We Study Billionaires - The Investor’s Podcast Network - TIP684: Current Market Conditions & Poor Charlie's Almanack w/ Stig Brodersen & Clay Finck
Episode Date: December 20, 2024On today’s episode, Clay Finck invites Stig Brodersen to discuss current market conditions and one of Stig’s favorite books — Poor Charlie’s Almanack. IN THIS EPISODE YOU’LL LEARN: 00:00 - ...Intro 01:23 - How Stig and Clay think about today’s market. 08:02 - Why we expect the stock market to continue to hit new all-time highs. 08:02 - How Stig is protecting himself against potential inflation going forward. 39:49 - Why Stig re-reads Poor Charlie’s Almanack each year. 49:55 - The psychological biases we need to be mindful of. 01:02:14 - How the endowment effect can be detrimental to our portfolio’s returns. 01:11:45 - How we can apply Munger’s principle of inversion to our lives and our portfolios. 01:27:00 - How you can attend the live events TIP is hosting in Omaha during the Berkshire weekend. And so much more! Disclaimer: Slight discrepancies in the timestamps may occur due to podcast platform differences. BOOKS AND RESOURCES Join the exclusive TIP Mastermind Community to engage in meaningful stock investing discussions with Stig, Clay, Kyle, and the other community members. Book discussed: Poor Charlie's Almanack. Check out Stig’s portfolio here. Email Shawn at shawn@theinvestorspodcast.com to attend our free events in Omaha or visit this page. Follow Clay on Twitter. Check out all the books mentioned and discussed in our podcast episodes here. Enjoy ad-free episodes when you subscribe to our Premium Feed. NEW TO THE SHOW? Follow our official social media accounts: X (Twitter) | LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | TikTok. Check out our We Study Billionaires Starter Packs. Browse through all our episodes (complete with transcripts) here. Try our tool for picking stock winners and managing our portfolios: TIP Finance Tool. Enjoy exclusive perks from our favorite Apps and Services. Stay up-to-date on financial markets and investing strategies through our daily newsletter, We Study Markets. Learn how to better start, manage, and grow your business with the best business podcasts. SPONSORS Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors: SimpleMining Hardblock AnchorWatch Human Rights Foundation Unchained Vanta Shopify Onramp HELP US OUT! Help us reach new listeners by leaving us a rating and review on Spotify! It takes less than 30 seconds, and really helps our show grow, which allows us to bring on even better guests for you all! Thank you – we really appreciate it! Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm
Transcript
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You're listening to TIP.
On today's episode, I'm joined by my co-host Stig Bruterson to discuss current market conditions,
how hard money fits into our portfolios during an uncertain macro environment,
and the one book that Stig rereads every year, poor Charlie's Almanac.
With Charlie Munger having passed away just over a year ago,
I thought it would be a good chance to revisit this amazing book
and uncover some of the lessons that Stig has learned from reading it more than a dozen times over the years.
At the end of the episode, I'll also show you.
share more on the free and paid events TIP will be hosting in Omaha during the Berkshire weekend,
where Warren Buffett hosts the Woodstock for capitalism. With that, I bring you today's episode
on the current market conditions and poor Charlie's Almanac. Since 2014 and through more than
180 million downloads, we've studied the financial markets and read the books that influence
self-made billionaires the most. We keep you informed and prepared for the unexpected. Now for your
hosts, Stig Broderson and Playfink.
All right, welcome to the Investors podcast.
I'm your host, Clay Fink, and today I'm happy to be joined by my co-host, Stig,
thanks so much for joining me here as a co-host today.
Thank you so much for inviting me, Clay.
It's always great to be a guest on one of your episodes.
So today I originally wanted to discuss Poor Charlie's Almanac, but I thought it'd also be
interesting to discuss current market conditions.
because when I think back to when I was a listener of TIP, those were some of my favorite episodes
to get yours and Preston's take on current markets.
We have the election season finally out of the way, and we're back into a market that
sort of resembles 2021 in many ways.
So Stig and I will be giving a quick overview of the markets and the economy to get us started
here.
And I promise I'll try and not bombard the audience and the listeners with too many numbers here.
So please bear with me.
So the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ, they're both sitting near record highs.
And then Bitcoin, as of the time of recording, soared to $96,000, really took off post-election
and also was around a record high.
And just the secular bull run of asset prices just seems to only surge higher and higher
after the temporary decline we had in 2022 in the stock market and assets overall.
So if we zoom out and look at interest rates, in early 2022, the federal funds rate,
was effectively 0%, and then the Fed decided they wanted to combat inflation, raise rates.
They took rates to over 5%, 5.25. That was in the fall of 2023. And here in 2024, they've done
two rate cuts, bringing the target rate to 4.5%. And inflation overall seems to largely be under
control. It probably depends on who you ask, at least relative to 2022. So the CPI metric currently is
coming in around 2.6%. The Schiller-P.E. ratio, that's around 38, and probably to many people
surprised, that's actually the level we saw back in 2021 when markets were quite frothy. So the
market overall is quite bullish and optimistic. And Stig, I think back to early 2023,
you know, we were at the tail end of that bear market, and we were talking about alphabet
and how cheap we thought it was at that time. And we both added to the stock. And today,
it's proving to be pretty difficult to find similar opportunities, at least in the larger
cap companies. Much of big tech is up over 100% from their lows around that time period,
and a lot of that's just simply come from multiple expansion, which we can't expect to continue
for too much longer. And ironically, when I actually look at some big tech names, some of them
still seem to be somewhat reasonable values, and not screaming bargains, but still not crazy
high valuations, I would say. And then, of course, many people are also talking a lot about
a Buffett and Berkshire having a record amount of cash. So as of the end of Q3, they held a record
$325 billion in cash. And it's probably more useful to look at this as a percentage of the assets
they own. So when we look at that metric, it's around 25% of Berkshire's assets is sitting in cash.
And it hasn't been that high since June of 2005, which is nearly 20 years. So lots of
interesting things there to ponder on. Yeah, so I'll be the first one to say that the S&P 500 doesn't look
cheap. I mean, trading above 6,000 at the time of recording. But, you know, there are certainly
pockets of the market that looks fairly valued. Say energy, for example, there's some smaller
value stock that looks quite reasonable too. Some might even call it cheap. But I don't know
if I should say cheap, but everything is equal, you know, everything is a function of opportunity
costs. I mean, the big tech companies, to your point, they get a lot of attention, and I like to
compare it to tourist attractions. I know it's going to sound a bit odd and it's almost going to sound
derogatory, but that's not my intention. So if you visit Barcelona, for example, you probably
want to visit Las Agrada Familia, and you're certainly not alone if you do that, because all tourists
get the same idea, and there's a reason why they get the same idea, because it's a fabulous place
to visit. Now, similarly, the big tech companies are also somewhat richly very well.
But then, again, just like the Zaglada familiar, there's a reason for that because they're
amazing. Some of the widest modes the world has ever seen, and they're priced like that
for a reason. So I don't know if it's a bubble. Like sometimes whenever we see the biggest
market cap companies would like to think that they're in the bubble, but by definition,
some companies had to be the biggest market cap companies. So to your point, I have a position
in alphabet. I don't think it looks expensive, if anything, it looks reasonable.
I don't think it looks cheap, but probably somewhat reasonable.
And then you can say that I own Apple through my holdings in Brooks-A-Hathaway,
even though Brooks-Haddleway is rapidly selling out of Apple these days.
So the big tech companies are probably not a hunting ground if you're looking to build a new position,
but if you're already invested and you're sitting on some capital gains,
well, perhaps you want to hold on.
One thing that I don't really like is whenever I see mainstream media
make these projections for companies like Nvidia,
And I think we've been accustomed for some time for them to focus on forward PE and not trailing PE.
But for a company like Nvidia, I see a lot of forward two-year PEs, which for a company that's growing close to 100% year or a year, I don't really know if I'd like that way of, of course, you can say if you don't want to do it for a two-year forward P.
if you don't do it for companies like in video, what kind of companies we do it for,
but then I would counter and say, don't do it for any companies.
So I guess that's just the whole rhetoric that makes me a bit uneasy.
Who knows?
Perhaps it's just because I missed the stock that I have such a sour mood here.
But I once read Pidelins's book.
It was one of his books.
It wasn't the Alvin Wall Street, it was the other one.
I think it's called Beating the Street.
And keep in mind that these were books written decades ago.
And so he talked about that if you're not holding GE, you are a first.
effectively shorting it because it took up so much of the S&P 500.
I understand where it's coming from, but I don't think it's a good way of looking at your portfolio.
For example, saying, hey, if I don't own big tech companies, I'm shoring big tech companies.
I think you set yourself up for trouble if you think like that.
And I think many of the problems that we're struggling with in this world probably comes
from us thinking that we need to have an opinion on everything.
Just like Buffett's notion that it's better to have a punch card with 20 punches and then you can only make 20 investments in your life, perhaps.
We should have a punch card every time we have an opinion on something.
And I do see the irony that I have an opinion on people not should have an opinion, which is so ironic in itself.
But anyways, I think that it might be too much around the fringes to have an opinion on big tech valuations right now.
Again, that's an opinion.
There's so many other pockets you can look in the market that might make more sense.
Yeah, I mean, I think I've read a stat that the top seven companies comprise of something like 31% of the S&P 500 today.
I think investors for quite some time could sort of ignore this concentration, but it just becomes more and more concentrate.
So it becomes more and more important to think about and consider.
And, you know, 100% of your net worths in the S&P 500, I think you should consider whether something should be rebalanced to some degree.
Because, you know, your portfolio largely depends on the performance of the stocks, at least for the next say.
five years or so. And you mentioned multiples with regards to Nvidia. When I think of a company like
Nvidia and a Tesla, something that's really trying to revolutionize industries, like, I think that
multiples might as well be useless. People would just quote multiples for Tesla for so many years,
but then their growth ended up just making those look ridiculous. And I think Nvidia's the same
thing where people looked at a multiple of 100 or 200 and they just blew expectations out of the water
and just made those multiples look cheap in hindsight. So, you know, I'm certainly no one.
expert on any of those two names, but multiples can certainly be tricky with some of these
growth-y companies. And you make a good point about just you don't have to have an opinion on
everything. So many people who aren't necessarily value investors, they'll ask me what I think
the market's going to do over the next year. And I can have an opinion on what I think the market's
going to do, but it's similar to asking me what card's going to be coming on the river at the
poker table. I can think I can know, but I really have no idea.
But history tells us that it really pays to have a long-term bullish bias. And I think our natural
instincts can tell us that we should wait to invest or wait till the coast is clear and prices
are cheap, but rarely is that the right path to go. And had you taken that viewpoint in 2020,
you would have missed the opportunity to buy the S&P 500 at half of what it's at today
and missed out on massive gains. I think part of what really makes investing so fascinating to me,
besides just the simple prospect of making money is that we just never know what the future's going
to hold. So while I've been an investor, we've largely just been in a secular bull market
when looking at the big picture, and it's really paid to be an optimist. So since 2010, for example,
the S&P 500's average annual return with dividends has been around 14%, while the long-term average is
typically around 8 to 10%. And these types of returns likely just aren't sustainable for the next
10 20 years and it's not sustainable just largely because of these larger cycles at play.
So some decades might be really good, whereas the next decade might just be the total opposite
where it might be flat.
So for example, during the 1990s, the S&P 500 compounded at 18% per year.
And I think it had nine straight years of going up.
Not a single down year, nine years straight.
But during the 2000s, it actually had a negative return from start to finish, even with dividends
reinvested. So that's data I pulled from dollars in data. And when I see the S&P 500 up
24% in 2023, another 27% year-to-date in 2024, I would say now is the time probably to act
more with caution in entering some of your positions. I'm also reminded of one of my favorite
frameworks that I learned from John Huber here on the show. So he shared that there's really
three sources for returns for any stock. It could be Google, Alphabet, could be
the S&P 500, it can be Nvidia, Tesla, any stock. The three sources of returns are earnings growth,
the change in your P.E. multiple and capital returns, which is essentially just buybacks and dividends.
So in the past two years, a lot of those returns have just simply come from the P.E. multiple
expanding, which is largely just a change in market sentiment. So when sentiment is largely positive,
you don't want to bet on that multiple just continuing to expand even more in the short term.
So it just isn't a sustainable way to generate returns over the long run.
No, and I should probably also preface a few different things.
So we talk a lot about the market, and we always have to ask, what do you mean whenever you talk about the market?
And very often we do talk about the S&P 500.
And I should also say, I've never invested in the SEP 500.
I think if you do that, you'll probably do well as part of a broader strategy.
My reluctance to invest in the S&P 500 to the point before isn't really because it won't do well.
It probably will do well enough if you hold it over a long period.
time. It's just more like, on this show, we really like talking about individual stock picks. And
I was speaking with someone the other day in the value investing community. And he said to me that
if he was, and I think he's probably in his 30s, and he said to me, if he was in his 80s and still
having been being in the market, he still would think that the good times were there to come.
And I kind of feel like, I kind of like that sentiment. I don't know if that's how you should
invest. But I think that there is something wonderful about that approach to life and being around
optimistic people who just love stock investing. And so I think if you really find investing boring,
yes, by all means, it's P500, but there is something to be said about picking individual stocks.
Anyways, to your point, Clay, no, the returns from the S&P 500 probably isn't going to come
from multiple expansion, but from earnings growth. And then you can say that with the current
multiples we see right now, it would take some time to work off that multiple. And also to a point
before, whenever you talk about multiples on, say, something like Tesla, and all of a sudden,
I'm saying, well, perhaps you should still look at multiples. There is a difference whenever
you're talking about individual stocks, and then whenever you're talking about collection of 500
stocks, because in average, well, there are some things that are on average, even if it's market
weighted. So, and I really like how you grouped it into decades, like you have one decade
with like 18% and then another decade with like negative return. So I think we should be careful
to God ourselves against survivorship bias. You refer to this historical.
call return of 8 to 10%. And I think it's completely logical if you're an American to have
home bias and you're looking at those returns and you're seeing it's the greatest economy
of the world has ever seen and it's the century of the US and say, hey, this is going to continue.
And so whenever I look at the SP 500 now, I'm like, I'm going to see another 8 to 10%. It seems
a vicious to me. And that's not because I don't think the US is not going to do well.
I think the US is going to do very well.
But it is very difficult to continue with those type of returns.
You know, why that happened to the greatest economy the world has ever seen,
a lot of great economies went belly up and there were highball inflation.
There were a ton of stuff happening.
So you can be susceptible to some kind of survivorship bias.
And then I also want to say that whenever you're seeing those returns, let's call the 10%,
there might just on a CPI basis be 7% real returns.
And so whenever we're talking about, let's say we're going to be sitting here and I don't
now 10 years from now. I'm pretty sure the S&P 500 would be trading more than 6,000. And certainly,
if you look at more 20 years, it's going to be trading more than 6,000. But then the question is,
how much can you then buy for the same dollar? It's a lot easier for a stock market to show a 10%
return if there is 10% inflation than if there is a 0% inflation. And some of that inflation is baked
into the stock price because it runs through all the way through the income statement. So
whenever we talk about, oh, the SP 500 is at an all-time time, it will,
continue, as long as we have inflation economy, which I will expect that we're going to have
forever for the latter better words. I'd say that we are going to see a new all-time highs,
even if we didn't see the productivity gain in theory, because it would just all run through
inflation. And then we can then go into a different discussion about, talked about CPI, so that's
sort of like the official inflation data. Perhaps we want to look at money supply growth or something
else, and then the math looks very, very different. But I think whenever you're looking at
nominal numbers, I also think it's important to think about how is your
portfolio going to go? How is that going to perform in real numbers as in purchasing power?
Yeah, I love how you mentioned, you know, you can't just write home an 8 to 10% return if you're
an investor in the U.S. because the reality is that things change eventually. And if someone
told me the S&P 500 is going to earn a 10% return over the next decade, I'm like, okay, we must
have some level of inflation in that, you know, if it's 5% inflation, you're getting a 5% real
return. Certainly something to think about. And very, very, very, very much.
quickly, we're getting into macroeconomics here. And Peter Lynch said that if you spend 13
minutes studying macro, you've wasted 10 minutes. And despite this sound advice from Lynch, I'm going
to talk a little bit about macro because I really just can't help myself. And someone recently
mentioned how Buffett's a person who says to ignore macro, but they have believed that he doesn't
do what he says to a large degree. So I mentioned earlier, he has record cash right now. So you could
maybe call that a sort of a macro forecast on where he sees valuation.
But again, Buffett would also say it's just opportunity costs where he's looking for the best
opportunities.
And many people would argue holding so much cash probably isn't the best route to go.
Maybe that's my own bias at play here.
When I look at the macro, I think one of the elephants in the room that a lot of value investors
don't talk about or just ignore is just the U.S. federal debt situation and where that sort of
sits.
So I wanted to pay a few numbers here.
The U.S. has over $35 trillion in federal debt.
Debt to GDP is 123%.
We have a $1.8 trillion deficit, and the current interest expense is over $1.2 trillion,
which exceeds the spending on the U.S. military.
The U.S. is just at a point where it's currently borrowing money just to pay the interest
on their existing debt, which honestly just worries me, like what the future holds in terms
of us as investors, us as a country. And I just saw this statistic here on X or Twitter here on
December 4th. The total U.S. debt spiked by $84 billion in just one day. And it's up over
$1 trillion in the past 105 days. And when I look at some macro analysts we've had here on
TIP like Len Alden, Luke Groman, the consensus to me seems to be that currency devaluation is
just inevitable. And that's just to keep debt levels at a somewhat sustainable level going forward.
So essentially, the government's just going to need to continue printing money in order to fund
deficits and try and keep debt levels at a sustainable level. And to me and you, we're thinking,
you know, how can we guard ourselves against potential inflation going forward? And you and Preston,
you started the podcast in 2014. And when you started it,
You were just full Buffett fanatics, just stock investors following the likes of Buffett and Munger,
but you've transitioned to invest also in other asset classes as well.
And thankfully, I've followed along and that journey with you.
So you and I, we both own gold and Bitcoin in our portfolios, for example.
And when I look at the returns of these assets year to date, while the S&P 500 is up 27% year to date,
gold's up 28% and Bitcoin's up 116%.
I say this fully knowing that Bitcoin is highly controversial with so many people, especially in
the value investing community.
And I try not to be too dogmatic about it on the positive or the negative side.
And gold in itself can be a little bit controversial as well, to be honest.
Yeah, that's definitely true.
And thanks for teeing it up, Clay, because to your point, we started the podcast back in 2014
and very much were influenced by Buffett and sort of like read that as the gospel.
And you can even go back in the back catalog and see the first three episodes we had.
that was just about how Buffett invest. And I think that we're still very much influenced by
Buffett here in the podcast, who I should mention in 1997 made a major silver play. He made short
of $100 million on that. And that was buying physical silver, I should say. So talk about not
wanting to make money on owning hot money. So there is something to be said about that. But
generally approach the idea of hard money the same way Buffett talks about investing in utilities.
He says that it's not how to become rich, but how to stay rich. And I think if you want to
become rich, generally you need to understand micro quite well. And if you want to stay rich,
you need to understand macro well. There's only so many ways you can lose your wealth if you have
a lot of money. Concentration is one. Leverage is another. And then you also have hyperinflation.
And most people don't think about hyperinflation because they never experienced it. So it makes
complete sense why you wouldn't consider it. But whenever you reach your number, I don't know,
As I'd say, it's $10 million, $100 million.
I don't know what your number would be, but you have to focus a lot on your downside,
and hot money falls into that category for some investors,
certainly not for all value investors.
And owning hot money might take a little longer to double your portfolio value,
but it also gives you some downside protection.
And then some people would then say Bitcoin doesn't even fall in the hot money bucket,
and then that's sort of like a different discussion.
So you might point to that many people refuse to look at macro and have gotten rich by not looking
at macro.
And that would be true.
I would then counter and say that how much of a short-term bias do you have and what do you
define as a short term?
So let's say you're looking at a shorter time period and I'm going to be a bit cheeky and say
50 years.
Perhaps 50s is a short period of time in a peaceful, prosperous time, depending on which country
you're looking at, what your experiences have been, and what will the future hold?
So before we talk too much macro and probably too late, I think that's where I tend to differ
a lot from a lot of investors.
A lot of investors, to say that 10 years is long-term investing in 20 years.
I guess if you think about in the light of financial history, like 50 years is a blink of an eye,
and very high inflation and wars, emergencies happen, pandemics happen, and it's always been
the case in recorded history.
This whole discussion about Bitcoin makes me a little uneasy.
It's almost like talking about politics.
You quickly stopped talking about substance and then emotions run hard and it can get quite ugly.
Preston and I covered Bitcoin on episode 30.
And this was published back on April 5, 2015.
Now, Preston and I later took positions and I said at the time that I wouldn't sell any of my coins
until they reached half a million dollars per coin, which obviously at the time made me look
like a fool, especially in the circle of value investors. Luckily, we had no listeners in 2015,
so no one heard it. I kind of feel like if you were a novice chess player, you may lose because
you don't know the value of the pieces on the board. But if you're a novice chess player,
and you are so certain about the value of the pieces of the board that you would never
exchange a rook for a bishop, regardless of the positioning on the board, then you're probably
also selling yourself up for trouble. And so if you're not a nerd about chess, what do I
referred to, basically mean that the rules and we set up rules for ourselves in our investment
process, but you always need to be able to make exceptions to your rules. So basically,
what happened at the time, this would happen later than 2015, but emotions certainly started
to run hot in the value investing community. And then at some point in time, I don't remember
when. It must have been later than 2015 because no one talked about Bitcoin at the time.
But Buffett and Manga went out and talked about Bitcoin being rat poison and then entire
value investing community, more or less, when with that, perhaps for a good reason, perhaps not.
And you were sort of like persona non-grata if you said that you invested in that.
So anyways, what Preston and I then did was we had a call and we talked about it.
We talked about the investment side.
We talked about the business side.
We talked about that it probably would be better if he set up his own show talking about
Bitcoin and I continue with value investing on another format, which is what we do now.
And not because it's very secretive. I publish my portfolio annually and everyone can Google it,
find it if they want to, and it's been documented. There are also been other times where I talked a bit more about my view on Bitcoin,
but I kind of prefer not to talk too much about it, which is a bit ironic because I know I just spent a few minutes talking about it,
but you sort of like in the outline put me a bit on the spot, which I also kind of like, so I think that's perfectly fine.
Then the other thing is that a podcast where you say, hey, I'm just going to wait for this hundred bagger to take off and not do anything.
thing for a decade or more, it just wouldn't be a great podcast, I think, goes out multiple
times a week. But anyways, if you used to think that, or if you do think that investing is all
about discounted cash flows, and if something doesn't have discounted cash flows, then it's a bad
investment. I don't know. I guess I just look at it from a different standpoint. I more look at it
as, I want my portfolio to be anti-fragile, defined as I want to reach my financial goals as many
times as thousands out of a thousand times if that's possible. And I see hard money having a role
in all of those thousands scenarios. So it's more a question of where can I find the highest
return with the lowest amount of risk? So even if you look away from financial history,
I think I've just changed my framework a bit where I'm looking more to see what kind of expected
return can I get and how do I minimize risk at the same time. And I've just become a bit more
permitting about it. So I guess, yeah, hot money falls into that bucket. And to my point before,
even for the very best investor, Buffett history, has ever seen, he made his ton of money
in silver investments back in 1997, which we sometimes tend to forget. So perhaps you're just
taking a page from his playbook and then adding your own color to it. Let's take a quick break
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All right.
Back to the show.
Yeah.
So it sounds to me like the main reason you want to own hard money,
you defining that as gold and Bitcoin,
is that you want to protect yourself from high levels of inflation
or some sort of currency reset where the currency is revalued against some sort of hard money or commodity.
And Preston has just got me thinking so much about this topic in particular.
So when I look at the past, say, 10 years or so, I think it's no doubt to me that we've seen
significant asset price inflation that's largely been a result of money printing.
So if we just look at home prices, for example, home prices are rising faster than average wages.
So many people are starting to ask themselves how they're ever going to buy a home.
So for some people who just might not have positioned themselves well financially, they're
sort of just forced to either just continue renting or go and have just a lower standard
of living, whether it be a smaller home or buying older home than those people in the past.
And it's sort of this interesting dichotomy where like the U.S. is such a prosperous country.
You know, of course I'm talking about the U.S. as a U.S. citizen here.
and I know we have a lot of listeners in other countries, but just speaking sort of from personal
experience, we have this very prosperous country, but asset holders are continuing to get
wealthier and wealthier, and a lot of other people who are asset holders are just largely
being left behind in some ways. I think back to Q1 2020 in the mastermind discussion.
It was with you, Preston, and Toby Carlisle. Preston pitched Bitcoin in a discussion that was
largely focused around stocks for many years. And Bitcoin at the time,
was trading around $9,000. I was curious how home prices have developed since then. So if you look at
average home prices from that time to November 2024, so March 2020 through November 2024,
average home prices in the U.S. went from 269,000 to 404,000. So that's a 50% increase
in nearly five years. Wages over that time went up less than half of that amount. And one thing
that Preston did that just sort of opened my eyes was instead of using your unit of account as
US dollars, try using your unit of account as Bitcoin. So one thing he would do is always reference
Apple. So Apple's revenues over time in terms of Bitcoin would go down, their income over time would
go down because of this emerging store value assets is what I would maybe call it. It's just
seeing a lot of adoption and is appreciating over time much faster than most asset prices. So
So had you denominated home prices in Bitcoin over that March 2020 to November 24 time period,
the value of a home in the U.S. went from 30 Bitcoin to 4.25 Bitcoin, which is an 85% decrease.
Now, this isn't my way of saying that Bitcoin has to be a major part of a portfolio or anything.
It's not 100% of my portfolio, and I certainly don't advocate for that.
It's an extremely volatile ride, and there's certainly no free lunches when it comes to investing.
But I just think it's so interesting that over time, the value of most assets have fallen
pretty drastically against what I would call it an emerging store value asset.
And whatever you want to call it, the prices of most things have fallen against that.
So I think I'm going to continue to have that as a portion of my portfolio and sort of
help counter against continued devaluation of the dollar.
And I mentioned the debt situation earlier where more and more debt is being issued.
And I think it also just helps sort of illustrate the power of an asymmetric bet.
where the most that you can lose is what you put in. But if it ends up being a good bet,
then you can significantly make multiples of what you put in over long time periods.
Tying back to the point on protecting against just inflation, one thing that comes to mind for
me is that many value investors would argue that the Buffett line where you can just simply
buy good businesses to protect against inflation because they can just take up their prices,
they have pricing power, and can pass on the inflation to consumers.
So how do you think about that, you know, using just businesses in general to protect against inflation?
Yeah, it's such a great question because I used to think that everything Buffett said was right.
And who am I to say that he's wrong? So please take it for what it is.
It's difficult with quotes because you don't really, it might just be taking out of context.
Perhaps you were saying a bunch of things afterwards.
I've heard the quote, but I don't know what he was saying before, what he was saying after, and what he was referring to.
So who knows?
So I come at this from a few different angles.
So for example, I don't own gold because of the risk of inflation.
I own it because of the risk of hyperinflation, which is a very different thing.
But you can just look at it as high inflation.
There are some technical differences to what hyperinflation is.
And so to your point, for example, about gold being up 27% this year, that is how you
would see it as an American in America using US dollars.
For a lot of our listeners who are not based there who are using other currencies, gold
this up significantly more than that. So I think that's just one element to that. And so briefly
about Bitcoin, because as you can tell, I keep about talking about, I don't want to talk about
anyway. So I ask for your forgiveness. Bitcoin was a bit of a different thesis. I'll see if I can
respond to a question just from this angle here. So we might feel like geniuses from having
invested. But we also have to zoom out. At a level around like 95,000, 96,000, whatever is
trading at the time recording. I think there's still a lot of upside. But
Obviously, it's lower than it was when we started covering, but it's also trading at those
levels because it's a symptom of the asset being de-resked.
Not that it's being de-resked fully by any means, but let's say compared to when we started
talking about in 2015, at the time, the idea of a Bitcoin ETF and that country having its
legal tend to just seem laughable, and here we are.
So talking about Bitcoin on our show is a bit like an astrometric bet, right?
It's sort of unlimited downside for ticking people off and no upside because those people
who have that conviction probably already listed to the other show that we have about it.
But back to your point about businesses and inflation, I think that generally, yes, great
businesses are a good protective inflation risk, but I also think it has some flaws that
doesn't cover the most extreme risks.
So for example, during the Second World War, many European stocks became worthless because of
hyperinflation.
And for others, it wasn't susceptible to that, they still became worthless because the factories
that these companies owned, they were bombed.
So there were just no value there.
And of course, in today's digital world, the risk has changed.
It's a lot harder to bomb Google's search algorithm than a factory.
I think I made my point with that.
And, yeah, we all like to get the highest possible return in our portfolio.
But really what I'm looking for is to run my portfolio a thousand times and then make sure
to take care of my family and loved ones, thousands out of those things.
thousand times. So that's one thing. And then another thing, this is just a personal thing.
I get taxed pretty heavily on public equities, whereas, for example, for private equity,
in certain structures, I don't get taxed at all. And so I think the general thesis of holding
great businesses as a protection of inflation makes sense. But perhaps it more makes sense,
if you know exactly why that person is having that thesis. How is he taxed? Where is he residing?
What's the time period he's looking at? And so on.
and so forth. So I don't necessarily think it's true a thousand out of a thousand times.
Yeah, I mean, taxes is certainly an important consideration for many investors, and I would say
especially for you. So there's been talks of an unrealized capital gains tax here in America,
and I'm like, I just can't imagine having to deal with something like that. But to my understanding,
you actually do have to deal with unrealized capital gains. Is that correct?
Yes, without going into Danish tax law, depending on how it's being.
held, there are different rules. There are some unrealized tax involved, yeah, which just changes
how you invest, which is why it's so hard to say, this is the way you should have your portfolio.
It's sort of like depends on your goals and how you're being taxed and a ton of other factors.
Yeah, and just to take that a step further, there's unrealized capital gains on public
equities, but not on something like gold or Bitcoin.
That's correct. For example, you can also make the argument that, no, sorry to be really
nerdy about this, but if you own more than 10% of a private company or sell, you don't pay
in a tax at all because there is incentive to raise money for private businesses and create
employment. So, like, everything is equal. What I should probably be doing with my time should
be to start a bunch of businesses, like from a tax perspective. And that sort of like goes back
to one of the things we talked about before. I just find it to be so much fun picking individual
stocks. But it's also one of the reasons why I only have five stocks, because if you have to
fight all of those hurdles, like those stocks really have to be good stocks. Otherwise, it doesn't
make in the sense to invest your money into them. Yeah. Well, I'm going to try and seamlessly transition
to talk about poor Charlie's Almanac here. So we talk a lot about Buffett on the show here, of course,
but I'm not sure if we give Charlie Munger as much credit as he deserves. So investors like Monash
Pabri has referred to Munger as a quantum leap above Warren in terms of intelligence. You had
mentioned to me that you read poor Charlie's Almanac every year. So at this point, you've probably
read it many, many times and more than probably most Charlie Munger fans. And it reminds me of a point
that our friend and former colleague Robert Leonard told me he had onboarded me here at TIP in 2021.
And I asked him sort of what stands out to him about working with you. And he mentioned that
he just learned so much from you. And he mentioned that one thing about you is you're really good
at reading, taking away a lot of the key concepts from a book and then applying those into your
own life. And I think we live in a world where a lot of people sort of feel this sense of
pride by having a full bookshelf or having read X number of books, but they might not apply
really much of anything of what they read. It would be like reading every book on Warren Buffett
and telling everyone you read every book on Warren Buffett, but never actually going out and buying
a stock in your brokerage account. So I'm certainly excited to learn more about what you've learned
about this wonderful book and how it's impacted your life. What books do you reread every year?
Why is poor Charlie's Almanac one of them?
That's actually the only book I reread.
I had other books on my list.
The reason why was that I read a book.
I actually don't remember the name of the book,
but it talked about how you should spend the first third of your life
reading as many different books as possible,
and then you should spend the rest of your life rereading the best books.
And I thought, oh, that seems smart.
So I created a list of books I wanted to read every year.
But only one actually made the cut in reality,
and that was Paul Charles Almanac.
And so I don't necessarily know why that's the one that made the cut.
And I didn't think about it like that before you asked me the question.
So I tried pondering a bit on that here before we started recording.
I think that there are different reasons for that.
One of them is probably that I don't go to Omaha anymore.
So it's almost like a way for me to be in Omaha while it's still being at home,
especially now that it's available in audiobook format.
It's even easier to read.
Charlie famously talked about how you should make yourself friends with the imminent dead.
And now sadly, Charlie would fall into that category.
And having read so much about him and what's every Berkshire meeting you can find online more than once,
I feel like you can draw that wisdom as if he was still here.
And I think he's just such a powerful role model to have in your life.
So I tried to become friends with him without having met him and tried to seek his guidance.
And I also think it's worth underlying that Charlie doesn't bat a thousand, which is also not
embarrassed to talk about in his book.
And so I have a process where I learn to what my heroes in life tell me, what they advise me
to do, and then I decide.
Mongo would probably tell me not to buy Bitcoin just for once, so I don't always pay attention.
But Charlie, like so many other successful people, has found that what works for them at times
tend to, they tend to think that also works for others. And I think that there are certain principles
that transcend time and culture. For example, Charlie talks about how being ultra-reliable is important,
and I do think that's true. But I also think it's worth noting that Charlie, what really made
him successful is that he's wired in a certain way. He was born and raised in the States and a certain
time, and you can point to many other factors that was very specific to him. And you're sort of like,
You shape your environment and then your environment shape you.
And I don't think anyone should try to be Charlie,
apart because you're not.
But even if you're wired like him and you're born today,
your environment would just shape you in a different way
and you wouldn't get the same benefits.
You would get different benefits from being Charlie today.
Paul Chalice Almanag is such a wonderful read.
And I think one of the reasons why is because it introduces you
to so many of the greats in world history.
And then you can make yourself friends with them.
Other imminent death.
That was how I learned about the American physicist Richard Feynman, his whole saying about
don't be fooled and the easiest person to fool is yourself.
And I wouldn't have become introduced to Feynman without Paul Charles Almanac.
And I think that's a very good mental model that I constantly use whenever, for example,
I find a new stock that seemingly is a screaming buy.
You know, I was thinking about his reason as last night.
On the mastermind community, we just talked about in RP.
And not to dive too much into that.
And I was going through the investor presentation yesterday.
and their latest 10-Q.
And I was like, oh, my God, this is so amazing.
And then I was like, am I just fooling myself?
You know?
And so I think Kyle has a position.
I think we need to make disclaimers and all that.
But I don't know.
I just think it's one example of like stopping yourself,
which I certainly didn't do a good job of before I started investing more.
I started Paul Charles Alamehameh more.
It just seemed wonderful.
Like, oh, my God, a single-digit stock and paying off debt.
And there's so much free cash low and high insider ownership,
how can this go wrong?
end, there's so many ways it can go wrong.
Anyways, I used to think whenever I was in grad school that markets were efficient,
and then I found Warren Buffett, Tyler Monger.
And then I thought the markets were always inefficient, which is also the wrong way to be
looking at it.
Because very often when something looks like a streaming buy, it's because you miss something
really important.
And you have to strike a balance, of course, because you have to assume that the mispricing
is there for a reason, and very often you'll find that it's the case.
But you also can't make that paralyze you.
So you also need to have the character to be able to load up if you truly find something
that is a screaming buy, which luckily happens from time to time.
Another powerful model I also learned from Paul Charles Elmanach is from the German
physicist Max Planck.
And he tried to immerse himself in economics.
And he couldn't do that because he found that the system was too complex and it was too
different from hard science.
And so if you want to be good at economics and investing, you also have to be okay with
knowing that you can be approximately right, and that's so much better than being exactly wrong,
which is John Maynard Keynes quote that really illustrate Plank's point here.
And then Max Blank has this wonderful quote where he says that progress advances one funeral at a time.
That's another important investing framework, and we're talking about this multi-disciplinary framework.
So let me paint some color around that.
So the idea that Max Blank had was he originally thought that if you could prove that you're right,
you could then convince the smartest scientists in the world that you're right.
And then he was like, you actually can't.
Even if you prove it, the old God are still not going to agree with you because they have
their truth and that is the truth and there is no way to debate it.
Even a hard scientist.
So he basically said that progress advances one funeral at a time.
And it sounds sad.
Whenever you put it like that, I find it to be true though.
And I generally think that's the best way to run your life and your portfolio.
So let's say whenever it comes to politics, you can think you have the best arguments in the
world. But it doesn't really matter. The other party won't listen, just like you won't listen
to them because they have a different politics than you. On that note, that's one of the
reasons why we don't want to talk politics on our podcast, because you can argue that politics
is important for investment decisions and there are. But as soon as you talk politics,
everything becomes so polarized and in this world, we just don't want to throw ourselves
into that discussion, but how do we lean into this framework as investors where progress only
advances one funeral at a time? So think about it like this. I have the best political argument.
No one can refute it, and of course people can. It doesn't matter if you're right or wrong.
The other person would still disagree and perhaps you're wrong. And this belief doesn't even have
to be deep-seated. It's really a question of the path of least resistance. And that strategy
and not panning out the way you hope.
Think about how many restaurants you've seen
that started out with a strategy
along the lines of
our food is so amazing
that we'll get a ton of customers
from word of mouth.
And of course, you sadly see
that that restaurant is going out of business
because the world just isn't that kind.
So you would have to find companies
where the product and services are so good
that you don't have to convince people to use it.
It will be their default mode
with the path of least resistance.
And so think about how that deans into the mode around big tech companies today.
Then depending on how old you are, you would have some investors out there, they would say,
I cannot convince my parents or my grandparents to use alphabets, Apple's products.
You don't need to.
Progressive advantage is one funeral at a time.
And I'm such a hypocrite.
I'm going to talk about Bitcoin now.
I think you can overlay the same mental model on Bitcoin.
It played the Max Planck framework, and then we had, it's a long time ago, we had a gentleman
called to the Mesteron, and he talked about, to me, that was not what he said on the podcast,
but the way I heard it between the lines was Progress, Advantage, one funeral at a time,
and he talked about how younger millennials and JNCs, who don't have any money, and certainly at
the time didn't have any money, were looking at this new asset class.
And then I was speaking with a lot of people about Bitcoin, and they told me.
me, they would never use it, their parents would never use it, people with money would never
use it.
And then I thought progress eventually one funeral at a time would sound so morbid whenever I put
it in that context.
I'm going to come across this bit of a jerk whenever I say that.
But in the value investing community, it's perfectly fine to make a killing, no pun intended,
to make a killing buying funeral homes at a P of 3, but it's a no-no if you invest in Bitcoin.
And then of course when you're thinking about it, the demand supplies is still ironclad
in both scenarios.
So I think you have to consider what is it that you're optimizing for.
And as you can tell, I'm not optimizing popularity in the value investing community at all.
But if we go back, take one step back here again, Buffer and Munker has previously said
that there were really 15 decisions that really make their track record, or roughly one
significant idea every five years.
So I think whenever you hear something like that, it really makes you humble.
And so there was another wonderful quote in Paul Charles Almanac where he talks about,
take a very simple idea and take it very serious.
That idea of you don't really get too many good ideas too often.
So I actually tried setting up a spreadsheet here the other day, inspired by this and are thinking
about, okay, let's say what is the best idea I had per year?
So I try it.
I don't remember that well.
My memory not that good.
So I only tried doing it for the past 10 years.
So I looked in my portfolio and I looked for the past 10 years like, what is
my best idea. And most years I didn't have any good idea. Last year, I kind of felt I might have
had a good idea. It was even not my idea that was cloned. This year, I took two new positions.
The jury is still out. So I guess you can say for good reason that I probably haven't had any good
ideas for two years. And I kind of feel like that approach, at least to me, was very sobering.
knowing that great ideas or at least great execution of great ideas don't come across very often,
knowing that even Buffett and Munger say that they only executed well on a good idea every five years,
and then try to look at your own portfolio of life and see what it boils down to.
Man, it's just a reminder to me of how biased we can all be, how emotional we can all be,
how binary we can think.
Either Bitcoin's the greatest thing to ever exist or Bitcoin is the worst thing to ever exist.
It seems like so many people are in one of those two camps, but the world is rarely so black and white.
And I think it's a reminder to me also is people tend to just not change their mind and
you shouldn't try to change their mind.
So there's a family member.
I told them about Bitcoin in 2020, around when Preston was launching his show and, you know,
was $10,000 a coin.
And they thought it was totally crazy, of course, like any normal person would.
And I think our natural inclination is like, once the price rises, then they're going to understand that I'm right.
Of course, the price is 96,000.
And they think I'm probably even crazier than back then.
People just generally tend to not change their mind.
And I'm not trying to say that the Bitcoin people are right or the non-Bitcoin people aren't right or whatnot.
It's sort of beside the point and also ties into what you're discussing on politics.
And I love that we don't discuss politics largely on the show here.
Your point on the complexities of investing in economics and munger's points in the book really
hit home for me as well. So when I started investing, I came out from a very like math and numbers
based perspective. So I'd look at Apple and I'd see Apple stock go from a P.E. of 25 to a P.E. of
30. And I would think that the stock got away from me. And over the long ground, you realize
whether you pay 25 or pay 30, like it really doesn't matter all that much.
in the long run. And it sort of makes me wonder whether someone like Buffett pays almost too much
attention to price, but who am I to question Buffett? You mentioned Munger was influenced by
his environment and life experiences shaped his viewpoints. It reminds me of a Munger's
obsession with Costco. I sort of feel that Buffett was a bit scarred investing in retail,
and he likely felt that Costco was usually too expensive for Berkshire to ever own it,
and Munger was just obsessed with all these qualitative aspects of it.
And Munger was just looking at the company through a different lens.
And he had a different life experience.
He had all these different viewpoints to look at a business like that.
And it also ties into your point on the path of least resistance.
Like, this business offered so, so much value to customers that it was just inevitable
that it would just continue to grow and just blossom.
So the end of poor Charlie's Almanac, it has a section on the psychology of human,
It highlights 25 psychological biases that we can all unknowingly fall prey to.
So for example, the fourth one he lists is the doubt avoidance tendency, and it explains how
our brains are programmed to quickly remove doubt and quickly come to a solution.
So I found that I can easily fall prey to this bias.
If you'll allow me to use an example here, we've put a really strong focus on trying to
interview investors who have a track record of beating the market. Oftentimes, I'll look at these
investors' portfolios because I'm interested in finding new stocks, and I can't help but find that
a number of these investors I've chatted with have Constellation Software as a top position.
And for the most part, I see most of them aren't too keen to sell it or trim it, even though
it's as expensive as it's ever been. So I'm an investor myself. I manage my own portfolio, and I look
at someone like Mark Leonard, I read his letters online, I see all these extremely smart people,
have it as a top position and in my mind thinks, this is just a no-brainer. Like, how could this
ever go wrong? And full disclaimer, I do own shares in Constellation Software, but I read about
this bias in Munger's book and I quickly realize that I can get excited about a stock like
Constellation quite quickly, even if the valuation is as high it's ever been. And I think that
many of us can likely fall in love with new, good ideas quickly and overlook the red flags
because we have recency bias and we see things that have just gone so well in recent years.
And then plus, when you're in a bull market and stocks seem to only go up, it kind of can bring in
some FOMO and really makes you want to get into it and creates this lo-lo-o-ploza effect of
issues that we can run into.
How about you just talk about the psychology and misjudgment, which biases you seem to
fall prey for and how you guard against these?
I could probably say all of them.
It's a bit of a cop-out if I say order 25, but I kind of feel all of 20.
I think one of the toughest biases to get rid of is the bias of resulting.
I actually want to talk a bit about that before we talk about some of the other biases in the book.
So I really like what you said there before, Clay, about wanting to interview guests that beat the market.
We want to make sure to have guests on that provide the most reliable advice, analysis to our listeners.
And it's really difficult to separate signal and noise.
And one of the ways we do that is by asking about the track record.
We set up a new system.
I'm not saying we've been very successful.
We used to get roughly, or I just know in my inbox,
they used to get around 2,000 requests annually.
Now we're down to 1,200.
I don't know.
It's probably not a great system.
But I've set up a new system with the help of our friend Guy
because I kept on complaining to him about my inbox.
And he was very kind and helped me setting up a system for inbound traffic.
So one of the things that I ask people about now is whenever they send us like a guest pitch,
I sent them to a page and then they have to like click off that they've been beating the S&P 500
for at least a decade and then provide proof.
And we've had that system up for close to a year and it hasn't happened once.
People still email us though.
No one has made proof of that.
So the way we get our guest is that we study who has already tracked records and react to them.
And ironically, most people who are beating the market are really, really hard to get on the podcast.
Whereas a lot of people who want to be on the podcast or not be in the market, which is probably
why they want to get the promotion and be on the podcast.
But anyways, I think that resulting is very tricky for better and for worse.
And whenever I talk about resulting, this is a word I learned from any Duke.
I'm sure Charlemong would also be aware of it.
But it's where you look at what is the result of a decision and then you determine whether
it's a good or bad decision and you don't really focus on the process.
focusing on the process is difficult. And focusing process is difficult because going back to your
point, Clay, about path of least resistance. The brain is 3% of your body mass and it consumes
25% of your energy. So you don't really want to think too much about it. It's very difficult
whenever we, for example, get a new guest on to be like, is this a good investor? Like all investors
would say that they have a good process. All investors would say that they take a low average risk,
whether that means that they invest in Apple or don't invest in Apple or like,
They would all say they're better average drivers and they take lower risk. That's just the way it is.
And so it's easy for me to say, and this is my not so humble brag, but I'm going to say something
afterwards, just to counter that. Two years ago, I invested in Spotify. I went on the show,
so it's all in the public record and I said, this is the time to invest in Spotify. And lo and behold,
it's up 530% in short of two years now. Obviously, I invested very little because it would be too easy
to make money if I invest big. And then more or less at the same time, I also went on the record and said,
you should invest in Alibaba. There's this genius. His name is China Monker and he's invested in
Adibaba. So let's invest a lot more in Annababa than in Spotify. And then I just lost my shirt,
right? Because it was just so brutal. Don't mess Nadiababa, or at least. And then you can say,
well, the Spotify investment was the right decision and the Adababa investment was the wrong
decision. Perhaps that's true. But it was the same brain that made 530% in two years that also
lost his shirt on Alibaba. I don't know. I ended up 30% or whatever I did.
But again, it was for a bigger amount.
And so it's very, very tricky.
Like, we can talk about a good investment process,
but it is essentially very, very difficult to figure out
if someone is a good investor, including ourselves.
And then we go back to the whole richly fine thing about,
remember the easiest person to fool is yourself.
And so every time I read Paul Charles Almanac
and this call you a human adjustment,
which is the best of all the talks,
I find myself being susceptible to all 25.
Still, I think some of them are more important to understand than others.
It's just more a question of if all 25 are equally important.
Nothing is really important.
One, I really tried to internalize is the incentive bias.
I found that to be very challenging in life, investing and running my own business.
I think one of the mistakes that I made early on after a while I stopped to learn that
incentives actually matter is that I thought that that was tied to money.
And yes, money is one incentive, but there's so many other things that's not related
to optimize for money.
So, for example, the former GE CEO, JFMLT, threw around two private jets or he was sitting
one of them and then there was another one just falling here around in case that the first one had
technical problems.
I don't think that's a question of money.
It speaks into this bias about self-importance and what that does to you to not just fly private,
but have another jet next to you.
That to make sure that, hey, if anything go wrong, you can always just take the other jet.
I have a friend who used to own his own digital marketing company.
it's now been sold and all this good and well, but he wanted to incentivize his team to do better.
So he gave everyone a bonus if they reached certain goals.
And his team was so displeased with that decision.
And whenever I heard that the first time, I was thinking that, oh, that was probably because
he needed to give them a bonus, so they got a lower base salary and there was probably why they were
displeased.
That was not the case.
The bonus was truly a bonus.
It was something that they were getting on top of their base salary.
So, we know that incentives aren't just tied to money.
So in which case, why was it that people were unhappy about getting a bonus?
Well, the team wasn't measured on their output before.
And so he was doing something that wasn't aligned with the company culture.
And you really have to understand that, say, as a business owner, or if you're looking
in as an investor and you're looking at different incentives, that yes, money and incentives
are tight at the hip, but you really win half the battle if you understand that money
He's just one of many ways to incentivize people.
One of the best talks in Paul Charles Almanac is really the talk is called practical thought
about practical thought question mark.
If you're confused, you're not alone.
I had to read that talk many times to understand what it was all about.
But it was a talk where he talked about the different biases than he also talks about here
in the human adjustment talk to explain the success of Coca-Cola.
So you learn the concept of Lodafaloosa effect.
So the Lodafelot effect is whenever you have multiple biases that build on each other and then
they drive you in one direction to do certain actions, for example, to buy a product.
And so in Munger's talk, he was talking about you should choose the more expensive sounding
name, Coca-Cola and several glottis sugar caffeinated water, or the bias towards
you should carbonate water so there is a bias to associate it with champagne, or tap into the association
bias by sponsoring various events that makes you really happy, such as in sports or featuring
attractive females in your ad if you're targeting a specific demographic.
There are so many of those biases that can pull you in one direction.
And so after reading those talks a few times, I was thinking, okay, so that makes sense for
Coca-Cola.
I don't know if there's any money to be making Coca-Cola right now.
But at the time, I was also studying MS.
And then I was thinking, okay, let me try and read those.
those talks and then just replace Coca-Cola with MS. And then you're like, okay, I understand the
business model now, which I certainly didn't do before. It's all about creating that Lodafalo
Perlera effect. And so it really feels like every time that you read Paul Charles
Eminac, you learn something new. It's like asking how many times a man can cross a river,
you know, it's not the same river, it's not the same man. And I know it's the same book,
but it feels like it's a different book every time you read it.
Yeah, I mean, your point on money not driving everything.
I mean, if money was everything, no one would buy a $20,000 Birkin bag from Hermes.
Some people have other aspects at play.
And I mean, Hermes is such a great example of all the biases and the Lollapaloo's effect
that can be at play.
So we actually did a sort of a deep dive on Hermes with Sriviz Winnathan on episode
659, if anyone's interested in that when I was in New York City for our Mastermind
community events. I made sure to stop by one of the malls where there's all these luxury companies.
So when someone like me that was just like an outsider looking at LVMH and Hermes, like,
oh, these are pretty good businesses. They have these great products. They have a loyal following
and whatnot. And then you go into this mall and I'm like, holy cow, this company has so many
competitors. And I'm like, how in the world are they able to do what they're able to do? And it just
points to, it just makes me marvel at just how good of a business, a company like
Airmaz is, seeing all these competitors is just like, just is really amazing. And another
misjudgment I haven't widely discussed on the show is the endowment effect. So the endowment
effect effectively means that we have a tendency to overvalue things that we own relative to things
that we don't own. We just instinctively believe that what we own is objectively better than what
we don't own, which is quite interesting in itself. And I think we can all point to examples of
things that have sentimental value and whatnot. And of course, when it comes to stock investing,
this can be very dangerous in some cases. So a simple example of the endowment effect is you can
just look at parents. They tend to over appraise their children relative to how other people view
their children. So to a large extent, they can be sort of detached from reality for better or for
worse. So perhaps in some cases it can actually be beneficial to view your children in this way because
maybe more is expected of them or they're taught to have higher standards in life or higher standards
when it comes to making friends, building relationships, how they spend their time, what school
they end up going to, all these sorts of things that can tie in. But to some extent, it can be
very dangerous when it comes to stock investing or it could also even be beneficial as well because
maybe it means we're more patient with our holdings, but if we have too big of an ego and we
aren't letting go of a bad stock, then it can clearly be a mistake to let the endowment effect
creep in. Another reason that the endowment effect comes into play is because humans tend to be
loss averse. So if we own a stock, we were quite bullish on it and it's down 20%. It can be so
difficult to realize that loss and move on, even if we know that we're better off holding some
other stock. And then another interesting point with regards to this is attachment theory. So
we tend to form an emotional connection to things that we own. And our minds tend to put
more value on things that we own than the actual market value. So even if the stock's trading
at $50, our mind instinctively probably values it maybe close to $70.
because that's what we paid for it six months ago.
It's almost like the things we own become a part of our identity.
It's a part of who we are.
We don't want to let go of who we are.
It reminds me growing up, a lot of my family would drive Chevy vehicles.
So like a Chevy pickup truck, my dad would drive to work and whatnot.
And in my family, driving a Chevy vehicle was essentially a part of who we were.
So today, I drive a Chevy car, largely because I've just been conditioned to think it's a good brand.
and I'm by no means a car enthusiast.
And I know some listeners out there are going to be like,
Clay is crazy for driving this brand.
And the bubble I grew up in, when I sort of exited that,
I sort of realized how ridiculous that was.
So tying this back to stock investing,
I personally know that I can have a bias to hold a stock I'm bullish on,
sort of have the endowment effect come into play at times.
It's just so important to recognize that we're going to come across
disconverming evidence to our beliefs and our bullish bias on,
the stocks we own, and of course, it can end up hurting me eventually. To try and combat this,
I jotted down a few notes. So one thing we can do is think about if we didn't own the stock
today, if you'd be interested in buying it. So this might be a little bit of a counterintuitive
question, because if you own it, you're already positively biased in the first place. But
if the situation has changed to such an extent that you wouldn't buy the stock you're currently
holding, then maybe you shouldn't be continuing to hold it.
And perhaps the thesis has just been busted due to unforeseen circumstances leading you to not
want to start with a fresh position.
Another way to help guard against this is to write down just your investment thesis when you purchased
it.
So that way, when the thesis happens to change later down the line, then that's maybe a signal
that you should exit that position because, again, it ties in.
If the thesis has changed, maybe you wouldn't buy it today.
And then anti-duke's kill criteria can also be powerful.
you know, what would lead to you selling this investment down the road?
So how about you talk a little bit about the endowment effect?
Yeah, it's interesting that you mentioned that, Clay, I once read in a book that
most research on cars were done after the car was bought.
And that speaks to the confirmation bias.
Oh, it's such a great car.
Like, you've probably someone Googled, oh, why should I buy a Chevy?
Someone who's an enthusiast about Chevy's probably, you know, typed that up.
I don't know.
And I don't think I have a good way of combating this.
For many years, I followed that advice of imagine that you inherited the portfolio today.
What would you do?
And then I heard our co-host Kyle interview and Adjuk.
And Kyle said the same thing.
I was like, oh, my God, Kyle is so fantastic.
He was the right approach.
And Adiuk was like, yeah, that doesn't work.
She said that she referred to some studies and she was like, no.
Just knowing that you own it just makes it impossible for you.
So if it truly is that way and you're not taxed and you don't pay any fees,
actually go in and just sell it today and then see what you'll do.
And obviously people don't do that.
But that was a thesis, which is probably true.
I lost too much money because of the endowment, in fact.
And I can't remember how many times I thought, for example, with my investment with Alibaba,
then I just need to break even and then I'm going to sell it.
And of course, and I still wouldn't have been broken even if I've done that and I actually
just ended out. I want to say it was like a 30-ish percent loss, and then I invested in Bettson instead.
But anyways, this is not an endorsement or anything for Bettson. It was just like, I had a really,
really hard time letting go. And I think that one of the reasons why it finally happened was
partly that I've had so many times in the past, had a hard time letting go of a stock that was
just a losing stock, that I sort of learned my lesson. But as you can tell, I didn't learn my
lesson because I was still holding on for too long. But the other thing was that I put myself
through school playing poker. And whenever you start doing that, you also make a lot of mistakes.
One of the advantages, of course, in poker is that you have a much quicker feedback loop and you
can easily tell whenever you're right and wrong. And there's some math in there where it's easier
to tell if your process is right or wrong compared to investing. But one of the things you really
learn from the poker tables are that if you try to make your money back the way you lost them,
you're selling yourself up for trouble. So if you lose XYC dollars to the guy sitting to your right
and you're like, these are actually my poker chips and I need to do whatever I can to get my
poker chips back, then you're going to make a ton of stupid decisions. So once that dude have
taken your poker chips, then it's actually his poker chips. And it's really hard not to think about it
like that. So one thing that has helped me by no means doing a good job of that, as you can tell
from my experience with Adibaba, but I learned from losing many hands and tilting as
it's called in poker whenever you can't control yourself. I learned that think about poker
like one long game. And whenever you don't think about it as one poker session or one poker week
or one poker month, but as hundreds of thousands of millions of hands you're getting dealt,
it becomes easier to let go of a clear loser. And so way too late, and I'm by no mean doing a good job
with that, I'm implementing the same framework in my investing process where I'm thinking,
this is not an investment I have in Alibaba. This is one of many poker hands that's being
dealt to me. And now I need to make another decision. So that's how I deal with. Or perhaps
Claire, I should say that's how I don't deal with being susceptible to the endowment effect.
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Man, I think it's like such a beautiful thing that in the stock market, you don't have to make your money back the way you lost it.
As painful as it is, you can make your money in other ways when you recognized you've made a mistake.
I wanted to transition to talk about one of the more famous Munger axioms, which is to invert the problems that you're trying to solve.
I've revisited William Green's book, Richard Weiser, Happier.
he has a chapter on Charlie Munger and he interviewed Charlie in person in preparing that.
I'm sure you've thought of this a lot with regards to your own life, your own business or
your own investments. How do you apply this concept of inversion?
I try using it in my marriage. I'm not saying I'm doing a good job. You should probably
speak to my wife and ask her if I do a good job. But the reason why I thought about that
is because recently I was asked about someone I know is getting married here very soon,
and she asked me about merit's advice.
And I told her that I've been married for 14 years now.
And I couldn't tell her how to have a great marriage,
but I could tell her how to have a terrible marriage.
And perhaps she could then invert.
And so I told her she should create a life where her and her husband would not be a good version of themselves.
and it really, really be in situations where they can't be what they want to be,
and be outside of the comfort zone at all times,
and be under too much pressure for too long.
And, of course, that's not what you should be doing,
but that's how to get a terrible marriage.
I've tried, I don't think I've been successful.
I've tried for the longest time to figure out how to attract the right people into my life.
And I found that to be challenging.
Like, we all heard the average of the five people you surround yourself,
with. And I've been thinking a lot about that and thinking a lot about how do I attract good people
and I find that to be difficult to figure out who those people should be. And perhaps it's just
me. But I also inverted that problem similar to talking about a bad marriage and thinking
about what kind of person is the wrong person in my life and cut them out of my life instead.
I found that to be a simpler way to go about it. And so whenever I spend time with another
person, whether it's on an online meeting, which most of our meetings are, sometimes whenever I meet
people in person. I try, and I don't know how to measure this, but either I leave with a positive
energy or leave with a negative energy. Sometimes I don't leave with any energy at all. And so I think
it's important that you do more with the people who leave you with a positive energy, but I think
it's equally important to not continue to engage with them who leave you with a negative energy.
I find that to be very challenging, also because to Munger's point about consistency,
which is one of the biases he talks about the psychology of human adjustment, it's hard whenever
you say something not to be consistent with that. And I think knowing your own biases is just so
valuable. It doesn't always get easier even if you know your own biases, but at least you know
your own biases and can work on that. I found that there's some things in life that are just
so challenging to work through. And then I'm often surprised when I tend to keep those challenges
to myself a lot of times, just like toughen up. That's the way the world is. Just get through it. And then
from time to time, I'll share some of those challenges with you. And I don't know why I'm surprised,
but you've gone through the same challenges that I have. It's powerful in building relationships,
I think, having that sort of transparency. And then for some reason, it helps me get through those
sort of challenges, like the one you mentioned of telling someone no, essentially. Like,
surprisingly, telling people know is something that's very challenging for me to do at times. Yeah,
It makes it easier to go work through those challenges, knowing that other people have been through them as well.
And Munger is also just very blunt about cutting negative people out of your life.
I mean, it's again another situation where you just have to learn how to tell people no.
It sounds so logical, but it's just so, so emotionally hard to do.
How about inversion and how it ties into your portfolio?
How do you think about that and the way you diversify and set up your portfolio?
It's a very good question.
And I think it's very powerful in building your portfolio.
Like most of the listeners, I don't want to lose money, but it's not enough to say,
just don't lose money.
I feel like I work so hard to achieve my financial goals.
And so actually would probably also define what do I mean whenever I say financial goals.
So do what I want with whoever I want for as long as I want.
That's my financial goals.
I know independence has been very important for channel mongar.
It's never been about the money.
It's been about having that independence.
And to your point before about Monker saying, oh, just cut negative people out of your life.
It's easier to say if you're a billionaire.
I'm not a billionaire, but I'll imagine that if you're rich, it's probably a lot easier to have that approach.
But even so, it's still tricky to do because it's hard to say no to people and especially
hard to say no to people you like.
Allow me to tap into this wonderful world of China Monger, of this saying, like, take a very simple
idea and take it very seriously.
I think that in poker, we have an expression called playing with scared money.
And playing with scared money is whenever you're focusing too much on not losing,
which means that you don't maximize the opportunities whenever you have the odds in your favor.
And so whenever that happened, you're not a good version of yourself,
and you'll let other people push you around.
And so the irony in poker, just as it is, an investing in life,
is that in an attempt not to lose, you are actually losing by having that strength.
So the way I think about that inversion and that simple idea for my own portfolio is that
I'm going to sound like a broken record here, but if I run my portfolio a thousand times and
then say, okay, my goal is to do what I want with whoever I want for as long as I want,
and I want to do that a thousand out of a thousand times.
Of course, this quickly becomes very philosophical and you also break your feedback loop to
some extent, but I found it to be very useful.
start thinking about that a little bit differently, at least I do.
Charlie Munger refers to the Roman poet, Cicero, which was like 100 years before Christ.
And he quotes his saying, he who does know what happened before who was born will walk
through life like a child.
And so if we go back to this point here about macro that we're not supposed to talk about
and we keep getting back to, we had a world of a fiat standard since 1971 and not before
world history. So 53 years, is that short term? Is that long term? Depends on how you look at it. And
if I run my portfolio a thousand times, if I do that a thousand times, what's going to break me in some
of those scenarios is not whether my investment in Berksa Heatherway is going to return 4% or 20%
or the next decade. It's about whether or not I'll get wiped out by whatever it could be.
So I've definitely taken that to heart.
So here at the time of recording, just sort of like to give an idea of where I am with my
portfolio for better or worse.
Of my investor's portfolio, I have 60% in public equities, 4% in hot money.
And it's a bigger allocation of hot money that I would likely have.
And it's not designed that way.
And the reason is threefold.
I should probably also say that I'm going to late to my portfolios if anyone is interested.
But I think whenever this goes out, I don't know if I only update it once a year. I go crazy
if I look at my track record more than once a year. So whereas I have a really, really hard time
not looking at stock quotes on a daily basis, I have a surprisingly easy time not looking
at my track record and my overall portfolio. I think it's, I don't know, it's probably just the
way it unwireed. So I update it once a year and I make it public if anyone is interested.
I think it's important going back to understanding what your financial goals are. So for example,
I have a rule that I would only add up to 10% of my best idea at cost, but I also like
to let my winners run.
Like, you don't want to cut your flowers and water your weeds.
So sometimes something you invest in goes well and then just takes up more in your portfolio.
And I think we also talked about taxation before, not to drone on too much about taxation,
but I could easily see an argument for having more than 60% in public equities, but again,
depending on how you tax, perhaps it just doesn't make as much sense to you.
I meet investors who have a model portfolio and say they might, I don't know, have, let's say,
$100 million.
And then they would be saying, look, I don't want to lose my money.
What is the right asset allocation?
How much should I put in stocks?
How much should I put in bonds?
And I completely understand where that's coming from.
I don't think there's anything wrong with having that approach.
But it's very difficult to, that's also one of the many, many reasons why we don't provide
any recommendations, and there are some legal reasons that we can't give any kind of recommendations,
but people come at this from so many different angles, that whenever you present, this is my
portfolio, does that make sense to you? It really requires such an in-depth knowledge about that
person and their finances and their goals and the risk tolerance. For example, I think I have a
high risk tolerance, but most people say that they have, just like most people say that they're
above average drivers, but I've put different things in place for me so I don't take too many
risks. For example, I have this rule. I don't put more than 10% at cost into a specific position.
I used to make a living out of playing poker. And so I know that I tend to take bigger swings
and just wired that way. So I have to guard myself against taking two big swings.
I have a friend, and he's sort of like at the opposite end of the spectrum where he says that
he would not invest in less than 5% because he knows that he does.
doesn't have a high risk tolerance and he sort of like would then start allocating, I don't know,
0.1% to that position and 0.2% to another position, nothing's going to change. So he's forcing
himself to whenever he's making a bet, he has to make it bigger. So I think you can set rules
up for yourself by inversion by sort of like countering some of your own biases. And then there's
of course like another element where I'm saying, hey, look, I can put up up to 10% at cost. But that's
also because I spend less than what I make. So I still accumulate wealth. Like if I was 70,
perhaps my threshold would not be 10%, perhaps it would be 5%. So it also very much depends on
where you're coming from whenever you're doing that. And so I was speaking with a community
member the other day. And he said to me that he was a bit puzzled about why we talk so much
about individual stock picks in the mastermind community. And it's perfect fine. I've got that question
quite a few times. And I think we all tend to have a bias towards thinking that other.
look at it the same way we do or have the same experiences as we do.
So if you come at this and you're saying, look, I have $100 million.
I have to figure out the trust funds.
I had to figure out which of the foundations I founded, how much money to allocate to which foundation.
All studies show that it doesn't make any sense to picking individual stocks.
Why should I?
And why do everyone talk so much about stock investing and picking individual stocks?
It doesn't really make any sense.
I can easily understand where that person is coming from.
Like, no, it doesn't make any sense for you to do that, especially if the thought of reading
a 10Q or 10K makes you fall asleep.
But then there are other listeners to this podcast, they have a $100,000 portfolio and
they're dreaming of that 100 backer that could make them financial independent.
Why wouldn't they be looking for the next 100 backer?
It's crazy for them not to look at it.
And they don't think about the next trust fund or the next which foundation to donate
$10 million to, like it's different.
So they couldn't think of anything more exciting than reading a 10Q, even if they weren't
looking for a 100 backer.
So I don't even know if I answer you a very question that you asked you there at the top.
But as you can see, I've painted myself into a corner.
So I'm going to throw it back over to you, Clay.
It's largely an approach of taking many uncorrelated bets and trying to protect your own
against your own biases, asking yourself, how can things go terribly wrong?
How can this portfolio fall apart?
Where are my blind spots?
But yeah, there's certainly a lot to think about with regards to having many uncorrelated assets,
especially when you're trying to stay wealthy rather than get wealthy. Yeah, for me personally,
a lot of my investment decisions are all about what sort of rate of return can I get. Also,
of course, limiting downside as well because losing money can really set you back in my own
pursuit of financial independence. So before we drone on too longer about Fort Charlie's
Almanac, I wanted to mention some of the things that we're planning for Omaha during the Berkshire weekend,
the first weekend of May in 2025.
Also just take the chance to just reflect a bit on 2024 and just sort of some of the things
we've been working on over the past year within our mastermind community especially.
So Kyle and I will be doing a yearly takeaways episode here soon with regards to the podcast.
I think there's that saying that we overestimate what we can do in a day and underestimate what
we can do in a year. So over the past year, we've onboarded more than 80, just fantastic people.
We've recorded more than 60 videos, all sorts of things we discussed. You recently hosted a call
on portfolio management. A number of members have done stock presentations on stocks like Kelly Partners
Group, Mercado Libre, NRP, Terravist Industries, among others. And then we've had Q&As with
guests like Chris Mayer, Ian Castle, Joseph Sheposhenich, and John Huber.
among a number of others. And Kyle and I hosted two in person events this year. So the first one was
in Omaha in May and then the second one in New York City in October. And you also hosted a couple
dinners in London and Copenhagen. So meeting so many great people in the community has just
really been such a blessing to me to say the least. When we talk about bringing in high quality
people into our lives, it's certainly raised the bar for me and who I want to allow into my life. And
And I've just been so appreciative of how so many members are so giving of their time and their knowledge.
And Munger also has us saying that you aren't going to get very far in life on your own.
And I definitely tend to agree and that you want to surround yourself with great people.
And for me personally, that really started with joining TIP and frankly just learning so much from you every week and from other team members for the past three years.
And now in managing the mastermind community and just meeting so many amazing people there as well.
It's just been such a blessing for me looking back at 2024.
I love to use that opportunity to look back when I can.
But yeah, before I give off the handoff to what we have going on in Omaha, I'd like to give you the opportunity to share anything you've picked up over the past year from the community.
Yeah, so this has been an absolutely wonderful year.
And as always, we mainly talk about stock investing.
So there have been a lot of interesting stocks.
And one of the things I really like is whenever we do the bull bearer case on the stock, I hope that we're going to do more of that.
And I don't want to make it sound like it's because I'm bored of stock investing because I'm
certainly not. But I've been surprised to see how much I've enjoyed learning from the other
community members about acquiring private businesses. Many members from our community
has built their wealth through private businesses and perhaps they had an exit and then since
turned to public equities because they didn't want to be operational anymore. And so I like to
think, or perhaps it's just my vanity talking, that I might have a small edge in stock
investing, perhaps I don't, as you might have listened to me throughout this episode. But I feel like
I've been helping some of the community members with various stocks and their process. And I think they've
helped me a lot in terms of understanding private businesses and how to acquire them and what to pay
for them and how to structure financing. And that has just been immensely helpful for me.
Another change in 2024 is that I feel like our community has just organically evolved.
To some extent, I feel like parts of it has evolved from being a, I'm going to say a hundred
bagger community, and I mean that in the best possible way, but going more from like a hundred
bagger community more to a portfolio focused community. So to some extent, it has gone from a group
of investors. We are, I think we're like 115 right now. So I can't speak for anyone. These are very
broad strokes. So a group of investors who are looking for the hundred baggers, and we still have a
big part of the group that's interested in that. But then we also have another group who are
a little less interested in that because they already achieved their financial goals a long time ago.
And as crazy as it sounds, a hundred back wouldn't change anything for them because they already
have what they need. So they might be a bit more focused on generational wealth. We might talk about
philanthropy, legacy, trust funds. Sometimes some of those calls would be recorded. Sometimes it wouldn't
be recorded. And it could also be more about like managing multiple asset.
classes, rather than seeking one investment that could transform the wealth and perhaps make them
financial independence. So it's a different crowd, and they typically are looking for other things.
I certainly think there's people in the community for everybody. Yeah, I mean, some of the most
interesting members are sort of what you're referring to, like the family office or family
wealth type individuals who are thinking about bigger things than just achieving returns.
And those types of people spend a lot of their days just sitting, thinking,
learning about certain things, and it can become lonely.
And hopefully the community is just an outlet where they can connect with like-minded people
who are going through similar struggles.
And yeah, just thinking about similar things.
And of course, we allow those people to connect and get to know each other in New York
City, Omaha, and London.
So for those that are heading to Omaha, TIP is hosting a number of events.
So we have one set of events that are free and then one set is paid for our TIP Mastermind
community. So my colleague, Sean O'Malley, will be organizing our free events. So we're going to have
a social on Friday and Saturday evening and I'll have a link in the show notes with more details.
Or if you're interested in the free events, you can reach out to Sean at S-H-A-W-N at the
investorspodcast.com. And I also mention the event has limited space. So it's going to be first-come,
first-serve. I'll be hosting a couple of dinners and socials for our mastermind community.
This is our paid offering for private investors, entrepreneurs, high net worth individuals.
And we'll also be organizing a bus tour to sort of see all of what Omaha has to offer.
So Nebraska Ferengiburbart, see Buffet House, et cetera.
And this will be my sixth meeting that I've been to in Omaha.
So we'll have a link for the mastermind community and then our other meetups as well in the show notes for those interested.
And we actually, on our website, we also have information on just how to attend the meeting, how to get credentials, everything you need to
know. And as we say every year, if you'd like to go to Omaha, I would encourage you to book your
flight in hotel as soon as possible, because if you wait until late April, it's likely the flight
prices are going to be outrageous. If there are any flights left, the hotels are just going to be
pretty insane. So, yeah, I'd encourage you to get that booked as soon as possible. It's the first
weekend of May. The Berkshire meeting itself is on Saturday, May 3rd, and then we have events on
Friday and Saturday. And then there's a number of other events that we go to as well that I can
keep you on the loop on. Yeah, all of that linked in the show notes. We have a page for the Berkshire
Hathaway annual meeting, and then we have our Mastermind community page. That's the investorspodcast.
com slash mastermind. Yeah, I think that's all. I really wanted to cover today. Stig.
Thanks so much for joining me here to discuss markets, Port Charlie's Almanac and the community.
I really appreciate it. Yeah, you bet. Thanks for inviting me. I don't know if you're a co-host or a guest,
but thanks for bringing me on. In any case, Clay, it was a lot of fun.
Great. Well, I always enjoy it Stig, so thank you.
Thank you for listening to TIP.
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