and you've seen some cycles, and you've gained some experience and you've gone through those cycles with your eyes open saying 'What are the implications of cycles for our behavior?', then I think you can reach a point where you say, 'You know what, it just feels like the power is in the hands of the issuers, not the buyers. It feels like there aren't many sellers, just a lot of buyers. And the market is not acting in a disciplined way.' We want to buy when the market in panicked, not when the market is sanguine. Buffett says that 'The less prudence with which others conduct their affairs, the greater the prudence with which we must conduct our own affairs.' When other people are optimistic, we should be worried. When other people are panicked, we should turn aggressive." -Howard Marks (source)

Two Decades of Winning by Not Losing - by Steven Romick [H/T @Wexboy_Value] (LINK)

How I Built This podcast -- Five Guys: Jerry Murrell (LINK)

Grant’s Podcast: Taxi! Taxi! (LINK)
Uber comes under the Grant's lens.
Grant's Podcast [previous]: The biggest pyramid scheme the world has yet seen (LINK)
Grant’s talks to China authority Anne-Stevenson-Yang.  
China’s Debt Crackdown Is Driving Borrowers Into Riskier Territory [H/T Matt] (LINK)
China’s crackdown on debt is driving some companies to a murkier form of financing as it gets harder to secure bank loans or tap the bond market. 
New loans from so-called trusts, firms that raise money from individuals and corporations to plow into riskier areas of the economy, reached 882.3 billion yuan ($129.5 billion) in the first four months of this year, according to data from the People’s Bank of China, nearly five times as much as the same period in 2016. 
Trust firms, which often charge borrowers higher rates than banks, occupy a middle ground between banking and asset management. They are licensed and loosely regulated by China’s banking watchdog, but they lack some of banks’ protections, such as government deposit insurance, and they have more flexibility to invest in risky areas than banks do.
Chinese Banks Face Up to Funding Squeeze[H/T Matt] (LINK)
Beijing is squeezing its financial system. Its banks may soon find themselves gasping for breath. 
Household deposits—long the backbone of China’s economy, funding inexorable loan growth—are fleeing: Around 1.2 trillion yuan ($176 billion) left the banking system last month. Meanwhile, growth in corporate deposits has slowed, reducing the rise in deposits overall to a crawl. 
The exodus is proving a double whammy for China’s banks. Not only are they losing a stable source of funding, they are also bearing the brunt of higher costs to raise cash as financial conditions tighten.
92nd Street Y: Destined for war with China? Graham Allison and Gen. David Petraeus (Ret) (video) (LINK)
Related book: Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’s Trap? [There's also another recent video on the book and topic, with a panel that includes Niall Ferguson as well, HERE.]
Steve Keen on the Hidden Forces podcast (LINK)
Related book: Can We Avoid Another Financial Crisis?
The Quiet Master of Cryptocurrency — Nick Szabo (The Tim Ferriss Show) (LINK)

Getting Hacked, Lessons Learned - by Fred Wilson (LINK)

The Thoughts of a Spiderweb - by Joshua Sokol [H/T @BenedictEvans] (LINK)
Spiders appear to offload cognitive tasks to their webs, making them one of a number of species with a mind that isn’t fully confined within the head.
The energy expansions of evolution - by Olivia P. Judson [H/T @AlexRubalcava] (LINK)
The history of the life–Earth system can be divided into five ‘energetic’ epochs, each featuring the evolution of life forms that can exploit a new source of energy. These sources are: geochemical energy, sunlight, oxygen, flesh and fire. The first two were present at the start, but oxygen, flesh and fire are all consequences of evolutionary events. Since no category of energy source has disappeared, this has, over time, resulted in an expanding realm of the sources of energy available to living organisms and a concomitant increase in the diversity and complexity of ecosystems. These energy expansions have also mediated the transformation of key aspects of the planetary environment, which have in turn mediated the future course of evolutionary change. Using energy as a lens thus illuminates patterns in the entwined histories of life and Earth, and may also provide a framework for considering the potential trajectories of life–planet systems elsewhere.

Thursday, May 18, 2017

Links

The Advantage Of Being A Little Underemployed - by Morgan Housel (LINK)
Related previous post: Deep Work sessions, and tips
John Malone on trust (LINK)

Brazil stocks plunge 10% on emerging political scandal (LINK)

Union Square's Wilson on VC Market, Twitter, Snap & Uber (video) (LINK)

Boring Google - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

a16z Podcast: For Your Ears Only (LINK)
When it comes to spycraft — or rather, “tradecraft,” as they say in the biz — what do the movies get right, and what do they get wrong? In this episode of the a16z Podcast (recorded while on the road in D.C. for our annual Tech Policy Summit), Michael Morell — former Deputy Director and twice-Acting Director of the CIA — talks all things tradecraft and tech with a16z partners Matt Spence and Hanne Tidnam.
Poli'ahu: Time-lapse of telescopes and stars dancing under Hawaiian skies (LINK)

***

As I've mentioned before on this blog:
When it comes to the macro, I like to take the approach of being a risk-identifier--as opposed to being a forecaster--and so listening to people who are intelligent and spend way more time on certain macro things than I do helps me get a sense for whether or not I might be missing something big while I spend most of my time thinking about individual companies.
And in the above light, I recently read Steve Keen's latest book, Can We Avoid Another Financial Crisis? It was great overview of the importance of private debt in the economy, where many countries currently stand in regards to private debt levels, and what risks that might entail. While many of the major debt risks have been well described elsewhere in regards to places like China and Hong Kong, he mentions several others and gives a great overview of Minsky's 'Financial Instability Hypothesis' on pages 14-21. Timing of when debt burdens becoming too unsustainable is hard or impossible to predict (which is a reason why, most of the time, value investors ignore the macro), but Keen does give some plausible reasons for why the Australian and Canadian economies in which many, including Keen, have been warning about for years seem likely to finally hit a big rough patch at some point within the next 3 years or so. Keen also has some good charts on country-by-country debt levels on his website, HERE

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Links

Business Blunder: Pancake Flipper Al Lapin Jr. & International Industries (IHOP) (LINK)

IP Capital (Brazil) with a discussion on Amazon in its Q3 report (LINK)

The Absolute Return Letter, December 2016 (LINK)

Michael Hudson and Steve Keen discussing macro (Real Vision TV transcript) (LINK)

Macro Voices podcast -- Art Berman: OPEC Production Cut, Crude Oil Outlook (LINK)

An interesting podcast worth checking out: The Distance [H/T Aaron] (LINK)
The Distance is a podcast by Basecamp about longevity in business, featuring the stories of businesses that have endured for at least 25 years and the people who got them there.
Freakonomics Radio (podcast) -- Bad Medicine, Part 1: The Story of 98.6 (LINK)
We tend to think of medicine as a science, but for most of human history it has been scientific-ish at best. In the first episode of a three-part series, we look at the grotesque mistakes produced by centuries of trial-and-error, and ask whether the new era of evidence-based medicine is the solution.
Brain Pickings -- Genes and the Holy G: Siddhartha Mukherjee on the Dark Cultural History of IQ and Why We Can’t Measure Intelligence (LINK)
Related book: The Gene: An Intimate History
It’s Personal: Five Scientists on the Heroes Who Changed Their Lives (LINK)

World's Largest Cluster of Sinkholes Discovered (LINK)

Seneca on Cato: the best quotes (LINK)

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Links

GMO's Mean-Reversion Strategy Is Tested in Today's Market [H/T Abnormal Returns] (LINK)

The Brooklyn Investor blog: Record Valuation Spreads! (LINK)

Steve Keen talks with Merryn Somerset Webb (video) (LINK)
Related 1992 article mentioned by Keen: Maastricht and All That - by Wynne Godley
Investing quote of the day: "George Soros has a philosophy that I have also adopted: The way to build long-term returns is through preservation of capital and home runs....I've learned many things from [Soros], but perhaps the most significant is that it's not whether you're right or wrong that's important, but how much money you make when you're right and how much you lose when you're wrong. The few times that Soros has ever criticized me was when I was really right on a market and didn't maximize the opportunity." -Stanley Druckenmiller (via the book The New Market Wizards)

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Links

If you haven't listened to it yet, Malcolm Gladwell gave some interesting thoughts on what he thinks a college education and experience should entail in his chat with Tim Ferriss, starting at the 57:27 mark in the audio HERE. He also recommended a couple of books; one that appears to be out of print, Merchant Princes, and another, Strangers to Ourselves, that has also been recommended by Nassim Taleb and Danny Kahneman.

After Fleeing the Nazis, a Legacy That Won’t Run Dry [H/T @jasonzweigwsj] (LINK)
The frugal couple bumped into young Warren Buffett. Now they’ve left millions to Israeli water research.
Warren Buffett - Opinion on Brexit and EU [from early May] [H/T @HurriCap] (video) (LINK)

Steve Keen on the Macro Voices podcast (LINK) [The podcast also seems to have some of the older Real Vision TV interviews, such as Kyle Bass interviewing John Burbank, as one example. More available HERE.]

BIS 86th Annual Report (LINK)
There is an urgent need to rebalance policy in order to shift to a more robust and sustainable global expansion and address accumulated vulnerabilities, the BIS writes in its main economic review of the year. It calls for prudential, fiscal and structural policies to play a greater role.
Puerto Rico Governor suspends payments on infrastructure debt [H/T @BarbarianCap] (LINK)

Craft Brewers Go High-Tech [H/T Abnormal Returns] (LINK)

Interview with Disney CEO Bob Iger [H/T @Kevin_Holloway] (LINK)

Interview with outgoing Illumina CEO Jay Flatley [H/T @EricTopol] (LINK)

A Portrait of the Overperforming Salesperson [H/T @RobertCialdini] (LINK)

What Old Monkeys and Old Humans Have in Common [H/T @TheLeakeyFndtn] (LINK)

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Links

CNBC transcript of Warren Buffett on 'Squawk Box' yesterday (LINK)

And in case anyone is interested in reviewing Warren Buffett's CNBC appearance back around the market lows on March 9, 2009 (LINK)

Reassessing Berkshire’s Insurance Operations (LINK)

The Rise and Fall of Commodities Hedge Fund King Willem Kooyker (LINK)

Guy Spier: There are lots of Gordon Gekkos on Wall Street, and that needs to change [H/T Will] (LINK)

The Absolute Return Letter - March 2016 (LINK)

A look at Australia's housing market with Steve Keen (audio) (LINK)

Fred Wilson: The Twitter Contradiction (LINK)

James Gleick on the Common Character Traits of Geniuses (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

Excerpt of Jeremy Grantham's panel appearance on climate with Secretary of State John Kerry back in October (video) (LINK)

Australia’s Great Barrier Reef hit by coral bleaching (LINK)

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Links

Today's Audible Daily Deal is one that I've seen recommended several times as a great audiobook: Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder and One Man's Fight for Justice (for $4.95)

Guy Spier: A Buffett Disciple on What to Do About Market Turmoil (LINK)

Ray Dalio on Bloomberg (videos) [H/T The Big Picture] (LINK)

How Quiksilver  imploded [H/T @Wexboy_Value] (LINK)

Should The Fed Raise Rates? - by Steve Keen (LINK)

An appreciation of neurologist and author Oliver Sacks, on Charlie Rose (video) (LINK)
Related book: On the Move
Why These 10 Famous Thinkers Napped (LINK)

Vast Ocean Underlies Ice on Saturn's Moon Enceladus (LINK)

How to solve the world's biggest problems (LINK) [This reminded me of Charlie Munger's gift to the University of Michigan a couple of years ago and his gift to U.C.S.B. last year.]
Since the Beckman was founded, the interdisciplinary model has spread around the world, countering the trend towards specialization that had dominated science since the Second World War. Cross-cutting institutes have sprouted up in the United States, Europe, Japan, China and Australia, among other places, as researchers seek to solve complex problems such as climate change, sustainability and public-health issues. The interdisciplinary trend can be seen in publication data, where more than one-third of the references in scientific papers now point to other disciplines. “The problems in the world are not within-discipline problems,” says Sharon Derry, an educational psychologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who studies interdisciplinarity. “We have to bring people with different kinds of skills and expertise together. No one has everything that's needed to deal with the issues that we're facing.” 
Even so, supporters of interdisciplinary research say that it has been slow to catch on, and those who do cross academic disciplines face major challenges when applying for grants, seeking promotions or submitting papers to high-impact journals. In many cases, scientists say, the trend is nothing more than a fashionable label. “There's a huge push to call your work interdisciplinary,” says David Wood, a bioengineer at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. “But there's still resistance to doing actual interdisciplinary science.”
Book of the day (mentioned in the above article): The New Production of Knowledge: The Dynamics of Science and Research in Contemporary Societies

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Links

Bill Gates: 50 Years of Warren’s Wisdom (LINK)

University Of Auckland Investment Club Q&A With Mohnish Pabrai (LINK)

Latticework of Mental Models: Mean Reversion (LINK)

The Brooklyn Investor comments on Berkshire Hathaway and the annual meeting (LINK)

Meet the World's Most Bearish Investment Manager, Mark Spitznagel (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)
Related book: The Dao of Capital
Morgan Creek Capital's Q1 Letter (LINK)
Julian Robertson has gotten extremely Bearish three times since I have known him, once in 1999 leading up to the Tech Bubble in 2000, a second time in 2007 leading up to the sub-prime melt-down and Global Financial Crisis in 2008 and late last year (and becoming increasingly more concerned this year). In each instance, he started off mildly concerned about imbalances that were building and then he became increasingly vocal in his public appearances, as the situation grew increasingly dire. On each occasion he made significant adjustments to his portfolios that ultimately preserved capital and generated superior returns over the course of the entire event and we would all be wiser, and wealthier, had we followed his lead when the Big Tiger turned into a Bear. The challenging part of the story is that on each occasion he was early in his calls for caution and the funds experienced less favorable performance either in the form of actual losses or perceived opportunity costs (the dreaded Fear Of Missing Out) during the lead up to the actual event. The problem with the big crisis events is that you can be hours early, but you can’t be one minute late on getting out of the way as the corrections happen too quickly and come at the precise time when everyone has convinced themselves that nothing bad could possibly happen.
Stan Druckenmiller Sees ‘Massive' Problem Caused by Aging (LINK)

Bond Market Plunge Shows How Stability Can Breed Instability (LINK)

Steve Keen talk on Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis & the crisis of 2008 (video) (LINK)

Mark Hanson: Housing Bubble 2.0 at Peak Sphericity; the Kardashian’s are now house flippers (LINK)

10 Writing Tips from Legendary Writing Teacher William Zinsser, May He Rest in Peace (LINK)
Related book: On Writing Well
Related link: A Guide to Writing Well

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Links

Buffett: Tesla doesn't threaten me (videos and article) (LINK)

Evan Osnos on Xi Jinping (LINK)

James Surowiecki: The Puerto Rican Problem (LINK)

Toby Carlisle talks to the WMTW podcast (LINK)
Related book: Deep Value
Steve Keen: The Principal And Interest On Debt Myth (LINK)

Amazon starts selling repair, cleaning and assembly services online (LINK)

R.I.P. California (1850-2016): What We’ll Lose And Learn From The World’s First Major Water Collapse [H/T Matt] (LINK)

Tim Ferriss talks to Amanda Palmer (LINK)
Related book: The Art of Asking: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Let People Help
Book of the day [H/T @AlexRubalcava]: The Making of the Atomic Bomb

Monday, March 30, 2015

Links

My friend Lukas' book has officially been released: Value Investing: A Value Investor's Journey Through The Unknown...

Sanjay Bakshi and Vishal Khandelwal's email exchange about why the rules for buying vs. holding a stock are not the same (LINK)

Kyle Bass sits on a panel at The Buttonwood Gathering (video) [H/T Zero Hedge] (LINK)

Barry Ritholtz talks to Charley Ellis, Chair of the Yale Endowment, and author of Winning the Loser’s Game: Timeless Strategies for Successful Investing (LINK)

Steve Keen: The Fed Has Not Learnt From The Crisis (LINK)

Steve Keen on the PeakProsperity podcast (LINK)

Ben Bernanke is now blogging (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Eating Our Seed Corn: The causes of U.S. economic stagnation, and the way forward (LINK)
For practical purposes, the above identity reduces – from the standpoint of overall variability – to a straightforward statement: Unusually elevated corporate profits (a surplus) are largely a mirror image of unusually large deficits in the household and government sectors. Most of the variability in corporate profits over the business cycle is the mirror image of variability in the sum of household savings and government savings. If you examine the actual U.S. data, this is exactly what we observe. Because government and household savings (shown on an inverted scale below) have actually recovered in recent years from the depths of the financial crisis, we’re beginning to see a flattening of growth in U.S. profits. That flattening is likely to turn into outright contraction during the next couple of years.
Mark Buchanan: Common core and common rancor (LINK)
Learning how to distinguish between fact and opinion would seem to be a pretty fundamental piece of any education. In the bizarre world of U.S. public schools, though, it's proving to be controversial. For several years, schools across the U.S. -- with significant help from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation -- have been putting in place something called the Common Core, a set of standards on what students from kindergarten through 12th grade should learn on topics including English, mathematics, science and history. Along the way, they’ve faced ample criticism, some of it reasonable. Teachers, in particular, think they haven't had adequate preparation.
Inside Jeremy Lin's life after Linsanity and the New York Knicks [H/T Abnormal Returns] (LINK)

StarTalk Radio: The Future of Humanity with Elon Musk (LINK)

Book of the day [H/T Brad Feld]: The Intel Trinity: How Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore, and Andy Grove Built the World's Most Important Company

Monday, February 9, 2015

Links

Jeremy Grantham Divines Oil Industry's Future (LINK) [Excerpt from his letter.]
The simplest argument for the oil price decline is for once correct. A wave of new U.S. fracking oil could be seen to be overtaking the modestly growing global oil demand. It became clear that OPEC, mainly Saudi Arabia, must cut back production if the price were to stay around $100 a barrel, which many, including me, believe is necessary to justify continued heavy spending to find traditional oil. The Saudis declined to pull back their production and the oil market entered into glut mode, in which storage is full and production continues above demand. Under glut conditions, oil (and natural gas) is uniquely sensitive to declines toward marginal cost (ignoring sunk costs), which can approach a few dollars a barrel — the cost of just pumping the oil.
Oil demand is notoriously insensitive to price in the short term but cumulatively and substantially sensitive as a few years pass. The Saudis are obviously expecting that these low prices will turn off U.S. fracking, and I’m sure they are right. Almost no new drilling programs will be initiated at current prices except by the financially desperate and the irrationally impatient, and in three years over 80% of all production from current wells will be gone! Thus, in a few months (six to nine?) I believe oil supply is likely to drop to a new equilibrium, probably in the $30 to $50 per barrel range. For the following few years, U.S. fracking costs will determine the global oil balance. At each level, as prices rise more, fracking production will gear up. U.S. fracking is unique in oil industry history in the speed with which it can turn on and off. In five to eight years, depending on global GDP growth and how quickly prices recover, U.S. fracking production will start to peak out and the full cost of an incremental barrel of traditional oil will become, once again, the main input into price. This is believed to be about $80 today and rising. In five to eight years it is likely to be $100 to $150 in my opinion. U.S. fracking reserves that are available up to $120 a barrel are probably only equal to about one year of current global demand. This is absolutely not another Saudi Arabia.
Daniel Yergin: Who Will Rule the Oil Market? (LINK) [This article was mentioned by Grantham.]
Related books: The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power, The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World
Related DVD: The Prize - An Epic Quest for Oil; Money & Power
Nestlé is getting paid to borrow money (LINK)
Once upon a time, you actually had to pay lenders to borrow money. It was an archaic ritual called "interest"—here's the Wikipedia page if you don't believe me—but it's over now. 
In fact, it's the opposite of how things work today, at least in Europe's brave, new, deflationary world. France, Finland, Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Germany are all getting paid by investors—that is, bond yields are negative—to borrow for up to four, and sometimes six, years. Switzerland is even getting paid to borrow for ten years. That's never happened anywhere before. But it's not just governments that people are paying for the privilege of lending to. It's companies, too. Or at least one of them: Nestlé. Its €500 million debt that comes due in October 2016 became the first corporate bond of a year or longer to have a negative yield, after it got as low as -0.0081 percent on Tuesday. (Its borrowing costs later rose to a, relatively-speaking, punitive -0.002 percent).
Five Good Questions for Jeroen Bos about his book Deep Value Investing (LINK) [Bos also recommended the book The Predators' Ball: The Inside Story of Drexel Burnham and the Rise of the Junk Bond Raiders.]

Broyhill Annual Letter (LINK)

RV Capital's Annual Letter [H/T value and opportunity] (LINK)

Some great David Iben links (LINK)

The Future of New Business is Disrupting Old Business (LINK)

Jean-Marie Eveillard on WealthTrack (LINK)

Michael Covel speaks with Michael Mauboussin (LINK)

Steve Keen: My Friend Yanis, The Greek Minister Of Finance (LINK)

Tim Harford: How to See into the Future (LINK)

The Near Death, and Revival, of Monticello (LINK)

Nassim Taleb recently mentioned this bit of history, which I had never heard of before: The KGB's 1985 Counter-Terrorism Operation in Lebanon (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Expect a Decade of 1.7% Portfolio Returns from a Conventional Asset Mix (LINK)
Friday’s employment report showed a 257,000 increase in January non-farm payrolls. This news was followed by a spike in Treasury yields up to 1.96%, a 4% plunge in utility stocks, a 5% plunge in precious metals shares, and took the S&P 500 within a fraction of a percent of December’s record high, before a late-day retreat. These frantic market movements smack of an investment climate dominated by one-dimensional “theme” based behavior - where asset prices have been amped up on yield-seeking speculation, but where the most marginal change in the outlook can trigger a race for the hills or a pile-on, depending on whether the asset has features that are consistent with that theme. On Friday, the knee-jerk reaction was that stronger employment will prompt the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates sooner, creating a scramble to get out of yield-sensitive Treasury bonds and utilities, to buy dollars, and to sell foreign currencies and gold. Of course, in equilibrium, there must be someone on the other side of those trades, so prices moved to the extent needed to find that match.
.....
By our estimates, never in history, prior to the past 5 weeks, have the prospective 10-year nominal annual total returns of both stocks and Treasury bonds been below 2% at the same time. We currently project a 10-year nominal annual portfolio total return averaging only about 1.7% annually for anything close to a standard portfolio mix of equities, bonds and cash – regardless of how much diversification one has within each of those asset classes.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Links

Have a room to rent? Buffett expects record crowd at Berkshire shareholder meeting for his 50th anniversary [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Prof. Sergio Marchionne's bravura performance at the Detroit auto show (LINK)

Seth Godin: Five thoughts on software (LINK)

How Amazon Tricks You Into Thinking It Always Has the Lowest Prices (LINK)

How Bitcoin's Blockchain Could Power an Alternate Internet [H/T @WalterIsaacson] (LINK)

Steve Keen's Economic Outlook for 2015 (LINK)

Jeffrey Gundlach's 2015 Market Outlook Slides (LINK)

Scientists Discover Potent Antibiotic, A Potential Weapon Against a Range of Diseases (LINK)

50 Of The Most Majestic Libraries In The World [H/T @TimHarford] (LINK)

"I have no use whatsoever for projections or forecasts. They create an illusion of apparent precision. The more meticulous they are, the more concerned you should be. We never look at projections, but we care very much about, and look very deeply at, track records. If a company has a lousy track record, but a very bright future, we will miss the opportunity..." -Warren Buffett

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Links

Merryn Somerset Webb interviews Hugh Hendry (Part 1) (LINK)

Bob Rodriguez's speech to CFA Society of Reno [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

Steve Keen: Launching Kingston University's Rethinking Economics group (video) (LINK)
Related book: Debunking Economics
He had good timing calling bubble tops with his first two editions, and now a third edition of Robert Shiller's Irrational Exuberance will be coming early next year (LINK)

Scott Adams on A Life Well-lived (LINK)

“Please Don’t Abandon Me” - By ASHIQ MASIH (LINK)
Note: Asia Bibi, a Christian Pakistani woman, was sentenced to death for blasphemy against Islam in 2010. The year before, while picking fruit with Muslim women, she took a sip of water from the local well. She was immediately accused of making the water impure by ​the other workers, ​who told her that they could no longer use the well. A​ccording to her husband, Ashiq Masih, and others, men and women started beating her and accusing her of making derogatory remarks against the Islamic prophet Muhammad, a charge she denies. Asia is currently in prison waiting to be hanged after losing an appeal ​on ​Oct. 16. She has told her story in a memoir, Blasphemy: A Memoir: Sentenced to Death over a Cup of Water, written with French journalist Anne-Isabelle Tollet. 

Monday, October 27, 2014

Links

James Montier: Shareholder Value Maximization: The World's Dumbest Idea? [Montier starts in the video around 5:30] (LINK)

The Apollo Asia Fund's Q3 report (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Fast, Furious and Prone to Failure (LINK)

Jason Zweig: So You Think You’re a Risk-Taker? (LINK)

Bill Ackman and His Hedge Fund, Betting Big [H/T Will] (LINK)

Jim Koch: The Steve Jobs of Beer (LINK)

Jared Diamond talks with The Guardian (LINK)
Related books, HERE.
On the Obsessive Focus of Bill Gates (LINK)
One trait that differentiated [Gates and Allen] was focus. Allen’s mind would flit between many ideas and passions, but Gates was a serial obsessor. 
“Where I was curious to study everything in sight, Bill would focus on one task at a time with total discipline,” said Allen. “You could see it when he programmed. He would sit with a marker clenched in his mouth, tapping his feet and rocking; impervious to distraction.”
.....
Related book: The Innovators
Related previous post: Bill Gates quote from Charlie Rose interview (or, how the world's best companies are built by fanatics)
a16z Podcast: The (Definite) Optimism of Peter Thiel (LINK)
What is Silicon Valley’s greatest reigning monopoly? How did PayPal manage to emerge from the dotcom implosion? Can you build a great tech company and keep it private forever? And how did Elon Musk manage to wreck an uninsured, million-dollar car with Peter Thiel in the passenger seat speeding on the way to a VC meeting? Marc Andreessen and Thiel discuss all of it in a wide-ranging conversation that toggles off the topics in Thiel’s new book “Zero to One.”
Munger Gives $65 Million to U.C. Santa Barbara [H/T Daniel] (LINK)
Charles Munger, the vice chairman at Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A), is giving $65 million to the University of California at Santa Barbara for a housing facility where visiting scientists can gather to discuss physics. 
Construction of the three-story residence is expected to be done in two years, the university said in a statement. The gift by Munger, the long-time business partner of Warren Buffett, is the largest single donation in the school’s history, according to the statement. 
“Once you see what a combination of calculus and Newton’s laws will do and the things you can work out, you get an awesome appreciation for the power of getting things in science right,” Munger, 90, said in the statement. “I don’t think you get a feeling for the power of science — not with the same strength — anywhere else than you do in physics.”
What Will Set Warren Buffett’s Company Apart When He’s Gone? (LINK)
Related book: Berkshire Beyond Buffett
Buffett’s Model Not Challenged by IBM Loss (video) [H/T Will] (LINK)
Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Lawrence Cunningham, author of “Berkshire Beyond Buffett,” talks with Betty Liu about how the value lost in IBM impacts the effectiveness of Warren Buffett’s investment plans. He speaks on “In The Loop.”
Talks at Google: John Mihaljevic, "The Manual of Ideas: How to Find the Best Investment Ideas" (video) (LINK)
Related book: The Manual of Ideas: The Proven Framework for Finding the Best Value Investments
Steve Keen: Time for a Copernican Revolution in Economics (LINK)
Related book: Debunking Economics

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Chart of the Day: Margin Debt on the NYSE

Via Steve Keen: “How far can it go? Margin debt is still shy of its all-time high as a percentage of GDP, so there is certainly some headroom for further rises. But at the same time, the market is still in territory that was uncharted before the Loony Zeros (my “Roaring Twenties” candidate for how we should describe the last decade and a half) drove it higher than it has ever been before. Fragility, rather than sustainability is the message I would take from this data.


Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Tuesday, November 20, 2012