We’ll start with the simplest of all possible investments and that is buying Treasury bonds. When we buy a bond, we become a lender. And with Treasury bonds, we become a lender to the U.S. government. So, say the yield (interest rate) on a Treasury bond that matures in 10 years is 5 percent. ForContinue reading “Demystifying Investment Returns”
An Obvious Secret To Wealth
The truth about the Warren Buffett class of wealth is that if somehow a Buffett were to be stripped of all his wealth, his life wouldn’t change much. The Gates and the Zuckerbergs of the world fall in the same league. Some do indeed live larger than you and me, but you can just tell that they are not into it. They don’tContinue reading “An Obvious Secret To Wealth”
Return Of Investment
Joel Greenblatt, founder of Gotham Funds, says that the secret to investing is figuring out the value of something and then paying a lot less to buy it. Obvious but wish it were that easy. Price is not the problem. We see it quoted every day for the businesses that are publicly traded. A privateContinue reading “Return Of Investment”
Takeaways From Investment Scams
Bernard Madoff was a successful money manager for more than twenty years until it was discovered that he was in fact running a giant, $65 billion Ponzi scheme. And the who’s who from Wall Street to Hollywood to Main Street were taken to the cleaners in one of the largest frauds ever perpetrated. So howContinue reading “Takeaways From Investment Scams”
Investing Is Hard
Warren Buffett says that investing is simple but not easy. Indeed. Let us reconcile these two data points from two different news sources at the onset of the Corona virus pandemic. The US economy lost 20.5 million jobs in April, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Friday — by far the most sudden and largest decline since theContinue reading “Investing Is Hard”
Recency Bias
Americans afraid of flying overwhelmingly took to the nation’s highways right after the September 11 terrorist attacks. But flying as we know is much, much safer than driving can ever be. Our odds of getting killed in a plane crash – one in a million. Our chances of dying in a car crash – oneContinue reading “Recency Bias”
Let Prognosticators Pontificate
Joseph Granville was in the business of prognostication. He was a stock market maven. He knew precisely what to buy and when to buy. He moved markets. And he let it all know in a newsletter he published called the Granville Market Letter. In that, he gave specific instructions on whether it was time to buyContinue reading “Let Prognosticators Pontificate”
Quit Playing The Game You’ve Already Won
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak co-founded Apple. We all know that. What many do not know is that there was a third co-founder. His name was Ronald Wayne. The reason we do not know much about him is because he quit just two weeks after the company was formed. He then sold his 10 percent stake in Apple forContinue reading “Quit Playing The Game You’ve Already Won”
A Tale Of Two Speculators
Edwin Lefèvre in Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, a 1923 pseudo-fictional novel, chronicles the life and travails of the real Jesse Livermore, a stock trader par excellence of the time. He made and lost fortunes many times over but ultimately and tragically ended up taking his own life. Jesse Livermore went from being one of the richest peopleContinue reading “A Tale Of Two Speculators”
Gold Is Not An Investment
Before the Great Depression of 1929, the United States experienced a mini, almost forgotten depression towards the tail-end of World War 1 (1920-1921). That mini-depression was partly caused by the government slashing its expenses to balance its budget considering the wartime debt the country took on. That plus rapidly rising prices brought upon by pent-upContinue reading “Gold Is Not An Investment”