A lot of really wealthy people seem to understand this in some level (conscious or uncouncious) because either they got wealthy that way (Silicon Valley folks, business people that did well, real estate investors who catched a big bull run in their markets) or they know people that got wealthy that way. Even Munger only understood this fully when he met 'a lot of idiots that were really rich' (or something to that effect), that's when he realized that paying a fair price for an amazing business (holding it forever and never having to pay any capital gains tax) was superior to the 'cigar butt' approach of buying something cheap and selling when it was no longer cheap.SNAP is worth about $22B now. FB is worth almost $400B. Will SNAP be worth anywhere near what FB is? Probably not and I will probably be stopped out of my trade at $23 (with a tiny little loss) but if I'm wrong and the continued US bull market leads to a more speculative mood, this could easily double or triple on that valuation difference alone.
So this is a nice way to play the bull market in optimism with tiny risk. I get so annoyned with these wall street types who love to say 'this is CRAZY, its irrational, im skeptical of the whole thing'.
If they kept track of their missed gains the same way a short sell shows up on their P&L they would quickly find that they missed several times their networth.
Simply because they are idiots who think they can predict the chance of small events and the impact of those small events (the payoff).
In unbounded investments (like stocks), its often the pessimist that has no margin for error
Thank you. My ideas might seem unusual sometimes but that is because I try to write when I got something different/new to say. I dont want to be repeating common ideas taught in books and blogs because I dont think it would add much value
Good stuff about inflation if u are interested.
Second of all, I would like to thank you about your independent thinking and writings. They have helped me to think and see things differently when it comes to my own gamebook.
Its an interesting point he makes on inflation during peacetime vs wartime but at the same time, my backtests and data from the US/UK show that the move from the gold standard to a fiat standard changed the game big time. It sticks out how much gold became valuable as a portfolio diversifier when countries moved to a fiat standard. So perhaps when Shilling looks at so much data (from late 1700s to today) he could be lead to a conclusion that is not applicable now due too much data from a gold standard world
Good stuff about inflation if u are interested.
Second of all, I would like to thank you about your independent thinking and writings. They have helped me to think and see things differently when it comes to my own gamebook.