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A better option

Source:Rich Martell

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Linkfest:October 28, 2015

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

NDA plans to rewrite tax laws (Mint)

The  increasing role of anchor investors (BS)

Emerging Markets:Bargain Hunters Beware (Schwab)

Investing Vs Flipping (RA)

Sovereign Wealth Funds in the new era of oil (IMF)

Warren Buffett:Why hedge funds fail (MarketWatch)

Invest in God’s own hedge fund (Deal Breaker)

China has credit bubble of epic proportions (Marc Faber)

Buy the winners (SRS)

On Fund Survivorship (Evidence Based Investor)

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You take what the market gives you

So what’s an investor to do?

I can sum it up in one deceptively simple sentence: You take what the market gives you.

It’s deceptively simple because it implies a totally different perspective on markets than most investors (or allocators, frankly) bring to bear.

It means approaching markets from a position of humility, i.e. risk tolerance, rather than from a position of hubris, i.e. return expectations. It’s all well and good to tell your financial advisor or your board or yourself that you’re “targeting an 8% return.” That’s great. I understand that’s your desire. But the market couldn’t care less what your desire might be.

I think it’s so important to stop focusing on our “expectations” of the market, as if it were some unruly teenager that needs to get its act together and start doing what it’s told.

It’s madness to anthropomorphize the market and believe that we can control it or predict its behavior. Instead, we need to focus on what we CAN control and what we CAN predict, which is our own reaction to what a stochastically-dominated social system like the market is going to throw at us over time.

Tell me what your risk tolerance is. Tell me what path you’re comfortable walking. Then we can talk about the uncorrelated stepping stone strategies that will make up that path to get you where you want to go. Then we can talk about sticking to the path, which far more often means keeping risk in the portfolio than taking it out. Then we can talk about adaptively allocating between the stepping stone strategies as the risk they generate today differs from the risk they generated in the past.

Maybe you’ll get lucky and one of the strategies will crush it, like US equities did in 2013. Excellent! But aren’t we wise enough to distinguish allocation luck from investment skill? I keep asking myself that rhetorical question, but I’m never quite happy with the answer.

From Salient Partners

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The world’s most attractive investment markets

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Linkfest: October 27,2015

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

Indigo IPO opens today (Mint)

HDFC Life IPO likely in 2016 (FE)

IPO Review: S H Kelkar (My Investment Ideas)

The unending itch to do something (Bala)

Satisfying your activity addiction (Common Sense)

Information is the key to stock picking (VRO)

Investing debates are settled with actual money (Barry)

Howard Mark’s latest memo (Market Folly)

Where were you when the Alpaca bubble burst (Climateer)

Reinventing the company (Economist)