Day: August 30, 2012

Volatility Analogy

Volatility Analogy

Today Heidi Moore interviewed me for NPR Marketplace.? I won’t give away what it is about, but I will tell you two things:

  1. If I am on Marketplace, it will be on Friday or Tuesday.
  2. There was a point in the interview where she stumped me.? I’m usually pretty able to think on my feet, but when she asked me “Volatilty: can you explain that in language that a teenager could understand?”? I choked up, did my best on short notice, and gave what I later viewed as a lame explanation, but as I said it, my heart sank, because I realized I was not clarifying anything.

So, after the talk (It was really good to meet Heidi voice-to-voice for the first time), I took a walk outside and pondered.? Then the analogy struck me, and here it is:

Imagine you are driving down a well-engineered smooth road with gradual turns, modest traffic, and no bad weather, and you are going 60 miles per hour.? This is easy.? There is no volatility here.? That is what an average retail investor hopes for, and rarely gets.

Now consider a road that is not so smooth, with significant and frequent curves, significant traffic, and now and then it is raining hard.? That is a difficult situation.? This is similar to what the market is normally like, with all of the volatility (high variation of results).? Maybe you can’t do 60 MPH in that environment, but something less.? Those who recognize risk must run at a slower speed or risk accidents.

Now think of someone without special skills who dares to drive the easy road at 100 MPH.? He might not think it so hard, and might think he is quite a driver doing so.? So it was for equity investors in the ’80s and ’90s; conditions were uniquely favorable, and average investors thought they were hot stuff.

Now think of someone without special skills attempting to do the hard conditions at 100 MPH on average.? Odds are they wipe out, or even die.? You can’t fight physics, or can you?

Okay, now think of a highly trained driver with a special car that is able to handle the hard conditions, and can do it at 100 MPH on average, most of the time.? It doesn’t work all of the time, because there are things no one can catch — extra slipperiness, a bump in a particularly bad place that leads to an overturned car.

Finally, think of the trained driver with special car told he must average 150 MPH over the hard conditions course once.? He dies on the first try, destroying the car.? Several other trained drivers try with identical cars.? They all die, and the cars are destroyed.? Eventually, you can’t get anyone to try the hard conditions course at 150 MPH.

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In my analogy, the difference between the hard and easy course is volatility: how rough/variable are conditions.? Leverage is represented by speed.? Any course can be completed, but there is a maximum speed for which a course can be completed without disaster.? No surprise that those who are overly aggressive in investing frequently fail.

Now for the final tweak: imagine that you have no map for the hard course, it is new to you, no GPS, nothing to aid you in the driving.? That is what the markets are like.? As I often say, the markets always have a new way to make a fool out of you.? How fast could you go?? How fast could the trained driver with a special car go?

This is why I urge caution in investing and avoiding leverage.? Investing is tough enough without trying to earn something beyond what the market can bear.? I encourage safety first, after that, look for best advantage.

Book Review: A Decade of Debt

Book Review: A Decade of Debt

This is a short book that in some ways is a summary of Reinhart and Rogoff’s greater work This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly. Think of it as an executive summary in book form.? How short is it?? Less than 160 pages, but in terms of text there’s less than 40 pages of text in this 6″ x 9″ book, so it’s a fast read.

Graphs occupy the remainder of the book, with the latter two-thirds of the book going nation-by-nation, allocating 1-3 pages to each, showing Debt/GDP, and the various sorts of financial crises they have faced.

Main Findings

1) When debt to GDP ratios get above 90%, growth rates fall by 1%.

2) Emerging markets fare worse than developed market on point #1.

3) There’s no relation in the short run regarding public debt and inflation in developed nations.

Other Findings

1) Many nations default continually… I allege cultural problems, but I am willing to be corrected.

2) Banking crises were normal in developed nations prior to WWII.

3) Private debts surge prior to banking crises. This is normal, when banks lend aggressively, they lend badly.

4) When there are banking crises, other crises tend to occur.? No surprise, because restrictions in bank lending leads to difficulties in those seeking financing.

5) Banking crises are associated with sovereign debt crises.

6) Public borrowing follows a repeated boom/bust cycle, particularly in developing markets.

7) Like Michael Pettis’ book, The Volatility Machine: Emerging Economics and the Threat of Financial Collapse, short-term debts tend to accelerate prior to crises in developing markets.

8 ) Public credit ends to absorb private debts after the crisis erupts.

This is a good book,? it summarizes the dangers that come from high national debt levels.? The graphs in the back are a handy reference to the debt histories and crises of most major nations.

Quibbles

None

Who would benefit from this book: I think every serious investor and thinker on economics should be familiar with the findings of Reinhart and Rogoff.? If you want to, you can buy it here: A Decade of Debt (Policy Analyses in International Economics).

Full disclosure: I bought this book with my own money.

If you enter Amazon through my site, and you buy anything, I get a small commission.? This is my main source of blog revenue.? I prefer this to a ?tip jar? because I want you to get something you want, rather than merely giving me a tip.? Book reviews take time, particularly with the reading, which most book reviewers don?t do in full, and I typically do. (When I don?t, I mention that I scanned the book.? Also, I never use the data that the PR flacks send out.)

Most people buying at Amazon do not enter via a referring website.? Thus Amazon builds an extra 1-3% into the prices to all buyers to compensate for the commissions given to the minority that come through referring sites.? Whether you buy at Amazon directly or enter via my site, your prices don?t change.

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