Motley Fool Money - Howard Marks, The State of the Market
Episode Date: June 15, 2025Howard Marks the founder of Oak Tree Capital Management. He joins Motley Fool CEO, Tom Gardner, plus Chief Investment Officer Andy Cross and Senior Analyst Buck Hartzell for a conversation about: - H...ow investors should think about the deficit - Investing in human emotion - The inescapability of risk Hosts: Tom Gardner, Andy Cross, Buck Hartzell Guest: Howard Marks Engineers: Bart Shannon, Dan Boyd Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, "TMF") do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Most people are subject to emotion and that emotion causes people to buy high and sell low,
then what you got to do is you've got to tie your hands and not do it.
Now, we run funds, they're institutional funds, they're not open to the public,
but in many of our funds, you lock up your money for 10 years.
You can't get out.
And it's kind of like Odysseus tying himself to the mast when he had to sail past the sirens.
That's Howard Marks, the celebrated value investor and founder of Oak Tree Capital Management.
Earlier this week, Marks joined a motley group of fools, including CEO Tom Gardner,
chief investment officer Andy Cross, and senior analyst Buck Hartzell on our live stream,
Fool 24, to discuss the state of the market.
We're replaying the conversation in full here on Motley Full Money in case you missed that live version.
Buck and Andy, great to have you both here.
I was reflecting a little bit on all the many things that we've studied.
and learn from Howard Marks and from Oak Tree over the years.
And then I was thinking, I wonder, and we'll ask Howard as he joins us,
I wonder if it gets a little annoying for Howard and his team of many,
many great investors that they're probably referred to as Oak Worth, Oak Bridge,
Oakmont.
There's a lot of oaks out there.
There are a lot of oaks out there, but there's one oak tree capital management that
specializes in distressed debt and alternative assets.
and we are joined by its co-founder and co-chairman, Howard Marks, for this hour.
And Mr. Marks, thank you so much for spending this hour with us.
Mr. Marks is my father.
It's great to be with you, Tom.
As well, as well.
Do you often hear different phrasing of your company name?
Like, you all are so great over there at Oak Hill.
Well, of course that happens.
You know, by the way, we started up 30 years ago in April, you know,
And a couple of months later, I saw an ad or something about oak tree, this or that.
And I said, that's ridiculous.
We're going to sue those people.
And then it turned out that there's an oak tree in just about every city.
I mean, an oak tree investment management firm in just about every city.
And we're the last, not the first.
So we're no lawsuit.
Well, I won't give a detailed story of the time I met Nikki Six from Motley Crew.
And he playfully threatened to sue us for that.
And that was an enjoyable moment that we had.
Howard, this is how we want to spend the hour together.
If you're willing to take this journey with us,
if you'd like to edit any of the major themes that we,
that we're heading towards, please do so.
But we thought we would start with debt and the markets today,
then investing in human emotion,
and then designing a great investment process,
and then what you've learned in business to close.
Okay.
Great.
That'll be a good hour.
I'm looking forward to it.
Yeah.
What is the debt market telling us today about the equity markets?
I mean, there hasn't been that much change, except that when the whole tariff thing occurred,
the yield on the 10-year jump by about 50 basis points, half a percent.
And, you know, that basically, I think it's, you can say that people demand higher interest rates
when they're more aware of risk.
And, of course, you know, I think that the, most people think that the tariffs introduced new
risks and it's reflected in bond prices and as it should be. I'd like to ask about one other
form of debt, and that's for our country. You know, you've talked about tariffs. Debt to GDP is
probably about 124% right now. We've had a kind of really high-profile divorce from the leader
of Doge. Elon Musk is headed back to Tesla and a big, wonderful bill kind of making its way through
Washington right now, but I just wonder from like, from your investment standpoint, how big of a deal
is that deficit? Am I the only one worried about it? Or how should investors think about two trillion
dollar deficits as kind of as far as the eye can see right now? No, I don't think it's a, it's a
non-issue. You know, the U.S. was given by the world a golden credit card, the way I describe it,
where there's no credit limit and you never get a bill and the interest rate is one of the lowest in the world.
And we got that because of our leadership in many areas, including economic, but also the fact that, you know, the dollars, the reserve currency of the world.
And that has permitted us to spend more than we bring in in taxes.
or I don't know, I think, let's say 41 out of the last 45 years.
And of course, that's the rational behavior for somebody who has a golden credit card.
Why would you possibly live within your means if you can, you know, if you can do what I describe?
But the question is, can we lose that status?
That's really the question.
If the world decides to impose a limit on our credit card, as you can see with what's
going on now is it will be very hard to go back to living within our means. So, you know,
exactly what that means is hard to say. If the world worries about us and they raise the interest
rate, then that'll increase the cost of our debt service and that'll add further to the deficit
and the debt. And, you know, as we as we spend more on interest, it adds to the deficit and
the debt balloons. And so it seems like a spiral. It has, it seems uncontrollable because you can't
imagine, you know, I guess one of you said, mentioned two, two trillion dollar deficits as far as
the eye can see. It doesn't seem possible to get it under control. So where does this lead?
Hard to say.
Yeah. Yeah.
And, you know, Warren Buffett at the Berkshire Athlete Annual Meeting said, you know, this is going to be a problem, but nobody knows if it's two years or 20 years.
Right.
One of you mentioned, somebody mentioned that our, maybe as Andy mentioned that our debt is 120-odd percent of GDP, which sounds like a lot.
Is that a problem?
Well, where does the problem set in?
Nobody knows.
You know, in Japan, it's 200.
Right.
So, well, so maybe 120 is not a problem. But, you know, the golden credit card sounds too good to be true. There was an economist once named Herbert Stein, and he's famous for saying one thing. If something cannot continue, it will stop. And I agree 100%. And if you can't spend $2 trillion more than you're bringing in taxes every year forever,
then it will stop. And what happens? Hard to say. And there are two choices. You can spend less
or you can you can raise more in the form of revenue. And neither of those are politically
very attractive to folks. Well, you know, you have to, we need, what we need is elected officials
who, for whom not getting elected isn't the worst thing in the world. Yeah. Because
Because what we need, I'm writing a memo about this and it'll be out within a week or 10 days.
And I touch on it.
And I say, what we need is austerity.
The trouble is austerity isn't fun.
And if you want to get reelected and what you want to do is you want to entertain the voters.
And they're not going to be amused by austerity.
and so far, you know, we have let that dominate the discussion.
So as you say, they say, well, I'm all for a balanced budget.
I just don't want to increase taxes or cut spending.
And I would say, you know, two years ago at the Berkshire meeting,
when Warren was asked about selling Apple, which he sold over 600 million shares eventually,
and he just said basically taxes are going up.
He believed that that was the reason that he gave for selling it.
He wasn't he didn't believe in.
Of course, Apple was trading at a higher multiple than when he acquired those shares, too.
I think that you talk about percentage of GDP.
I think that our taxes at the federal level now are 17% of GDP, which is unusually low.
And by the way, and the top rate on the federal, I think, is 37.
but not mistaken.
That's not, and that's unusually low.
You know, when I was a boy, it was 95.
So 37's a bargain.
But you have to have some spine.
And you have to say, you have to say,
it's not okay to spend more than we make.
We have to get it under control.
And by the way, an interesting thing to note is nobody
ever pays their debts.
no company, no country, very few people ever reduce the amount they owe.
They just roll it over and usually add to it.
So we're not talking about erasing the 36 trillion of debt.
We're only talking about bending the curve a little so that it grows slower than GDP.
We're not even saying it shouldn't grow.
But if it ever started to grow slower than GDP, everybody would celebrate.
What would be your balance?
What would be the Howard Marks plan in terms of raising revenue and cutting spending?
50, 50, 30.
I'm not astute enough to know.
The trouble is a large percentage of Americans don't pay any taxes, federal taxes.
It would be hard to start them on it.
you can't get that much more out of the people in the top few percent.
So you have to hit the middle class, you know, the people who make probably between 100 and 100 or 100 and 200, let's say, thousand a year.
And, you know, by the way, I was doing some research for this memo I'm writing.
And it turns out that the baby boomers, of which I'm about the oldest, he had to be born between 46,
and 64, and I was born in 46, the baby boomers, they estimate were 38% of the voters in the 2020
presidential election. So it's a very, very populous group, and you don't want to antagonize them.
Howard, well, how about on the corporate debt side, distressed debt, I mean, balance sheets seem to be
pretty strong, at least at the S&P 500 level. You mentioned that you don't really pay down your debt,
some do, but you typically, companies roll it over and just continue to pay,
even now, relatively low interest rates, but the status of the corporate
distressed debt market, how are you thinking about that today?
Well, the real, the typical company, I think, is not too leveraged.
What happened, however, is that in the last 20 years, something called private equity,
leverage buyouts was tapped as the silver bullet, the shore solution.
And money flowed into it like water.
And those companies are highly levered.
Those companies have basically, let's say, $3 of debt for every dollar of equity or something like that.
And they were purchased, a lot of them were purchased in the last 10 years.
and a lot of them purchased when the Fed funds rate was zero or close to it.
And so they were saddled with capital structures, highly levered capital structures,
that they did not anticipate a world where interest rates were four or five percent higher
and that are going to be hard to refinance when they come due.
And leverage is not as easy to get anymore and not as cheap.
And that will be an issue.
And so we don't usually think about ordinary S&P 500 companies going bankrupt.
We think about companies, good companies that were bought by the private equity industry,
saddled with too much debt, get into a low spot or have trouble refinancing.
And then we tend to get involved.
good company, excuse me, our mantra, Andy, is good company, bad balance sheet.
Yeah.
If you have a good company with a bad balance sheet, it's easy to fix.
It goes through bankruptcy.
They reject a bunch of their debt, and they emerge with low leverage.
If you have a bad company, it's hard to fix.
Yeah.
You have to be a magician.
And we don't claim to be.
Yeah.
Kind of one more quick question about debt, and this relates to retail investors.
You know, we've seen a lot of changes in people's ability to buy stocks, right, from
discount brokers, all kinds of changes.
And I get this question a lot from people.
Why can't individual retail investors just go buy their own bond?
The market is so opaque and it's difficult.
You've got to know the Q-Sip number.
And even if you can, the spreads are wide.
Why hasn't there been much evolution in that market for the retail investor?
I'm sorry, which market?
The bond market.
The bond market.
If I want to buy my own corporate bond or I want to go do that, it's just kind of out of the reach for most retail investors, it seems.
Well, I mean, I'm not an expert on the subject.
I don't know.
I mean, it just never has developed.
I mean, look, people go.
go into the stock market because historically the stock market has made people rich. The S&P has
returned 100 percent, 10 percent a year for the last hundred years, and that was enough to turn
a dollar into something like 14 or 15,000. So everybody wants to get in the stock market and
you hear all these stories about this company, went up that much, and this company went,
you don't hear those stories about bonds. So bonds never have been that popular. And you just don't
see companies, people going out and buying bonds one at a time and managing their own portfolios.
And, you know, it's kind of like, I don't know, you never know anymore what sayings are PC or not,
but we used to say kissing your sister, you know, and I think most people view bond investing as
kissing your sister.
But it's not that exciting.
So it doesn't have the allure of the stock market.
You know, if you can, today you can go into a high-yield bond fund and high-old bonds pay before
fees, which matter, and before potential defaults, which are bound to occur once in a while,
today they yield 7.5%.
So that's not bad, you know, and if you have, you know, if you have a million dollars,
you can get $75,000 a year of income.
with very little uncertainty and in cash in the hand. So I think that's pretty good,
especially at a time when the stock market is historically expensive.
What do you advise an equity investor, if you were? For example, I know I've watched
you reference occasionally the dynamic between you and your son in the different ways that you invest.
Somebody in the equity markets who's looking at, we could look at any number of factors.
we could say, you know, the Buffett market cap to GDP.
We could look at the 200-week moving average of the SMP
is now something like 25% above P-E ratios, etc.
Are you somebody who generally thinks you should reduce your equity exposure
and pay the tax, or you should be looking for larger cap, lower beta, dividend
paying, underfollowed, unloved, because we're certainly getting into a period now where people
are beginning to celebrate the winners and see the concentration of the attention around those
winners. So how do you suggest an investor reacts in the scenarios like this?
Well, you know, I'm not a professional stock market investor. And so clearly nobody should
take my advice on that. Now, having gotten that out of the way, that doesn't keep me from giving
advice. And so what do we know? You alluded to some of it. The statistics on the valuations of
something like the S&P are above average. The PE ratio, the ratio of price to earnings on the
S&P 500 companies looking out for the next 12 months is around 22. And the historic average is 16.
So 22 is high.
It's not crazy high.
It's somewhat high.
You know, back in 2000, I think, was 32.
That was crazy.
And the people who bought the stock market at that level, the S&P, in short order, I think we're probably down half.
This is not that kind of thing.
But it's lofty, nevertheless.
I tend to think of things as either rich, cheap, or fair.
and in the middle is fair and you know if it's rich you might think about reducing your exposure if it's
cheap you might pile in in the middle ground i don't think there's that much to do and i don't make
great distinctions within fair because it historically hasn't paid off if something's a little
expensive things go from a little expensive to a little more expensive to a bunch expensive to
somewhat expensive to a very, you know, and if you get off them just because you're a little expensive,
you've missed a lot. So I think, you know, when the market is in fair territory, you shouldn't do
anything. And I invade against hyperactivity. So, you know, and by the way, who was it? Bill Miller
has this saying that it's time in the market, not timing the market, that makes you rich. And I think
that's generally true. Now, of course, if the market's at an extreme, you might like to know it.
You might like to take some chips off the table. But as you say, you do have to pay taxes.
And then you have to remember to get back in when it cheapens. Charlie Munger used to talk about
market timing like that as a two-decision problem. You have to decide when to get out.
And you have to be right. And then once it goes down, rather than just congratulate yourself,
you have to remember to get back in. And most people don't do that because they're so thrilled
with the fact that they got out. But, you know, J.P. Morgan put out a chart around the end of last year,
and it showed for every, every dot on the chart was a month end between the period of 87 to 14, I think.
So that's 27 years. And there was a plot of PE ratio versus 10-year return of average annual
return over the next 10 years. And it was a very strong relationship. Not surprising. The higher the
P.E. you paid, the lower your subsequent return was. What your pay matters. And according to that
chart, every single time you bought, if the P.E. was 22, your return over the subsequent 10 years
was between minus 2 and plus 2% a year.
Much different than 10% that you quoted over here.
Yes.
So what you would say, don't hang up at me on the numbers,
but if you buy at 16, which is the average P.E.,
you get the average return, which is 10.
Buy it a P.E. of 22, which is high, you get 2 to minus 2, which is low.
If you buy at eight, which is low, you might get a return of 15 to 20, which is high.
So the higher the price you pay, the lower your return makes sense.
But of course, if you're a real long-term holder and indifferent, you just strap yourself in
and you hold for the long run and you hope once you get past your period of over,
of overpricing and underperformance that you regress toward 10.
But, you know, if you bought in 2020, which I mentioned, I think you made no money for the next 12
years.
So that was an extreme overvaluation, but valuation matters.
Yeah.
Well, you've written about how investing patients is so important and pivoting over now to
investing in human emotion. I just wanted to maybe get your thoughts, get your thoughts on risk
preparation. You say that you can't predict, but you can prepare. You've written about that a few times,
and I think we all respect that. But as investors are thinking, whether it's equities or
distressed debt or wherever it is, how do you think about when you're in that 80% range and
you're saying, okay, well, in general, allocating capital fully in, but trying to
balance a time when it should be a little bit more opportunistic or a little bit more cautious
based on whatever metrics you're looking at. But mentally there's a time when you have to start
to make that change. And I guess just over your experiences, any guidance you can give us to managing
that temperament when things are getting a little bit extreme or when your outperformance or the
performance is actually not so good in your portfolio, but you're just waiting to see better
days in the market. Well, first of all, Andy, I'd like to give
a commercial for myself. During this discussion, once in a while, I'll say, I wrote a memo,
this or that. And I hope that people, if they're interested, will read the memos. You go to oak treecapital.com
under the heading, the insights, and it says memos from Howard Marks, I think. And you can click on it,
and you can subscribe to it. And I hardly recommend it. But the one thing I'm sure of is that the price is right,
because it's free.
And people can read whatever they want.
And there's 35 years worth there, so it'll keep you busy.
But I wrote a memo, as you say, called You Can't Predict, You Can Prepare, and I think it was 2002.
And now that I sold that line, as I do most lines, that was the tagline of the Mass Mutual
Life Insurance Company.
And I saw it during a football game.
I thought it's a great line.
Now, what is investing? Investing is positioning your capital to benefit from future events.
So, how can you prepare for the future events if you can't predict the future events?
It sounds like an oxymoron. But the truth of the matter is, you can prepare for an uncertain future.
I don't believe in forecasts.
I inveigh against predictions wholeheartedly macro predictions, economy and markets and rates and currencies and that kind of thing.
But I think you can, one of my sayings is we never know where we're going, but we're sure as hell ought to know where we are.
I think you can get a sense for the climate we're in.
And the question is, are we in a, is everybody ecstatic and optimistic and thrilled with the way things are going and generous and paying high prices, in which case the market is risky?
Or is everybody chastened and pessimistic and downcast and paying low prices, in which case the market can be above average and attractiveness?
Or is it in between, in normal territory?
So I think it's possible to get a sense for the environment and thus what you should do.
Now, the main dimension, when I say what you should do, the main dimension in portfolio management, in my opinion, is, well, the main thing that matters is the balance in a portfolio between offense and defense.
And, you know, do you want to have an offensive portfolio that might get you to lose some money in the bad times?
or do you want to have a defensive portfolio, which might cause you to miss some gains in the good times?
That's your choice.
Or do you want to balance them absolutely?
And people should make a choice based on their own risk tolerance.
And but you, you know, so you can figure out, is this a time when the market's depressed and that's a time to be aggressive?
Or when the market's elated, which is a time to be defensive.
Buffett said the less prudence with which others conduct their,
affairs, the greater prudence we must conduct our own affairs. And that's about right. When other people
are carefree, we should be terrified. When other people are terrified, we should turn aggressive.
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Howard, do you find that is a skill that most investors can learn?
because buying into pessimism for, I think for many is rather difficult.
And maybe that's the opportunity of an investor like yourself
for those who are really optimistic to take advantage of distressed securities.
But it's a learned skill, I think.
And any guidance you have to learning that skill, I would love to hear.
Well, now I'll make a commercial for something that costs money, which is my books.
But in 2011, I wrote a book called The Most Important Thing.
There's 21 chapters.
each one says the most important thing is, and it's a different thing, because there were so many
things in our business that are important. But there's a chapter which says the most important
thing is contrarianism. And that's what we're talking about here. And so number one, you can
learn about the importance of contrarianism at the extremes, not all the time. And then,
but then the question is, can you do it? Can you learn to do it? And the trouble is, as you say,
it goes against human nature. Because what you have to do is you have to be
sober when everybody else is elated, and you have to be stable when everybody else is suicidal.
But if you can do those things, obviously you can be an above-average investor,
because the average investor is excited at the high and buys, which is wrong,
and depressed at the low and sells, which is wrong.
So you want to be a contrarian to the extent you can, but it's not easy.
None of these things are easy.
You know, in my last memo, well, I think it was in my last memo, I quoted a chartist. Remember that word, chartist? Technical analyst called Walter Deemer. I hadn't heard of him before. I was reading Doug Cass's newsletter, and he quoted Wally Deemer, and it's the title of his book. And the quote is, when the time comes to buy, you won't want to.
And this is such a, in just 10 words, this captures so much truth.
The thing, what creates the great buying opportunity?
What creates the bank?
So what creates it is that the economy is not doing so great.
The companies are reporting poor earnings.
The stock market is declining.
Most people want to get out.
They've lost money.
Their main concern is not losing any money.
more, and they just want out. So that's the time when the greatest buying can be accomplished.
But as Wally says, when the time comes to buy, you wouldn't want to because you will also
see poor economy, poor earnings reports, declining stock prices, and heavy volume on the down days,
and you'll say, I want out too. So the point is,
Everybody is subject to the same influences.
Everybody reads the same headlines.
And here's the same stories on the news and on the podcasts.
And how many people can say, you know what?
The world is a mess.
And I think that means it's time to buy.
I'd like to hear.
Oh, sorry, Howard.
No, I just want to say it's just not that easy.
And there are very few of us who can do it.
And, you know, one of the main requirements seems to be that you have to have your, you have to be unemotional.
And if you look at, you know, some of the great investors, I think that unemotionalism has been one of the common threads.
Because emotion will get you to, my mother said, Howard, you should buy low and sell high.
but emotionalism gets you to buy high when things are going great and sell low when things are going
badly and that's a formula for disaster. So you have to be unemotional. I'd like to hear any guidance
you have for investors in setting their time horizon as an investor. It could be their overall time
horizon or position by position at the Motley Fool. What we have advocated now for 31 years is to make
your minimum holding period for average holding period for a stock, something like five years.
Then you will see business performance through most of a cycle. Obviously, trading activity
has increased dramatically with all of the technology and access to information.
But one of the things we've also said is if everyone doubled their average holding period,
they would be richer. That was just a default that everyone, if you hold a stock four days now,
make it eight days. If you hold three years, make it six years. If you have
I hold 10 years, make it 20 years, chances are your returns will increase.
But people have a difficult time knowing what that average anchor should be.
And then, of course, the news and crisis and different dynamics come in, but they often don't have that anchor.
How might somebody set that anchor?
Well, first of all, there's no solution.
There's no number which is right for everybody.
Everybody's number is different.
But along the lines you're talking about, Tom, which I think is, I think this is one of the most important
subjects we can we can tackle on this podcast. I wrote in one of my memos, and I'll tell you which one I
think it is, that they did a study and they found that fidelity that the best account, best performing
accounts belong to people who are dead. Now apparently fidelity can't find the study and nobody
else can find the study. So my guess is the study doesn't exist. But I still like the idea.
Because it tells you a lot. And obviously, if it's true,
that most people are subject to emotion and that emotion causes people to buy high and sell low,
then what you've got to do is you've got to tie your hands and not do it.
Now, we run funds, they're institutional funds, they're not open to the public,
but in many of our funds, you lock up your money for 10 years.
You can't get out.
And it's kind of like Odysseus, tying in,
himself to the mast when he had to sail past the sirens. You know? And if so it's it's the same thing
as you're saying, Tom, if you go into a fund that will no matter how you kick and scream on when the
market's down 50 percent, they're not going to let you get out. They're doing you a favor.
So I think I think that lengthening your holding period is very important. Now, if I can get the listeners
to listen to one thing or to read one thing,
I'd love you to read a memo that I wrote in October of 22 called What Really Matters.
And I'll bet you guys haven't read it either because nobody read this memo.
I can always tell from the response, you know, who read it and who liked it.
And I didn't get much response on this.
And I think that this memo probably had the highest ratio of value to responses.
what really matters.
And I start all, I think you'll enjoy it.
I start off by talking about five things that I think don't matter.
Short-term events.
And I talk about the fact that you go through these periods of time like 2017, 18.
And I would travel a country as I do and speak to audiences or clients even.
And I would get one question, what month will the Fed raise interest rates?
That's all they ask me.
what month? And I would say, why are you asking me? What does it matter? If I tell you May,
what are you going to do? And if I call you back and I say, no, no, not May, August, what are you
going to do different? Those are short-term events. They don't matter. And by the way,
it's interesting to note that what are the most, what were the most forceful short-term events
of the last, let's say, 20 years. Global financial crisis, pandemic, downgrade of the U.S.
credit rating, things like this. If you got out in advance of all those things and forgot to get back
in, you left a lot of money on the table. So number one, short-term events. Number two, short-term trading,
in, out, in, out, you know.
Nobody has, almost nobody has been successful at that.
And certainly not the amateur investor.
Well, let's say almost nobody.
Number three, short-term performance.
How did you do last month?
How did you do last quarter?
It doesn't matter.
You know, I have a news bulletin.
Last quarter's over.
What matters is how you're positioned for next quarter.
But yeah, every investment committee I sit on,
when they have a meeting of the investment committee,
they spend the first hour discussing last quarter's performance.
It's over.
So that's number three.
Number four, hyperactivity.
And I say that when I was a kid,
we used to have a saying,
don't just sit there, do something.
My suggestion is don't just do something, sit there.
There'll be a lot better off.
And number five is volatility.
And, you know, when things are volatile
and they fluctuate a lot, people get spooked.
But Buffett says,
I'd rather have a lumpy 15 than a smooth 12.
and, you know, just tie yourself to the mast, make some good investments, strap yourself in,
and live through the volatility, and hopefully if you've made good fundamental decisions,
it'll produce a good long-term return, and the volatility in the short term doesn't matter if
you've made a good fundamental decision. So I think this is really in line with what Tom said,
and I think that you have to be patient and think about the long-term. And also, and this is a
So this memo grew out of a conference we had for some investors in June of 22.
And I was on the stage, and all they asked me was, when are the rates going to go up?
When are they going to stop going up?
When is the recession going to start?
When is it going to end?
How bad will it be?
And I said to him, this is all short-term stuff.
What really matters, this is stuff that doesn't matter.
What matters is two things.
Do you buy into companies that grow and do you lend money to companies that pay you back?
it's all that matters.
And, and, you know, if you watch the shows, there's an enormous preoccupation with what the market
did today and what it's going to do tomorrow.
And it doesn't, it doesn't matter.
I once wrote a memo in February, January, February of 15, I think it was.
Well, in January, I wrote one called On the Couch, because I think every once in a while,
the market needs a trip to the shrink.
And then people were asking me, well, the market's down.
Isn't that a warning system?
So then a couple days later, I wrote a memo called, what does the market know?
And I think the market doesn't know anything.
And if you want to outperform, you have to take advantage of the market's manic depressive
behavior.
You can't act as if the market is a sage and tells you what the,
do. You have to say the market's a manic depressive, and when the market makes a mistake, we're going to be on
the other side. We're not going to take its advice. Anyway, that was a long answer to one of my
favorite questions, Tom. Yeah, no, that was a great, that was a great answer. We try and tell folks,
you know, I think most recently with the tariffs that were announced, and we had extreme volatility
for several days in the market that, you know, on those big down days, if you sell out of stocks,
biggest up days in the market tend to be very close in proximity to the biggest down days,
and that halves your return from 10% to 5%.
So selling out on those down days can look smart for a day or so,
but usually it doesn't look smart in the river your mirror.
Well, and I would add one thing.
You bought something yesterday, and it paid 100.
Tomorrow, a bad piece of news comes out like a tariff,
and it falls to 90.
If you had decent reasons for buying at 100,
shouldn't you buy more at 90 and not sell?
And most people just do not have what it takes
to extract the significance of these events
and they should just ignore them.
Something you've mentioned is,
you said the biggest people make,
the biggest mistake the investors make
is they project whatever happened most recently,
long into the future.
And I think regression to the mean is something that's really important to you and Oak Tree.
Can you talk a little bit to investors about that?
Well, you're going to get another long answer.
I only have long answers.
Nothing in our business is simple.
Nothing in our business permits a short answer.
But when I was a kid, and I mean 73 or four, somebody gave me a gift.
And it was the first of the great adages that I had.
ever learned. And somebody said, I'm going to tell you about the three stages of the bull market.
The first stage in the bull market is, you know, there's been a crash or a crisis or some loss
of confidence that stocks are on their rear end and nobody's interested in the market. And only
a few smart people realize things could get better. In the second stage, most people understand
that improvement is actually taking place.
And in the third stage, everybody assumes that things can only get better forever.
And this tells you most of what you have to know.
If you buy in the first stage, when nobody's optimistic, you get a bargain.
If you buy in the last stage, when everybody's optimistic and has pushed prices up,
you often overpay.
So, again, it's desirable to have a sense for where we are in the market.
And certainly, you should never sell something just because it's down or buy it because it's up.
You know, people buy things.
They see it's up.
They say, oh, I better get on because it could keep going up.
And I might miss it and then I'll have to kill myself.
You know, in bad markets, people are overly concerned about losing money because they take the
bad news as portending continued bad news, not regressions of me.
And the fear of losing money drives people out.
But in the good times, an even stronger force, in my opinion, takes hold.
And that's FOMO, the fear of missing out.
And when the stock market is rocking and rolling and it's going up every day and you see
headlines about, you know, Joe Blow turned 10,000 into 15,000.
in a day, people say, oh, my God, I feel so terrible. I've been missing this. Everybody else
is getting this. I got to get on this. I can't stand to miss out. I better get in. Now, they
may not know what the thing they're doing is or why. And by the way, they may have decided
not to buy it when it was 100, but now that it's 200, they say, I got to get in or I'll keep
missing out. And all these things, this is all emotion. And you have to stand against these
things. And, you know, there's a book called, I think it's called Panics, Manias and Crashes,
if I'm not mistaken, by Kindleberger. And in a later edition, it has a great line. It says,
there is nothing so injurious to your mental well-being as to watch a friend get rich.
And it's really true. I mean, that's, that's human nature for you. And, you know,
you have this guy who has the locker next to you at the gym, and he's not that smart.
He's a nice guy.
Good to have a drink with once in a while, but you don't think he's not that smart.
And he starts telling you about the money he's been making.
And you say, oh, that's silly stuff.
You don't even know what you're doing.
You know, back in the dot-com bubble, you know, people would say, oh, I'm buying a stock.
It's coming public yesterday.
They say, what's the symbol?
It's a L-B-R.
he says, well, what's the name?
I don't know.
Well, what does it do?
I don't know.
But I hear it's going to double.
So the next day, you see the person, you say, did you buy that stock?
He says, yeah, I did.
He said, what happened?
Oh, he's tripled.
So after you hear five of these, then first, when the first time you heard it and the guy says,
I'm buying it, but I don't know the name or what it does.
You think he's an idiot.
But after five of them, you say, I got to get in on that.
And that's the way this thing works.
And so you have to get away from excessive fear of losing money,
excessive respect for fluctuations.
And especially you have to get away from this fear of missing out.
And just when you're in the third stage of the bull market,
when things have been rocking and rolling for a couple of months or a couple of years,
and everybody's getting rich, that's when people capitulate and get in at just the wrong time.
Because the market has, it is the fact that the market has risen a great deal that attracts you,
but that's not a reason to buy.
Howard, do you live in a world of balanced stoicism?
Do you view the world as a market and when others are getting excited about something unrelated to
the capital markets, you start to see a reason. I was at the New York Knicks playoff game,
and I looked down over to my left, and there you were at the game, I saw you. And are you somebody
who says, you know, well, we've had a good first quarter in the game, but I'm not going to get
too excited because there's another three quarters to go. Is that a general stance for you or a particular
into that? I think it is. I think that, you know, people who are that way might describe themselves
as level-headed. People who aren't that way
might describe us as, you know, kind of dead
from the neck up or something. But I think, you know,
you just can't get too excited about the good moments
or the bad moments. You have to, investing is hard enough.
And if you let your emotions run wild and get you to do the wrong thing
at the wrong time, it becomes infinitely harder.
I mean, it's hard. It's hard.
enough to find a good company with a great future and buy the stock. But then if you let the
short-term fluctuations of the market drive you in and out, it becomes infinitely harder.
Well, Howard, one of my favorite memos of yours was the indispensability of risk, because as
investors, we think a lot about risk. And this is how you ended this piece. And I want you to just
guide us on this. You shouldn't expect to...
to make money without bearing risk, but you shouldn't expect to make money just for taking the
risk. You have to sacrifice certainty, but it has to be done skillfully and intelligently and
importantly with emotion under control. I love that thinking about, because investing, especially
in the equity market, well, really anywhere almost, takes this notion of managing emotions with
risk and balancing those two out. Right. Well, you see,
Andy, most people say, well, why are you in the stock market?
Say, well, I want to make money.
Well, don't you think everybody else does too?
Why should you be the one who gets to make money?
And the answer is, or what do you have to do to make money?
And the answer is you have to bear uncertainty.
And if you do very safe things,
you shouldn't expect much of a return.
In our business, we talk about something called the risk-free rate,
and that's the interest rate on 30-day T-bills.
There's no credit risk and there's no time risk
because you get your money back so soon.
And it's absolutely safe, but because it's absolutely safe,
it pays the absolutely lowest return of anything.
And then if you say, no, you know what, I'm not interested in that.
I'm going to take some risk.
So I'm going to lend money to some great.
corporations. And if you do that,
rather than today, rather than four and a half,
maybe you can make five and a half.
But you've taken credit risk because every once in a while,
a corporation goes bad in defaults
or goes bankrupt.
So, or
you may say, well, I don't know,
five and a half is not so great.
You know, I have to pay taxes. I'm only left with two and three
quarters. So I want to have a higher
return. Well, then you can go into
high yield bonds. And high
yield bonds, you can get today seven and a half. But that's because they have a real possibility
of default. And over the last, you know, I've been involved in them for 47 years. And on average,
something like almost 4% of all the bonds outstanding have defaulted every year. So that's,
four is not a huge number, but it's not zero. And, and, you know, basically,
you have to think of high returns as being the compensation for bearing risk.
But as the quote says, because risk actually entails danger and occasional loss,
you don't want to bear risk passively and without investigation.
You want to do it intelligently and knowledgeably.
And so it's not easy.
It introduces and you can get safe returns absolutely dependably, but they're not that interesting.
But to try for a return that is interesting, you have to do some things that aren't easy.
Simple as that.
Now, most people look at a chart.
When I went to University of Chicago, they had just developed the capital market.
theory. And I don't know, I can't do it backwards, but there's a line that goes like this.
On this axis, you have return, on this axis you have risk. There's a line that points up like that.
And when we see a line that points up like that, we say the two factors are positively correlated.
There's a positive relationship between return and risk. Now, what people say erroneously,
when you say, well, what does that mean, that upward sloping line?
A lot of people say, well, what it means is that risky assets have higher returns.
And that is a terrible trap to fall into.
Because if risky assets could be counted on to produce high returns, then by definition,
they wouldn't be risky.
So that can't be right.
What it means that upward sloping line is that investments that appear to be risky have to appear to offer high returns.
or else nobody will make those investments.
That makes perfect sense.
But they don't have to deliver.
And it's from the possibility that they won't deliver that the risk comes in.
So the more you go out on the risk curve, the higher the expected return is.
But the wider, the dispersion of possible returns and the bad returns get worse.
So risk is a real thing.
It's not some academic concept.
and every person has to figure out the right level of risk for them.
And it's not easy.
And of course, then once they do, they have to figure out how much risk there is and the things they're contemplating.
And that's not easy.
None of this is easy.
Given our predilection to take on risk in our lives, often under-researched risk,
I wanted to cite a couple sources and see what you think of this in terms of a process somebody might embrace.
in, you know, scratching the itch of taking on a lark.
I'm thinking of Walter and Edwin Schloss,
the father and son, wonderful money managers who,
when asked at a particular shareholder meeting,
why do we have 150 holdings when maybe 20 of them make up 85% of the portfolio,
and one of the Schloss is answered?
Because if we don't buy new, unknown, risky things,
we won't learn about the world ahead.
We'll get comfortable with our 17 companies
and not realize that their competitive advantages are being eroded.
And then I'm thinking about a book entitled to Zerk Axioms,
which a book I really enjoyed by Max Gunther in which he articulates,
if I'm remembering correctly, maybe graduates of business school
trying to put together an investment club to make extreme wealth.
Not let's figure out a few stocks to buy, but how does one make $30 million?
How does one make $50 million in life?
And one of their concluding principles was you have to be willing to embrace
small risk continually to learn more about the world around us. Any reflections on that?
Well, it makes sense. It happens, by the way, not to be my approach. And again, I'm not a
stock market investor. But if you will only buy, you know, what are the things some people might
do to improve their probability of success? You buy things that have obvious merit, great
products, great management, great history of profits, and things that have gone up in the past.
If you think about it, those things are easy to buy. Everybody's attracted to the things that
have obvious merit, which means that probably a lot of buying has taken place and the price has been
driven up. So if you want to be, by the way, if you want to be an average investor, it's really easy.
And I recommend for most people that average is very good. And you just have to tie yourself into an
index fund and stay with it for the long term. And you know, if you buy an S&P index fund,
you're guaranteed S&P performance, whatever that might be. You're not guaranteed good performance,
but you're guaranteed S&P performance. But if you want to go beyond,
that and have better performance than the index, you're going to have to do something that's not
obvious to everybody else because the things that are obvious to everybody else they've already done.
So you might have to buy a small company, an obscure company, a company that has not
demonstrated greatness yet, a company whose product is on the come, unknown. It might be a stock
that's down a bunch, which scares everybody else, but among the
other things that might mean that it's on the bargain table, having been marked down.
So above-average success can never lie in doing the obvious.
That's really just a simple rule.
Now, you have to study and you have to read up on things like contrarianism to understand,
to get to the point where you can understand that question.
So I guess what I'm saying is that maybe the viewers or listeners should ask themselves
as if they get that.
Above average success can never lie in doing the obvious.
And I would say, if you want to be an above average investor, read and study until you can
really explain why that sentence is true.
Buck, you will have the final question of our hour with Howard Marks.
This is great.
It's a privilege.
And I have enjoyed your books and your memos throughout the year.
so I do recommend people go to Oak Tree and check those out because there's a wealth of information there.
So I'm going to ask you about something that's a little bit, maybe contrary.
I know forecasting, you have your six principles, and you don't rely on macro forecasting and those kind of things.
But there's a wonderful book called The Super Forecasters.
And I don't know if I'm familiar with that with Philip Petlock and Dan Gardner wrote that.
But it turns out they kind of build a group of people that could do forecasting good.
really long. They've learned it's like it's easier to do shorter term than it is to do long-term
forecasting. But those group of people came from a variety of different backgrounds, but they had
some things in common. They were open-minded. They were humble people. They were willing to update
their beliefs, and they used a variety of sources of information. Whenever they got new facts,
they changed their forecast. So they would update them kind of all the time. So I would just say,
sounds to me a lot like oak tree. And so I would just like to know about some of the processes
at oak tree and just like, when you hire people there, do you hire a certain type of person
or do you train those people to think along the lines of your principles and emotional intelligence
and those types of things? Well, I think, Buck, I like to believe both because just like in
selecting a marital partner, it's not a good idea to select somebody who is the opposite of
what you want in the expectation. You can make them what you want. A lot of sweat and tears have
resulted from that. So what we try to get is independent thinkers and people who can think different
from the crowd and who will see things that others don't see or take a chance on a maverick.
point of view. And then we, you know, and they, they are invariably have to be highly intelligent,
but also have this streak of independence. And in my book, the most important thing I talk,
I say the most important thing is second level thinking, which means thinking differently from the
crowd and better. What the crowd knows is already in the stock price. So if you only know the same as the
crowd, you can't improve on the stock price. You can't tell when the stock price is higher or lower
than it should be and do something about it.
So we need people who are capable of second level thinking, thinking different from others, but also better.
If you think different from everybody else and worse, all you'll do is lose money.
And by definition, relatively few people have the possibility of thinking different and better and probably even fewer can actually do it.
but you have to understand the essential nature of contrarianism.
And you have to understand what I said before, that success can't lie in the obvious.
And it can't lie in agreeing with what everybody else knows.
Now, most of the time, what everybody else knows is pretty correct.
So disagreeing with them for the sake of disagreeing is not a good idea.
But on the other hand, if you think the same as everybody else, that's not a very good formula for having above average performance.
So you have to be able to find those times, and they may be few, when you have a view which is different from that of the herd, and it's correct.
But if you never have a view that's different from the herd and correct, then you just can't be an above average investor.
and you should buy an index fund and just hold on.
A lot of this has reminded me of a line I've heard from my father over his,
well, my handful of decades in his 87 year life.
I don't like to be wrong, so I don't make predictions.
And that's right for many people.
That's not dumb.
But, you know, but, you know, well, maybe I'll close it out by citing
my favorite fortune cookie. I got a fortune cookie, and it said inside the cautious, seldom
error or write great poetry. And I think it's great. Because it can be read two ways,
that if you're cautious, you'll seldom err, which is good, but you'll also never write
great poetry, which is bad. And if your goal is to write great poetry, you have to take a chance,
of being incautious and occasionally erring.
But there's no sure formula for doing so,
and there's no algorithm you can follow or no machine.
You just have to turn the crank on.
And, you know, when I got through writing,
the most important thing,
I had lunch with Charlie Munger,
who worked in the building next to us in Los Angeles.
And he says, I've got up to go and he says, just remember, none of this is easy.
Anybody who thinks it's easy is stupid.
And you know, that was Charlie.
But it's true.
If everybody wants to make money, it can't be easy to make an above average amount of money.
You have to take risk and you have to excel in some way.
and you have to know something that not everybody else knows.
Howard Marks, thank you so much for this hour.
What would be your estimated length of time on an interview
if, say, you were willing to come back again
and have the Motley Fool interview you on all of your memos?
One at a time.
One at a time.
Yeah, well, let's do it again in the year.
Love it.
Thank you very much for what a wonderful hour.
And thank you, Andy and Buck as well.
Well, I've enjoyed this, and your questions are knowledgeable, and that's the most important.
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For the Motley Fool Money team, I'm Mary Long.
Thanks for listening.
We'll see you tomorrow.
