Before I start this evening, I would like to explain some of the reasons for these “Best of the Aleph Blog” articles. ?I write these no closer than one year after an article was written, so that I can have a more dispassionate assessment of how good they were. ?I write these for the following reasons:
- Some people want a quick introduction to the way I think.
- Some publishers on the web want additional copy, and I let them republish some of my best pieces.
- One day I may bundle a bunch of them together, rewrite them to improve clarity, and integrate them to create a set of books on different topics.
- One of my editors at RealMoney once shared with me that I was one of the few authors there whose articles got re-read, or read after a significant time had passed. ?This is meant to be mostly “timeless” stuff.
- New readers might be interested in older stuff.
- I enjoy re-reading my older pieces, and sometimes it stimulates updates, and new ideas.
Anyway, onto this issue of the “Best of the Aleph Blog.” ?These articles appeared between August 2012 and October 2012:
On Credit Scores
Why credit scores are important; make sure you guard yours.
Retail Investors and the Stock Market
On the pathologies of being an amateur investor when there are those who will take advantage of you, and you might sabotage yourself as well.
On the Poway School District
Goes through the details of how a school district outside San Diego mortgaged the future of the next generation who will live there, if any will live there.
Using Investment Advice, Part I
Using Investment Advice, Part II
Using Investment Advice, Part III
Using Investment Advice, Part IV
A series of articles inspired by what I wrote at RealMoney, encouraging people to be careful about listening to advice in the media on stocks, including those recommended by Cramer.
The Future Belongs to Those with Patience
On why patience and discipline are required for good investing.
What Caused the Crisis?
A retrospective, if somewhat controversial.
On the International Business Machines Industrial Average
Replace the DJIA with a new cap-weighted index of the 30 largest capitalization stocks.
How Warren Buffett is Different from Most Investors, Part 1
How Warren Buffett is Different from Most Investors, Part 2
You have to understand Buffett the businessman to understand Buffett the investor.
Volatility Analogy
How an interview I messed up led to an interesting way to explain volatility.
Spot the Gerrymander
Eventually we need to eliminate gerrymandering — hey, maybe we can do that at the future Constitutional Convention.
Reforming Public School Testing
Creating exams where you can’t study for the test; you can only study.
Carrying Capacity
Governments imagine that they can shape outcomes, and in the short-run, they can.? In the long-run, the real productivity of the economy matters, and only those that can make it without government help will make it.? Whatever government policy may try to achieve, eventually the economy reverts to what would happen naturally without incentives.? There is a natural carrying capacity for most activities, and efforts to change that usually fail.
Actuaries Versus Quants
On why Actuaries are much better than Quants
Neoclassical vs Austrian Economics
Applying math to economics has been a loser.? Who has a consistently good macroeconomic model?? No one that I know.? Estimates of future GDP growth and inflation are regularly wrong, and no one calls turning points well.
The Dilemma of Adding Yield
A quick summary of risk in bonds, and why additional yield is often not rewarded.
The Dilemma of Adding Yield, Redux
On working out the pricing between discount, premium, and par bonds.
Too Much Investment
Investment is a good thing, overinvestment is a bad thing.
Got Cash? (Part 2)
On Buffett and others carrying cash to give themselves flexibility.
Set it and Forget it
On what uneducated investors should do.
Forest Fires and Central Banking
Short piece pointing out that small crises are needed to prevent huge crises.
Match Assets and Liabilities
Total Return Versus Long Liabilities
Cash flow matching has often been sneered at as an investment policy. ?I explain why such a view is naive, not sophisticated, and definitely wrong.
The Rules, Part XXXIV
?Once something is used for hedging purposes, it becomes useless for predictive purposes.?
Why I LOVE Blogging
On the downsides of blogging, and why they aren’t so bad.
Higher Taxes, Inflation, Default (Choose One)
Coming to a country near you, and soon!
On the Virtue of Hard Questions for Young Analysts
How young analysts toughen up through hard competitions.
Dealing in Fractions of Sense
On how to reform High Frequency Trading
Yield is the Last Refuge of Scoundrels
Far from offering high price appreciation, it is far easier to cheat many people by offering a high yield, because average people look for ways to stretch their limited resources with a tight budget.