https://twitter.com/Brad_Setser
Great stuff on Turkey from Brad Setser, perhaps there will be some opportunity to buy TUR bello $19
Great stuff on Turkey from Brad Setser, perhaps there will be some opportunity to buy TUR bello $19
Good point by Taleb here. Its similar to my case. Bitcoin is a call option on blockchain speculation/sentiment, options benefit from uncertainty. For the intelectually honest (or those with skin in the game) there is a LOT of uncertainty of where Bitcoin will trade at in the future, therefore it makese sense to be long options rather than short (partially except if the 'short' is just talking, no skin in the game, in that case the damage is only reputational). He goes as far as saying 'BTC doesn't even have a variance, steep power law.'
One might be able to calculate BTC's historical variance but the number is so unstable and the amount of needed samples is so large to be able to arrive at this final variance that you might as well call it infinite. A typical power law distribution needs 10 trillion samples (IIRC) for one to be able to say with confidence what the standard deviation (and variance as well) is, Bitcoin might be even more unstable than that
The only folks that can beat their chests in a bravado and talk about how worthless BTC is are the ones with no skin in the game and those who dont care about their investing reputation. Real risk takers know that something that goes up 400,000x can trade at almost any price
Other at the very least, the THRESHOLD to get bearish should be higher than the THRESHOLD to get bullish. So if someone presents a very good bear case for bitcoin and someone else presents a very good bull case, a rational investor might think its 50/50 on who is right. But he will still invest in the long side because of the optionality and pay off matrix ("If I'm wrong I lose 1 unit, if I'm right I have 5")The rational way to analyze a convexity market is NOT to weight bull arguments and bear arguments equally and 'rationaly' determine what is right and what is wrong. But rather, there SHOULD be a bullish bias in that analysis, this due the optionality and payoff matrix
Lots of times bulls can win in many different ways
-Bull thesis is correct
-Bull thesis is wrong but speculation drives the invesment up
-Bullish surprises
Whereas bears have to be correct about their thesis, correct that speculation wont take place, correct there wont be bullish surprises (like GOOG buying Youtube in 2006, which these days is probably worth over $50B).
all THRESHOLD THEORY. What makes a great trader/investor is where they place their threshold to get bullish and bearish at and how they weight bull arguments and bear arguments relative to the market they specialize in. NOT what the trader SAYS or WRITEs (or even what they would describe their 'investment philosophy').