Sunday, October 31, 2021

The speed and the destination

When we want to go somewhere, is the speed we can arrive at the destination the only factor to consider?

Let's say that we are to go and visit some friends in a remote area in northern Sweden. 

The winter roads through the forests are full of moose, reindeer, bears, polar bears, and what-not.

What kind of driver (and car) would we prefer for the journey?

Let's make a thought experiment with obvious hints to a financial journey.

One driver promises to keep a good, high average speed, with the performance one can expect of a good, new car, let's say around 120 km/h (80 mph).

Another driver wants to arrive as quickly as possible. This driver proposes a new kind of car (untested on arctic winter roads) that he thinks could go really fast, let's say 160 km/h  (100 mph). We will reach the destination in no time, or so he promises us. All other alternatives seem unnecessarily slow to this driver.

The third driver seems, in comparison, dull and boring, but quite stable from a temperamental perspective, and proposes to drive in 80 km/h. Just in case.

There might also be this guy from the local bank who tells us to walk the whole way.

Quick? Or safer but slightly slower?

Speed might not be the only factor to consider when aiming for a given destination (that doesn't include a dead moose in one's lap).

To arrive at all, in an acceptable time, is for many much more important than being the first to arrive.  

Let's end with the analogy there. 

Many seem to focus on optimizing for just one parameter when considering one's financial journey.

  • Insane returns. Including untested assets, which could be anything that is new. New is the definition of tech stocks. Or exotic assets that didn't exist 20 or 50 or 100 years ago. Might be quick, yes. Will it always work? Who knows? And what happens at an unexpected turn?

  • Average speed, known car. Buy the index, or pick value stocks and reinvest the dividends. This is less insane and it's far from impossible to reach our destination. Yet, if one is not that familiar with the conditions of winter roads in northern Sweden, then do we really understand what risks we are exposing ourselves to? And what makes the assumption true, that high average speed is the only factor that is interesting for our journey? Is the assumption that average speed automatically also has a decent reward for the risk? Or that the risk matches our journey and appetite to arrive also if conditions or events are less than optimal?
  • Slow yet steady. Even a sharp turn becomes much less challenging with slower speed and higher safety. The big swings, so to speak, of the road  becomes less dangerous, and we can both handle sudden ice and even the odd moose on the road. We might get to our goal in a slightly longer time. But in most scenarios we will get there, alive. 
We have given the question which vehicle will bring us to our destination some thought, and for us, slow and steady might not be so bad, as we prefer to arrive in most scenarios rather than being quick in the average scenario. 

You can read our thoughts on portfolios here, and our thoughts on volatility here.

How about you? Are you mostly considering your speed in your portfolio? Or is arriving at the destination even if the unexpected moose shows up behind a curve also in your equations?

Farewell,

antinous&lucilius

Saturday, October 16, 2021

Why the Samurai shouldn't study too much Buddhism

There's so much mindfulness in today's world. And to enjoy freedom, the stoics, and quite a lot of thinkers like them, advice a kind of detachment from the material world - at least when it comes to deriving anger from material failures.

Yet - when we are NOT yet free; isn't it better to think of how to be good followers of our clan and company? Is then too much dwelling on the mental virtues for freedom really with what we should consider ourselves?

A Samurai is not overly concerned with a peaceful mind.
(Kusunoki Masashige, 14th century)

In the Hagakure, Tsunemoto writes that the Samurai should not study too much Buddhism. 

Instead, one finds other virtues, quite detrimental to preserving one's peace of mind, in the thinking of the way of the samurai - bushido. 

Act quickly

The philosophers in Their Elevated Elysium like to think and not make haste. 

Yet, the Samurai prefers to to act and act quickly. Only the feeble refrain from acting. 

Use the anger

The stoics stay clear of anger, and comfortably turn their fat necks away.

Yet, for a Samurai, rage can be turned into a force that can be directed at one's enemies or what needs to be done.

Don't be afraid of death

In one translation, Tsunemoto writing goes:

"This is the substance of the Way of the Samurai: if by setting one's heart right every morning and evening, one is able to live as though his body were already dead, he gains freedom in the Way; his whole life will be without blame, and he will succeed in his calling."

Perhaps we don't always have death over us, yet at some point, being attached to personal safety is obviously counter to Tsunemoto's samurai. If we accept that everything will vanish to the point that it has already vanished, we can do the right thing, free of fear. 

If we are afraid of death, we might refrain ourselves from doing the necessary.

Often, the hard way is the right way and can be enjoyed precisely because of its hardships. 

Live by honor

Honor, and the lesser byproduct of reputation, is everything in a clan-based society. 

Hint: much of business life, and beyond that, behaves like a clan based society.

In all action, show respect, stick to your word and never loose face.

Serve your master

Precisely because of honor and reputation, the Samurai cannot have anything but complete loyalty to his master.

A good follower

Most of us spend some time in a clan, nowadays called an "organization" or a "corporation". This existence can be enjoyed for its medieval, clan- and samurai-like attributes.

And being valuable to the clan is a sure way to achieve freedom.

So let's think how we become a good follower for our master, and put the horse before the cart, and consider this and enjoy this before we start to consider freedom.

A samurai shouldn't study too much Buddhism. 

Be a good samurai first, and then, be the monk who dwells on transcendental freedom in his state of higher and higher enlightenment. 

If we set our will to it, our goals will be in our grasp.

Tsunemoto again:

"Nothing is impossible in this world. Firm determination, it is said, can move heaven and earth. Things appear far beyond one's power, because one cannot set his heart on any arduous project due to want of strong will."

Farewell.

//antinous&lucilius

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

When lightning struck the cow

There was this farmer's tale, of a good ranch. The harvests were plenty, the meadows bountiful. 

Each and every year, everything at the farm got a little better, the barns were filled, the live stock was fat, the children happy.

Then, one summer night, the farmer looked to the skies and saw dark clouds gathering. A storm was building up.

Well, he was probably not sitting on the cow.

His favorite cow grazed on the hill, and the farmer had a tingling sensation. Too late he understood what was about to happen.

Lightning struck his cow.

From that day on, what was slightly better every year became slightly downhill as the years passed by. And just five years later, the farm fell into disarray.

It was a story that ran in the village for generations. 

To have a little bit too much is not a problem. To discover that one has a little bit too little is a big problem. 

Diversification and safety margins are there for the things we do not see coming.  

As when lightning strikes the cow.

Farewell,

//lucilius&antinous.