The Canadian Investor - The Hidden Risk Most Investors Ignore
Episode Date: March 24, 2025In this episode, Simon breaks down a type of risk that often flies under the radar for everyday investors—counterparty risk. Whether you're dealing with a brokerage, bank, crypto exchange, or ev...en a gold custodian, you're exposed to the risk that the other party might not hold up their end of the deal. Plus, we touch on lessons from great investors like Bill Nygren and Stan Druckenmiller—including the importance of maintaining conviction in your investment thesis and having the humility to change your mind. We wrap up with a look at current retail investor allocations and whether markets have become a bit too complacent after a strong year for equities. Tickets of stocks/ETFs discussed: Check out our portfolio by going to Jointci.com Our Website Canadian Investor Podcast Network Twitter: @cdn_investing Simon’s twitter: @Fiat_Iceberg Braden’s twitter: @BradoCapital Dan’s Twitter: @stocktrades_ca Want to learn more about Real Estate Investing? Check out the Canadian Real Estate Investor Podcast! Apple Podcast - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Spotify - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Web player - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Asset Allocation ETFs | BMO Global Asset Management Sign up for Finchat.io for free to get easy access to global stock coverage and powerful AI investing tools. Register for EQ Bank, the seamless digital banking experience with better rates and no nonsense.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is the Canadian investor
where you take control of your own portfolio
and gain the confidence you need to succeed in the markets.
Hosted by Brayden Dennis and Simon Bélanger.
The Canadian Investor podcast.
Welcome into the show.
My name is Brayden Dennis.
As always joined by the sagacious Simon Bélanger.
It is Friday, March 21st.
I am in a cheap, crappy hotel room
for a conference because over here,
we just compound investor capital
and don't stay in the expensive,
suggested hotel allotted conference hotels.
It's in the sketchy part of town.
It's not a sketchy part, it's in Miami.
And no, it's in a good place in South
Beach but you know when you go to these conferences they're like we have these blocks reserved for the
for the conference and they are oh nine times out of ten egregiously overpriced so you just go to
one that's like a three-minute walk and you pay
like literally one-fifth the price. Sometimes they will give a good deal
though like they'll actually give you a discount but I guess that's one the one
out of ten times. They might give you a discount but they always suggest like
the premium hotels. Like that you know for typically typically, I mean, it's a wealth,
it's a wealth investing conference,
like these companies have a lot of money.
Anyways, but crappy hotel room means old musty carpet,
obviously the bed, old drapes on the windows,
and you know what that means.
Unbelievable podcast sound quality.
It just eats up all the sound.
There's no hard surfaces.
Yeah, I was gonna say.
I thought you were gonna go a different direction.
I'm like, don't bring a black light there, but yeah.
Yeah, keep your great podcast studio.
Keep the black light in the bag.
Don't ask any questions and you're off to a good start.
All right, that's good.
Yeah, are we gonna get started?
I think we have some fun segments today too.
Yep, you've got Counterparty Risk
and then I'm gonna talk about how to measure success.
Oh, you got Druck.
Yeah, if we get there, if we get there.
I feel like they're pretty long segments, so we'll see. If not, he's
He's worth studying. So I'm excited for that. All right, you kick us off today. Yeah, so counterparty risk
I don't think we've talked too much about that and of all the risks that are present for investors
I think this has to be one that is the least talked about for
specifically retail investor because it is definitely on
the radar and you deal with a lot of institutional investors, institutional investors dealing
with large sums of monies.
They will definitely be aware of counter parity risk much more than retail investors, but
it's an important risk to be able to understand and just be aware of.
And it's not to send panic or anything, but we've seen over the last, you know,
even five years, we've seen how that counterparty risk has actually materialized
and creating some significant issues and even loss of investment for investors.
Yeah.
There's been actually some really big examples, especially in the US. Yeah. Yeah, there's been actually some really big examples,
especially in the US.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So there's different examples.
So I think it'll be easiest to explain
with giving some examples to people
on what type of counter-piracy risk you can face
with different types of investments.
Now, the first one, and it's not an order of
importance, I'm just starting off with this here. So a brokerage, for example, would have some
counterparty risk. So if the brokerage goes bankrupt and they were not properly segregating
funds from their clients and their operations, you could lose your investment. The good news,
however, so people don't panic, is that this is extremely unlikely,
and in Canada, it's very well regulated,
and we also have the Canadian Investor Protection Fund.
So this provides investor with $1 million in protection
based on account type.
So general accounts combined,
so TFSA, margin, cash, FHSA. You have registered retirement accounts and then
RESPs. So those are the main categories and you can get that protection there. Obviously when you
stay with more reputable brokerage the risk is very low that you would encounter these type of issues
but it's still worthwhile to know that it's a non-zero risk.
Derivative contracts, so depending on who the counterparty is, there could be some counterparty
risk if they default.
So derivatives could be like something like options, for example, or there's some very
complex derivatives that people can purchase.
I think it's a bit more on the institutional side,
but nonetheless, that risk is actually very well highlighted
in the big short.
So for people who have seen the movie, if you have not,
what are you waiting for?
But regardless, Michael Burry, the main guy who's played,
sorry, who plays Michael Burry?
Keep forgetting, he's well known. who plays Michael Burry keep forgetting he's
well-known Michael the main guy why am I forgetting I don't know why I'm getting
a plane but it's okay he played Batman too you know and people will know what
I'm talking about but Michael Burry in that movie was extremely concerned that
the big banks he had purchased the contract was credit default swaps from
would go bankrupt and not honor his contract.
And it's very, it's a great scene in the movie where he's making these deals with these bankers.
I think it's Goldman Sachs who it's with if I remember correctly.
It's Christian Bale.
Oh, Christian Bale.
There you go.
That it wasn't like the listeners are probably like, dude, Christian Bale. There you go. That was like the the listeners are probably like dude Christian Bale. Yeah, it's screaming out there
Screaming at their podcast player right now. I was just sitting on the tip of my tongue and I'm dude
I'm just picturing American Psycho like when he looks at the at the business card
I'm just like, oh yeah, how I blended out one anyways carry on
Yeah, exactly
And it's a great scene where he says like what's my guarantee like I need to
Know that you guys will pay me when these contracts kick in and you have this classic
Meeting table conference table where you know it's way too big for him and the four or five other people that are there
I think if I remember the scene and they just start laughing in his face and he's like no no I'm actually serious like I want some guarantees that I'll
be the first one to pay because I'm not sure if you'll be solvent.
So that's an example of counterparty risk and he makes it blatantly obvious.
The third one another example this one we've seen retail investors unfortunately being
very impacted by this.
So crypto exchanges, so this is probably the most obvious one that people can probably
think of.
We have plenty of examples for this.
The one that is the most obvious is FTX with SBF, Sandbank, and Freed.
There was also BlockFi, Celsius, some other exchanges or central lending platforms. Investors using those platforms saw significant losses
as a result of the counterparty risk
because the counterparty wore these exchanges
holding their cryptocurrencies
and they all filed for bankruptcy.
Thankfully, some of them actually were able to recoup
some of the funds that they had,
but not as much as they would
have if they just held on to the cryptocurrencies that they had.
The fourth one here.
Can I ask a question?
Yeah, go for it.
I don't know if you know the answer to this.
How is Sam Bankman free doing podcasts from jail?
I don't know.
This is not like a question of ethics.
Like for one, I don't think anyone should be platforming him.
But how is he doing?
Like I looked at him and no one seemed to be like
asking this question.
Like everyone's like, oh my God, it's so crazy that he's
people are platforming him.
I'm like, wait, wait, how is he,
do they let you do podcasts in jail?
I didn't.
That's a Tucker Carlson one, right?
Yeah, yeah, the Tucker Carlson.
He's like, yeah, I'm in jail.
Like I share like, I'm like just down the cell street
from Diddy.
That's what he said.
I'm like, is Diddy allowed to do podcasts?
Like he's a predator.
I don't know.
Like if anyone has any answers,
send me a little email or tweet. Like like are you allowed to podcast from jail that seems absolutely absurd
And I guess it goes into the same category of making phone calls, right?
They probably probably have to put a request in that would be and there's I'm assuming a special room
So I guess they make sure that you're not sending in from malicious information or criminal
information somewhere else.
I don't know, those are just my guess, yeah.
Just the AI overview says, is possible,
but requires significant planning and cooperation
from prison authorities.
Attaining permission, because remember the Firefest guy?
He got his, he was doing a podcast like for his phone call.
You know, you can do phone calls from jail
and he did a podcast and they found out
and they extended his sentence like another year
or something, cause that was like not planned.
So I'm just like, how is SBF getting permission
to do this crap?
Yeah, it must be it cause they probably allow it, but they probably monitor the conversation
where maybe they don't.
If you don't say it, I don't know.
That would be my guess.
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The next on the list is bank deposits.
So banks, as we know them, for newer listeners and a lot of people still don't realize that that banks operate on a fractional reserve
basis. This means that the counterparty to your deposit in the bank, that's them.
And they don't necessarily, if everyone wanted to get all their money all at once, they would have
trouble meeting those deposit demands. And we saw this happen with Silicon Valley Bank back in March
of 2023 in the US. But the good news is that there is FDIC in the US
and CDIC insurance in Canada for up to $100,000
per bank, per account type as well.
So you can have, if you're a wealthier individual,
you can have multiple bank accounts
that would benefit from that CDIC insurance.
So there is some measures in place. Bonds, corporate or government,
there is always the risk that the issuer of the bond
defaults on their bond payment.
You're relying on that party to pay back the coupon
or interest plus the principal.
And if they don't, then clearly this is a risk
that you ended up, you know,
whether it is a credit risk or counterparty,
you can probably make the argument the precious metals
So this is an interesting one whether it's an ETF or private contract with a custodian you're relying on that counterparty
so for gold
For gold for example
You're relying on them to ensure that they have the gold that they say they do have to and to keep it safe and
the gold that they say they do have and to keep it safe and making sure that you know they're not starting to give those gold certificates to other people. So there is some counterparty
risk there and there's always some issues with verifying the amount of gold that an
institution would have on hand. So that is a counterparty risk as well where you never know 100% that they have it on
hand and if you do require delivery because some of these ETFs, if you own large enough amounts,
you can actually request delivery. So those are all examples of counterparty risk.
There's been a lot of examples in the last few years of how overlooking this can be
in the last few years of how overlooking this can be pretty destructive. No question. Of course, the crypto one, use extra, use extra cross.
Just have good judgment with this stuff, right?
There are, there's more risk with some of that, some of those things.
But even in the US, you didn't, no one at Silicon Valley bank or first Republic thought that there,
there was going to be a bank run on their deposits at any point.
And look what happened. So you can never be so sure.
It's always good to spread these things out across different institutions.
Yeah. And at the end of the day,
counterparty risk is just relying on the third party to honor the investment. That's essentially what it is. Now, there's different ways you can mitigate that. So
obviously you mentioned spread your funds around. That would be one way. Insurance,
CDIC, for example, CIPF, the Canadian Investor Protection Fund is another example. These are
insurances that are in place to protect investors You can use reputable forms when firms when it comes to crypto you can also buy
I know there is a ways to buy Bitcoin where you essentially send some interact key transfers and it sends the Bitcoin
Automatically to your cold wallet, so you never really leave the money on the exchange so you would avoid
You know an FTX situation
for example and if you're looking for the reputable one there's a bunch in
Canada we had ShakePay that has been was a sponsor in the past and they've been
through the the bear market and they're still there I think they're a very
reputable form Coinbase obviously it's the most regulated in the US.
It's publicly traded.
Be careful of high-risk derivative instruments.
They can get really complex
and way beyond simple call or put options.
So that's more something to be a bit more careful.
Self-custody is a way to completely get rid
of counterparty risk.
You may have some additional risk if you do
self-custody. So whether it's physical gold, cash or crypto, you can hold these assets on your own,
but clearly you have to make sure there's always a trade-off. So yes, you don't have the counterparty
risk if you hold those on your own, but there's more other risks. For example, you could have a fire or you could forget where you put it, things like
that.
These are additional risks and don't overexpose.
Like you mentioned, don't overexpose yourself to one single counterparty is another way
to mitigate those risks.
And in terms of, I'll just finish this segment with, I don't think I've ever mentioned to you,
I maybe I have, I can't recall.
So I avoided a big one in 2022 related to crypto.
So back in 2021, obviously like in 2021,
there was a lot of DeFi, so decentralized finance,
but there was also a lot of centralized finance
when it came to cryptocurrency where you could lend out some of your crypto and be able to get
some money back. Some of the names I mentioned before Celsius BlockFi did
that and I read up a bit on BlockFi specifically, listened to their CEO, I
read how they protected funds and so on. And it seemed like they had sound risk practices in place.
However, the one thing that still
I was a little bit nervous about
was the lack of regulation in the space.
And they offered, but one thing that I did like
is the yield that they offered was much lower
than other centralized lending platforms.
So in my view, it made them more legitimate because it was a bit more realistic in terms
of the yield they were providing.
So at the time I decided, you know what, I'll try it out.
I had some USDC, which is a US stable coin, and I took about 5% of my total portfolio
and I put it on BlockFi.
And that was back in 2021. And late 2021,
there was no sign of a collapse yet for the crypto industry that happened later in 2022,
about a year after that. But just a lack of regulation and some of these entities offering
massive yield that seemed just too good to be true. I decided you know what I
made a bit of a bit of money on the yield that I got from that. It wasn't a
huge amount but 5% is not nothing either of my portfolio so I decided to take the
money out just put it in back in cold storage or take the stablecoins out and
little did I know less than a year, BlockFi actually went under because it had exposure
to Alameda research amongst other institution.
So I avoided a pretty big loss there.
Was it luck?
Was it foresight?
It's probably me just listening to my intuition
and saying, you know what, I'd rather keep control of that
even if it means not having any yield.
But I just wanted to show that, yes, I still mitigated that risk because it wasn't a huge part of my portfolio, but I was able to
to prevent that and losing most of it.
And that's an example on top of many of the examples that have been recent,
I'd say, 2020, 2022 onwards is counter part.
A counterparty is counterparty. Yeah. Right. That's that's where
there's that's where there's been issues. It's like there's contagion among the counterparty risk.
Yeah. And you had that happen during like the great financial crisis. It was all that bite. It was
Bank A had counterparty risk with Bank C and was bank A had counterparty risk with bank C
and then bank C had counterparty risk
with an insurance provider.
And then like you had all these things
that were interconnected.
And it ended up creating what we saw in 2008 and 2009.
And I know sometimes it's not easy,
but when things are regulated,
it's a good sign that at least it should be less risky. But sometimes it's not easy, but when things are regulated, it's a good sign that at least it should be less risky.
But sometimes it's not easy.
Remember FTX?
Like you had Tom Brady, Larry David,
all these celebrities with the ads.
And I can see where new people getting into the space
would be like, look, they've got Tom Brady and Larry David.
Like it must be safe, right?
Yeah, there's a lot of trust building
they can use with familiar faces.
They can borrow the conviction and trust of those people.
That's exactly why they pay them big bucks, right?
You get to live in the future in terms of building trust by spending some money by
sponsoring these people.
I like to think of this kind of stuff of, here's my engineering brain maybe, but maybe
you'd resonate with this too.
So if you have an electric circuit, okay, you can have things operate in series, you
can have them operate in parallel.
And if you have a circuit operating in series, basically what happens is if there's something wrong
with the circuit and something breaks,
everything after it won't work.
The electrons actually won't flow
to those things in series.
It's a hard cutoff, there's a choke point,
the electrons can't flow.
Same way that you can think of electric circuits
visually as like a pipe where the voltage is the flow, and the current is the velocity or something of the water moving through the pipe.
If there's a valve that's shut off, the water doesn flow, aka in an electric circuit, it operating in parallel,
the water can flow around and have, you know,
some sort of redundancy built into the circuit.
And so no matter what your analogy is,
you don't want to build one single isolated choke point of risk
where, you know, if something happens with this part of your stack, if you
will, is operating in series, then everything falls apart.
And I think that that's a good way to think about counterparty risk is if there's some
tool that you're using and they're built to operate in series with very little redundancy, you now have
counterparty risk on counterparty risk. So you've multiplied the chances of opportunity of failure.
And that's why engineering and manufacturing, they operate everything in redundancy. So that
if a machine goes down, the entire operation of the manufacturing facility
doesn't go down.
Well, though we saw the opposite of that
for the pandemic, right, with supply chains.
So everything was just in time with the efficiency
and speed being the primary concern,
not creating redundancy.
And we saw what happened in the pandemic
when everything closed down and you had these lockdowns and you saw that a lot of the PPE was coming over from China and
we had no options in North America. So what happened? We had a shortage and that's a,
that's as you were saying that I'm like, Oh, that's one that, that would make a whole lot
of sense for people. Yeah.
And it's, it's frankly illogical and actually actually a good a good way to get up be opportunistic with
With individual companies say that there is some huge concern
around
Taiwan concerns flare up and Taiwan semiconductor stock goes down 30%
This is just some hypothetical but you know, it's not've seen that in the past couple of years, these types of things happen
with semiconductor supply chains.
And you'll see something that's really, really close
to the sun like Taiwan Semiconductor.
It's got it in the name, obviously face a drawdown.
But you'll have designers and other companies
that are very closely connected
that rely on Taiwan Semiconductor
be in very, very small drought ads or be unaffected.
That is 100% illogical and makes no sense.
And that's a good chance for either TSMC is really undervalued or the ones with counterparty
risk to TSMC are extremely overvalued.
Yeah.
One of the two, and it's probably,
the truth's probably somewhere in the middle.
And so it can actually create an opportunity
when people overreact to certain risk,
when they don't look at second order effects
of who's down the line, who gets affected from this.
You know, like last time I checked,
Apple's not making any of their iPhones
if TSMC is not operational, right?
Exactly.
And speaking of TSMC,
they actually are building more redundancy, right?
With having some factories being built in North America.
So if something does happen.
Some geographical diversification, yeah.
Exactly, no, that's a great example.
I think we actually talked about it,
is TSMC was like in massive drawdown because of fears of potential Chinese military operation or attack on
Taiwan, but yet you saw like semi kind of like an Nvidia that was largely
unaffected. It was like okay. It was ripping. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. Like something doesn't make sense here.
You're not making any GPUs without TSMC. That's it. No, exactly. No, that's a great point there.
Should we move on?
Yeah, let's do it.
Okay. So I wanted to do a segment on how to measure success.
You know, it's been a volatile start to the year here in 2025.
There's been a massive amount of cohorts of new investors post 2020,
post great financial crisis, AKA 2008,
the markets been, equity markets have been
extremely nice to own, you know, no secret about that.
But how do you really measure success,
especially if you have a short timeframe, right?
Like if we have a really long timeframe, like, yeah,
I guess we can kind of measure success.
Like the proof is in the numbers, right?
Like you don't have to question Warren Buffett's credibility when he has been doing it for
decades upon decades upon decades.
People still do.
People still do, but...
It's a good time to sell all your stocks when people think that they're smarter than Warren
Buffett.
Yeah. And so those scenarios, right?
Where it's like, you don't have to think about how to measure success because it's a long
enough time horizons and long enough credibility or market data that, okay, we can stop saying
that this is being fooled by randomness.
And you're like, okay, I'm actually good at this or this person's
actually good at that.
So how do you measure success?
And I had some thoughts to give us a recap of where we are.
This is being a what?
Are we more than 10% drawdown?
It's bouncing around.
Hovering right around there.
Yeah.
Rallied, came back, whatever know, whatever market volatility. I listened to Bill Nygren, who's the, our head of research
at FinChat, Ryan Henderson, we came out with a podcast
called AUM and he, he interviewed Bill Nygren,
who's a fantastic investor.
It's the second episode and I would categorize him
as like 60% value and 40% quality.
It's kind of like buying quality stocks, but the price has gotta be right.
Like you won't just find like growth at a reasonable price.
It's like, it's gotta be at a good price.
I would say in the portfolio when I look at it,
it is mostly skews lower multiple value names.
And you had a segment that really resonated with me,
quote, we define our mistakes as fundamentals
not performing in the pattern
that was consistent with our thesis.
Again, so the quote is, we define our mistakes
as fundamentals not performing in the pattern
that was consistent with our thesis.
I'll paraphrase the rest of the discussion is,
you know, if we bought a stock, revenue's up 20%,
the fundamentals are strong and improving,
the core KPIs are chugging along
in line with what we expected, aka our thesis,
but the stock is down 20%, that's great.
We're happy to accumulate. This is not failure.
So how are we measuring success?
It's measuring our success as performing in line
with what we expected or better.
On the other hand, if we go in with expectations of X
and Y happens, that is failure, even if the stock is up.
Right, like that is failure,
because you need to be able to measure the goalpost
in the short term,
because stock prices can be randomized
in short periods of time,
but very efficient on long periods of time,
like the Warren Buffett example.
If you have a short period of time,
even just anything under less than five years,
how do you know if you're doing good? It's actually a really tricky problem to solve
for and you can kind of be fooled and be convinced that you're doing well when it's a little
bit of randomness. And of course, benchmarking yourself to the index definitely does help.
Like if you're in a bull run and like oh this is great I'm performing 8%
but the market's done 15 that's you know something's not adding up right like
that to me that's not great performance even though I'm up 8%. Yeah longer term
the markets have a way to revert to the means where you do see
whether you have over performance
because of momentum a lot of the time
or just general sentiment.
It'll revert to the means.
So whether it overperform will tend to go back
to more traditional valuation and vice versa,
something that would have completely underperformed
because of low valuation, even though the business has been doing well, it will revert
to the means to the upside over time.
Yeah, the Munger quote, in the short term, it's a voting machine, in the long term, it's
a weighing machine.
Yeah, yeah.
And a good example of that for those are into sports,
right? If you look at pretty much any sport, I'm most familiar with hockey and baseball, but
when you start looking at the start of the season, let's take baseball for example,
and you start looking at the first 20 games, you'll oftentimes see players that are hitting over 400,
which is very difficult to do in
baseball.
There's only I think one or two that have done it historically for a whole season.
And then every year you see, oh maybe they'll be able to catch the record.
And then as the season progresses, the sample site gets bigger, then you see them usually
go back to the means.
And the other way around, you have someone who has amazing track record,
maybe they've been an elite player for five years
or still in the prime of their career age-wise,
and then they start off the 10, 21st games
and they look like they've completely lost it.
And then you look back at the end of the season
and little do you know is that their season was as good
as the previous one or even better?
Baseball has the best analogies for investing overall
and that's a perfect example because in the short term,
the 20 game sample size is not enough to make
a broad statement about,
there's just not enough statistical significance. A whole
season is great for baseball because there's so many at bats, so many
pitches, the numbers start to revert to the mean. Like 162 games, right?
Like you have statistical significance. I wanted to add that for context for the
non baseball watchers. 162 games. They play what? Nine every 10 days basically for a better part of three quarters of the year.
Mm-hmm. Yeah, and I thought you so just thinking about it that way
I think it's it's easy to compare and it applies to hockey too, right?
Like you can have an amazing goal scorer and he starts off the season where he has no goals and the first five games
And everyone's panicking and then again at the end of the season he reaches a 35-40 goals that he usually
scores like you see that year after year in hockey you can see it in other sports
as well. Yeah so to round this out keeping score public equities in the
long term is a good thing to do you If you've been in the markets for five plus years now,
I actually think it's really important to have some sort of track record,
track this efficiently across your different assets,
and really keep score.
That might be a look in the mirror moment.
No.
If it's like, oh, man, I've been getting waxed
by just owning a low cost index,
then it might be like, okay, a bit of a reality check
when it comes to keeping score.
But in the short term, you can't overweight price action
because it'll give you a lot of uncorrelated data
on how things are going. So I think it comes down to as Nygren was talking about
having a really clear thesis of the business you're buying. You have to go in
with a really clear thesis and expectations because if it's kind of
just wishy-washy, and write it down. Spreadsheet technology has been around a
long time, use it. Write it down.
Having a clear thesis is really, really key.
I didn't do it for the first five years
of being in the markets.
And now it's like such a key process if I'm buying,
especially if I'm buying a new company.
No, I think it's great. Go back three years,
you might forget like, what was the thesis?
And if you're not keeping score and you don't have
some sort of data point to look back on,
that's when things get really, really tricky
to manage a basket of companies.
So it comes down to know what you own
and know why you own it.
100%.
Yeah, and I apply that also to other assets.
I apply that to Bitcoin and gold because I know why I own it. So it doesn't
have to just be stocks either. When you buy something know why you own it. Whether it's a ski
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there. All right, we got one more segment each. Do you want to go to
Druck? I also have this little passage from Jason Zweig, which we do.
We can do Drucken Miller and then finish with you. Okay, so Stan Druckenmiller. Yeah, and then finish with your okay. So
Stan Druckenmiller he's a billionaire and former hedge fund manager
He's well known in the investment world and founded. Uh, I don't know how to pronounce that ducane
Capital management just because it's a word that could be in french, too So I always I always try have trouble here. He founded that in 1981
He's also known for his pivotal role in
George Soros Quantum Fund where he famously profited over 1 billion by
shorting the British pound in 1992. The inspiration I got for this segment was
when I was listening to on the All In podcast they had Scott Besson an
interview that came out last week. He's the US Treasury Secretary under the current administration.
Now obviously, I'm not a fan of a lot of what Trump is doing right now like most Canadians.
However, like I've said time and time again, I think it's important to understand all different points of view and then form my own
opinion based on that. So I was listening to it. There's some stuff
I agreed with Scott Besson, some stuff didn't but he's no dummy so if you
listen to him he's a really smart guy and he clearly knows what he's talking
about when it comes to financial market. You may not agree fully with what he
says but he knows what he's talking about. One thing that stood out for me
was and from an investing perspective during the interview was when he said that
Drunken Miller's best quality as an investor was his ability to change his mind. Scott Besson also
worked in that fund that I was talking about, the Quantum Fund. I think he was a research analyst
back then. I decided to do a bit of research and I came across from another transcript from a podcast appearance from Drunken Miller back in 2022.
It was on How Leaders Lead podcast.
And I'll just read this portion here.
So I learned this way back in the 70s from my mentor.
I was a chemical analyst.
When should you buy chemical companies was a question.
Traditional Wall Street is when earnings are great.
Well, you don't want to buy them when earnings are great
because what are they doing when their earnings are great?
They go out, expand capacity.
Three or four years later, there's over capacity
and they're losing money.
What about when they're losing money?
Well, then they've stopped building capacity.
So three or
four years later, capacity will have shrunk and their profit margins will be way up. So you always
have to sort of imagine the world and this is the important piece, the way it's going to be in 18 to
24 months as opposed to now. If you buy it now, you're buying into every single fad, every single
moment. Whereas if you envision the future,
you're trying to imagine how that might be reflected
differently in security prices.
And I think this is really important because we,
and I'm guilty of that as well.
It's very easy to just look back at what happened
in the last few years or five years
and just project that out into the future.
I try not to, and I think markets and mainstream media are very guilty of that, even financial
social media.
They have a tendency to do and focus solely on that.
But I think it's really important to think about how the future, how it's going to go
forward, how it could potentially change your investment thesis as well.
And apparently Stan Druckenmiller is one of the best at doing that.
Say it with me, folks.
Cyclicals.
You know, that's exactly what he's talking about here with
buying cyclicals when their earnings are great.
Low P.E. cyclicals.
Yes.
You get fooled.
You get fooled by them.
It's happened so often, you know, new and experienced
investors alike with the cyclicals. But no, I like this. I mean, there's this kind of
constant counterbalance when picking individual companies or just being a participant in financial
markets of being some version of living in the past and living in the future.
There's some sort of balance that needs to be struck.
And I think if you're all in on the future,
you're not grounded by reality sometimes.
And if you're all in the past,
then you're gonna get smoked by the future, right?
There's some sort of talent and skill and luck
around positioning yourself in some sort of balance
between the reality of the past that we can know,
understand, analyze, and then use that
for building your thesis
in the future.
There's some sort of balance to strike.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And you have to be able to make that balance.
And I think it's important to adapt as well
and adjust as you get more information that comes up.
And I think for me, I'm a very different investor
than I was five, seven years ago.
And then five to 10 years, I'll probably be a much different investor than I am right
now.
Doesn't mean I'm completely changing my strategy, but I am changing as I think, as I see fit
for what I think will happen one, two, three, four, five years down the lines.
And I decided to just do, I used a new function, the research function from Chad GPT-5 which is really cool it takes a bit more time you almost
have time to go brew a coffee and then come back and it'll actually decide how
to analyze it and so on and I think one of the issues we're seeing right now
with markets because we've saw like so many good years and especially two
really good back-to-back years, 20% plus with the
S&P 500 is a lot of retail investors are becoming complacent and
you're seeing that more and more is that the allocation to equities are
climbing higher and higher for retail investor and I was able to find some US data It's a bit harder to find some Canadian data here
but in January 2024, the American
Association of Individual Investors reported that investors are more concentrated in equities that
they have been historically. Investor had 66.4% to equities versus 61.5% historically. Bonds,
it was around the historical average at 16.3%. The historical average is 16. And then cash
was 17.3% versus the historical average of 22.5%. And given the year that we saw in equities in
2024, because this is from January, I think it's safe to say it's probably closer to 70% because I
think a lot of individual investors don't trim and don't reallocate. And I'm not saying it's probably closer to 70% because I think a lot of individual investors don't trim and don't
reallocate. And I'm not saying it's right to do it or not, but this is all investors. So you're
getting people that are close to retirement or into retirement that may have 70, 80, 90% equities.
And people probably just look at what happened in the last two, five years, right, since the pandemic or even since the great financial crisis and
they think it's gonna be the same going forward. So I just wanted to show that to illustrate it that I
think we're seeing a little bit of complacency right now in the markets.
Maybe it'll change now that Trump is there and he's tweeting something and Mario making the markets go up and down with every single
tweet, but it's something I thought it would just be interested
to mention here.
Yeah, this is good.
This is good stuff.
I tend to agree with basically everything you said.
I don't think I have anything more to add.
There you go.
So we'll finish.
Enough time to finish with your last segment here,
which actually ties in a little bit.
Jason Zweig on being 100% in stocks.
So this is from one of his books.
The chapter in the book is called, Why Not 100% Stocks?
Graham, he's talking about Ben Graham, advised you to have more
than 75% of your total assets in stocks.
But is putting all your money into the stock market inadvisable
for every money?
For a tiny minority of investors, 100% stock portfolio may make sense.
You are one of them if you, one, have set aside cash to support your family for at least
a year.
Two, will be investing steadily for at least 20 years to come.
Three, survive the bear market that began in 2000. So we can.
Or we can say 2008.
Yeah.
We had that one.
Yeah.
We'll say dealt with extreme drawdown, had that scar and didn't panic.
And not just for like a month.
So for let's say for over a year, I think that's when you start feeling
it more. Yeah.
Correct. Did not sell stocks during the bear market that began in 2000. Okay. So basically
did not panic sell during the bear market, bought more stock in the bear market. So you
are adding during the bear market. Have read chapter eight in this book and imported, okay,
some sort of investing behavior. So a little checklist, okay?
So obviously outdated timeline wise, but so, so relevant.
This is timeless, okay?
So he's basically saying, should you be 100% in stocks?
No, but you might want to consider it
if the following makes sense for you,
which is you have a lot of cash to support your family for at least a year, will be investing steadily for many, many years to come so you
don't have some short time horizon.
You're not going to need it in three years, not going to need it in two months.
You didn't panic sell during a bear market.
And in fact, when you had a bear market, you kept adding.
I honestly can't think of a really a better checklist, right?
Like emergency fund, you don't panic,
and in fact, you jump on opportunities.
That's a great formula to be a good investor,
just generally overall.
Yeah, and it's easier said than done.
Someone who has not been through a prolonged bear market,
it is, it's not easy.
And like I have sort of,
so I started investing my first time,
my first go around before,
well, right around the great financial crisis.
And I actually added some Canadian banks
and I did pretty well.
I was quite young at the time.
But the other one I think I have felt
and it is definitely not easy is,
you know, I've been pretty vocal is I have a pretty good chunk of my portfolio in Bitcoin.
And I definitely went through a more than a few months bear market in 2022 and even through a
good chunk of 2023 as well. And it's not it's not easy to even add more to the asset as well.
It's easier said than done. If you haven't gone through it, I mean, it's great that you think
you'll stay the course and you'll even add, but when you're looking at it and it's been like
six plus months, it's really not as easy as people might think who have not gone through it.
And power to you if you go through it and you do do it, that's great.
But I just wanted to mention that.
Long periods of flat sometimes can feel even worse.
Yeah.
Because keep in mind too, all the headlines you see are super bearish or negative.
So you feel like you feel very stupid if you start adding
because everything you start seeing is to the contrary.
Why you should be 100% in cash or stuff like that.
Pessimism always sounds smarter.
I don't know, especially in financial markets.
It can always sound smarter to be negative or pessimistic
and it's really, really,
you sound like you're at to lunch
when you're overly optimistic, right?
And so there's some balance there,
but if you have a really long time horizon,
the really aggressively over optimist
has been the one making all the money.
Yeah.
Right?
And so it's kind of like, you know,
what do you want to be good at?
Do you want to be good at sounding smart?
Or do you want to be good at making money?
I don't know if that's an oversimplification,
but if you told, you know, if you're an analyst
and you saw AWS and you saw Amazon's rise
and you said that they were gonna be
a two trillion dollar company one day,
people would be like, you're such an idiot.
There was very few companies
that were 100 billion in market cap, right?
Let alone two trillion.
So you would just be completely off your rocker
by almost anyone's opinion. And so it'd be really smart to just come up with like 50 bear cases on why you know
You'd sound really smart and the person who's really really optimistic about the company would sound really stupid
And there's some sort of balance to strike on like
Just like we were talking about before about living in the past and living in the future. I think this is really related
we were talking about before about living in the past and living in the future.
I think this is really related.
You have to somehow be grounded in reality in fact,
which the past gives you reality.
And in the future is unknowable, there's no crystal ball.
So there's some balance between being grounded in reality,
but also optimistic.
Because the optimists tend to make all the money
if they're right.
I mean, case in point,
and I will throw myself under the bus here.
And I thought Tesla was overvalued in 2020 and 2019.
In the last five years, Tesla is up 748%.
And you had-
And it's also down 43%. And it's still up 750. Yeah, that's
actually remarkable. And I thought it was overvalued I thought at some point 2018
2019 couldn't even go bankrupt I thought like you'd be crazy to put some money in
Tesla and look at it now like I'm looking pretty stupid not having some
money in Tesla. I can't
believe the amount of negative sentiment on this company. Oh right now. Being on a
40% drawdown the market cap is still 770 billion. Yeah well I think it's I think
unfortunately people are realizing and shareholders that you know Elon's
prominence with the Trump administration is rubbing a lot of people
the wrong way and I think shareholders are realizing
that especially America is as polarized as ever.
And I think that is showing the stock price.
I honestly think the stock price is a big reflection
of that is that people are kind of-
You see people like literally burning Teslas
and vandalizing them and like throwing shit at them
when they're driving down the street.
That's not right.
I mean, that is so like, you are such a loser
if you do that.
And I'm not here to defend the company or defend him.
I could care less, but you're such a loser
if you're like, oh my God, you're driving a Tesla like shot
You're such a wimp. Yeah, I mean, I think that's definitely gone too far. I mean, it's a good time to buy a used Tesla
I'll tell you that last night. I was actually we didn't know we'd say I'd say the name Tesla here
I was looking on auto trader just for fun. You can get some pretty
Pretty cheap model threes with like reasonable mileage on them,
not that old all wheel drive for reasonable prices
because I think a lot of people are like trying to show
their anti Elon Musk support and getting rid
of their Teslas on and losing probably a lot of money on it
because they're selling it at discount
and then buying another car more expensively.
It's emotionally charged too.
It's usually when there's good opportunities
in secondary markets.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, that's, you know me,
I usually when I see opportunities,
so just for fun, we're not looking for a car
and it wouldn't make sense right now,
but I was just curious.
I'm like, okay, well, who knows?
If the price is right one day, I'll get one.
Yeah, they're fun to drive.
I've never owned one, but no, I think that's a good example.
The stock's up 770% in the past five years,
even though it's gotten smoked lately.
Yeah, another example of a company
that's just always been incredibly hard
to justify the valuation.
Yeah, exactly.
And look, for me, I think you said it best.
For me, my style, at least maybe I'll change,
but for now it's just having a balanced approach.
It's not being too bullish, too bearish,
just understanding the risks and understanding also
the potential upside possibilities as well.
And just trying to place myself where I think I'll do well
in different kind of scenarios.
That's how I try to do it because yes, you're right.
For those who have been incredibly bearish,
they've been smoked by the, just the index
over the last five, two, three, four, five, 10, 15 years.
My favorite way to invest,
it comes with high prices, unfortunately, is companies where the past is fantastic and the future looks like more of the same.
Yeah.
You know, like that's, that's the DevKantasari way where it's just like, I am buying the companies that I'm measuring quality of a certain public company in its predictability
to keep growing.
So yeah, the past looks fantastic.
I mean, look at the track record,
look at how the company has grown over time.
And the future I predict to be fairly knowable
in it going to continue to be great for this company.
And there's always things that change, right? Like, you know,
everyone thought GE was going to continue to dominate forever too, right?
There's a million examples of how things change. Intel, things change.
However,
if you're diversified and you're not just betting that on one company,
there are a lot of businesses today that dominated the last decade
and their dominance probably looks pretty similar
over the next decade.
So it's your job to find out what those things are.
Like I was just looking at Amazon just now
because we're talking about on the podcast,
it's now sub 200 a share.
It's in a 20% drawdown.
Been a dominant few decades for this business.
And I see a lot of domination continuing
for this business, right?
Like the AWS business alone,
you could assign some egregious price on probably.
Yeah, no, exactly.
What's it doing in revenue now?
AWS is at 107.
So in 2024, AWS did 107 and a half billion in top line.
And the operating margin was-
I'm still looking at that.
The operating income was 40 billion.
So call it high 30 operating margins on this
and the margin continues to grow.
So you have growth on the top line,
growth on the bottom line in terms of margin.
It's like, how does this not work, right?
Of course the future is unknowable,
but how does this not work?
Yeah.
No, exactly.
I mean, we use Amazon multiple times a week, uh, just
forwarding stuff and then obviously I know all the different companies using AWS too.
And just talking about the retail business.
I mean, you know, if you have, if you have kids and I know you don't, but I
know you use it too, like if you have kids or even if you don't, but especially if you do,
don't have the time sometimes to go in person and shop.
Yeah. I mean, there's always a better, faster, cheaper,
always wins in every industry.
Yeah.
And that's it just working out right here, right?
Exactly.
Well, around the South with,
there's a lot of news and headlines about a partnership with DoorDash and Klarna to
buy now pay later on DoorDash food deliveries. Yeah didn't they also win the
contract with Walmart too? Klarna did Yeah, I think they took it over from Afterpay.
Oh.
Or Afterpay or one of the other ones.
Clarnaland's buy now pay later.
Our firm, yeah they took it from a firm.
Clarnaday displace a firm as Walmart's buy now pay later.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah, really great company.
One of the better European fintechs around.
A really great company in terms of execution and leadership. Fantastic. But do we really need people buy now pay later
in their fucking burritos?
Like nothing makes, you know, nothing makes more sense. Like, you know, doing your Uber
or whatever door dash order with four installments or not things smells like
a really solid economy like people having to order and split that into four.
No kidding.
Like if there's a lot of demand for this, we're in deep doo doo.
The economy is, you're just seeing it.
I'm here in South Florida right now, but there's no better, better is not the right is. You're just seeing it. I'm here in South Florida right now, but there's no better,
better is not the right word. There's no easier way to see wealth inequality than somewhere like
where I am right now. It is staggering, right? And so I think the top people doing really well,
but bottom not so much. And the buy now pay later on a burrito is a pretty
stark example. It's shocking to the system almost a little bit.
Yeah. From a financial literacy perspective, if you have to do that, you should not be
ordering DoorDash. You should be going to the grocery and making your own food. That's my
view on that, but I know people will do it.
If they offer it, there's clearly a demand for it.
Yeah, no, you're not wrong.
There's some harsh realities out there, right?
Yeah.
Like, it's a tough pill to swallow.
Thanks for listening to the folks.
Thanks for listening to the folks.
Thanks for listening to the podcast, folks.
It is good to know that, you know,
if I ever end up behind bars, the show can go on.
See, the show can continue on regardless, you know?
I end up behind bars, just make a couple phone calls,
make a couple political donations,
and we can keep doing the podcast from jail,
just like SBF.
Exactly.
Yeah, yeah, that's it.
But I guess on the last note too,
this is next week, or when people listen to this on Monday,
it'll be the last week where I'm,
I employed person.
Oh, yes.
That's good.
That's bullish for the pod. That's good. That's bullish for the pod.
It's very bullish for the podcast.
So there's gonna be more content, stay tuned.
Just got some plan for the spring, summer,
and later this year, so you'll be seeing
some more stuff coming from the podcast.
Is there a polymarket on Canadian election?
There must, yeah, I'm sure there will be.
Maybe it'll set it up.
Okay, so there is the next Prime Minister of Canada
is one of the top, the top two Polymarket ones right now
are 2025 NCAA tournament winner.
Okay, not surprised.
And next Prime Minister after the election,
where is the, when is the election?
polymarket Yeah, it's gotta be wrong. Yeah, I mean I think that what I've seen polymarket aside
I think it's gonna be April 24th is the speculation and of April for sure
Yeah, there's which is going most seats who win the more popular vote. I don't see like a date polymarket
I wonder if yeah, there's no I don't know like a date poly market. I wonder if, yeah, there's no, I don't know if there was one.
Maybe there's not that much interest for when it will be more
like who will win.
I'm sure they will have the, you know, the pretty much
it'll be between Pierre and Pierre Poliev and Mark Carney.
Yeah, they're 59 and 42.
Everyone else is less than 1%.
But Carney's leading, you know that right it's crazy
yeah i mean it's been back and forth i think they've been pretty close one to another so
it's gonna be uh i just mean on polymarket as of recording friday march i think it's been
all yeah and the polls i've seen it's kind of depending on the polls like i think they're
both within the margin of error so it's basically like it could be one or the other at this point,
but I've seen some poll where Carney is leading,
seen some poll where Pierre-Paul Yavre is leading.
Some of this kind of degenerate gambling world is kind of crazy to me,
but it's actually amazing.
I find that fact fascinating personally.
It's pretty amazing as a stats guy to have a prediction markets on the future of things like this.
It's just so much more useful than polling.
You saw with the US election, it is just better. It's a better system.
Yeah, I'll be keeping a close eye on it, especially as we get closer within the week and then the hours after how quickly they'll have the
basically the probability will go up to like 90 to 95 percent for whichever
outcome and who will be the prime minister and who knows at this point but
it's just interesting how quickly it will move versus the official call from
either CBC or other main news networks. I wonder if there's gonna be a big global event,
like a big election or something
on these cal-shee polymarket prediction markets
that the consensus is so wrong.
There's gonna be eventually like a 95-5 with the five caches.
I mean, I hope if we have people
from the major news networks in Canada,
that some of them will actually look at polymarket
during the election night.
So that is one thing I hope to see,
is that they actually keep an eye on it.
I think it would be a disservice to Canadians
to not have a look on it.
Like it's different than it was four years ago.
Why not use this new tool that's available to you?
I think that is one thing.
I don't think they will,
but I do hope that some will take notice and say,
okay, like this is what we're seeing,
but also here's what Polymarket is seeing.
Like take note of what happened in the US and why not?
Honestly, I think it's a low-hanging fruit for the network.
If there's a network who does it, I think it will be a super low-hanging fruit and will
give them a lot more credibility for this election. That's my view.
Totally. Look, there is good reason to follow this data.
It's actual capital online versus a no risk poll.
And we'll see.
Maybe we end up seeing and their complete polymarket is completely off the mark.
I don't think so.
But I would say, you know, learn from the US and from the US election and just show
it once in a while during election night.
Why not? Yeah, absolutely. Thanks for listening to the podcast, folks. Tomorrow I drive 20 hours.
Well, I'm going to stop, but I drive back to Canada and hopefully we've de-thought a little bit.
Oh, it's almost all gone here, at least. Just know.
Okay. Yeah. Good. Good. Good. Well, I hope I don't get tariffed on the way out
On the way out of here. I'm excited to be back in in the country
Did you buy that mic in the US or Canada?
fancy mic you have there
No coming back in so, you know, maybe they'll just slap me with a little 25% tariff, my whole net worth.
No, but it'll be, let me know how it goes.
I'm just curious to see if the experience
a bit different than you would have seen
a year or two ago now that.
Well, I think going into the US, it's me.
But even coming back, I just don't know, right?
Like maybe it'll be a bit more intense
with the plan that they did to try and control the borders
a bit more up north too.
Like I don't know.
But when you come back into Canada,
you're talking to Canadian border crossing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I'm just curious, yeah, if it'll have changed.
Yeah, I'll let you know.
I know people have had some really strange border
Experiences as of yet. They're on the news and stuff. I always get stressed at the border even though I have nothing died
I don't know why I'm just like I feel I always feel like there's something I'm not saying
There is something very
kind of
Eerie about it. Yeah, especially I mean especially if you get some guy who's real stern or some woman who's real stern.
They just wanna see how you react under pressure.
I have a special skill.
If they are not cool with me, I can just switch to French
and ask that I speak to someone in French.
That I've done that a few times and usually they just like,
they let you go, because it's a pain in the,
I've done that. Ah in there. I got it.
Is that a requirement that they have to like talk to you?
Yeah, if you want, yeah, yeah.
It's both languages, so they would have to go
if they can't, they have to go.
But again, that's on the way home.
I'm not worried about coming on the way back to camp.
That's easy.
No, no, yeah.
Oh, the US, I never get stress.
I don't know why it's like coming back.
I feel like I'm doing something wrong.
I don't know why. What'd you buy? What'd you buy? I'm five dollars over the limit. No
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