DeepState
Multi-Strategy, Quant and Fundamental
- Joined
- 30 March 2014
- Posts
- 1,615
- Reactions
- 81
As a low IQ investor I find that Howard is just a bit too smart for me....and leaves me with more questions than answers, which is a healthy thing of course. Investing is exceptionally hard, and to think otherwise betrays a lack of depth of thought.
Ha indeed. Just realised that IQ was on display referring to you as DV. The change from RY has thrown me, and my cognitive bias has me reading "DeepState" and it becoming "deep value", hence DV. I need to lay off the investment books for a while.
... I have nothing on my list, which reflects my lack of imagination or initiative as much as anything.
I'd have thought it reflects your speed reading combined with your voracious appetite!
Many thanks: i really appreciated the talkA talk by Howard Marks at Google on 27 March on "the most important thing". Long but entertaining, bear with it.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6WroiiaVhGo
Really good stuff... I think you will enjoy it DV.
I'd have thought it reflects your speed reading combined with your voracious appetite!
Change of year, change of name. I like this DS one more. I gave it more thought. The avatar is an indirect double-meaning. One is a power behind the puppet concept. Evident enough. The other is "talk to the hand, the face don't want to hear it". I've not had immediate cause to use this meaning since taking it up.
Currently reading "Margin of Safety" by Seth Klarman of Baupost Capital on the advice of a seemingly retired ASF poster 'Sinner' - who is one seriously high-IQ guy. OMG. Some people here are right out of the box.
Klarman is another legendary value investor. It is interesting to compare/contrast these guys. Lots of overlap and then disagreement too. I think it might be useful to conduct a comparative analysis on Graham, Buffett, Klarman and Marks. Note to self: stop screwing around and get this done.
What's caught your attention lately on the reading front? I have nothing on my list, which reflects my lack of imagination or initiative as much as anything.
Here are some suggestions:
The Basic Writings of Bertrand Russell. A collection of essays on a wide range of topics.
23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism by Ha-Joon Chang.
Economics: The User's Guide by Ha-Joon Chang.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2384984/ - this guy is good.
Happy reading.
Cheers.
Just looked at the 3 piles of books on my bedside table, and of the lot of them I recommend to you ;
The Economist guide to investment strategy, Stanyer
A random walk, Malkiel
Beating the street, Lynch
Common sense on mutual funds, Bogle
General kick up the **** / pump up material ;
The prosperity bible, Hill, Franklin, Allen etc - a classic!
Mindset, Dweck
From Klarman (in 1991.....):
View attachment 62192
Why is dividend yield on stock so often seen in the same light as interest yield on cash?
From Klarman (in 1991.....):
View attachment 62192
Why is dividend yield on stock so often seen in the same light as interest yield on cash?
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