We Study Billionaires - The Investor’s Podcast Network - TIP794: Keynes And The Markets w/ Kyle Grieve
Episode Date: February 27, 2026Kyle discusses the investing evolution of John Maynard Keynes and the timeless lessons modern investors can draw from his successes and failures. IN THIS EPISODE YOU’LL LEARN: 00:00:00 - Intro 0...0:03:50 - Why John Maynard Keynes is such a fascinating case study in evolving as an investor 00:08:28 - A key resource that helped him think of assets from a bottom-up approach 00:10:59 - Why Keynes's experiences of going broke multiple times helped shape him into a long-term thinker 00:17:13 - How he thought about speculation and investing, and used that to beat the market 00:28:16 - How he improved his temperament, overcame overconfidence, and adopted a long-term mindset 00:36:21 - His thoughts on diversification and reducing risk 00:41:30 - Why he believed that markets were social systems, and the errors that exposed investors to 00:50:25 - What he thought about short-term volatility 01:01:16 - Why Keynes used adaptability as such a powerful tool 01:03:50 - Six impactful takeaways 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. Learn how to join us in Omaha for the Berkshire meeting here. Read Keynes and the Market. Read Concentrated Investing. Follow Kyle on X and LinkedIn. Related books mentioned in the podcast. Ad-free episodes on our Premium Feed. NEW TO THE SHOW? Get smarter about valuing businesses in just a few minutes each week through our newsletter, The Intrinsic Value Newsletter. Check out our We Study Billionaires Starter Packs. Follow our official social media accounts: X | LinkedIn | Facebook. Browse through all our episodes here. Try our tool for picking stock winners and managing our portfolios: TIP Finance Tool. Enjoy exclusive perks from our favorite Apps and Services. Learn how to better start, manage, and grow your business with the best business podcasts. SPONSORS Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors: HardBlock Human Rights Foundation Simple Mining Unchained Masterworks Netsuite Vanta Shopify Fundrise References to any third-party products, services, or advertisers do not constitute endorsements, and The Investor’s Podcast Network is not responsible for any claims made by them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm
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John Maynard Keynes compounded capital at roughly 16% per annum for over two decades,
beating the broader UK index by nearly 6% annually during that stretch.
But probably the most incredible part of this was that he achieved those returns
while navigating some of the most tumultuous times in human history.
He did this through the end of World War I, the Great Depression, and all of World War II.
He had to not only figure out which businesses were good,
but also which would survive potential damage to their operations.
All will try to withstand the volatility that the market would throw at him during peak periods of uncertainty.
In today's life, most of the uncertainty that we face stems from factors such as interest rates and inflation.
Keynes had to deal with the uncertainty of whether his country would still exist or whether a manufacturing plant would be bombed out and no longer able to produce any revenue.
But most investors don't really think of Cainth in this light.
They think of him as an economist who had a large impact on economics and then just stop there.
But in reality, Keynes developed some of the most impactful investing concepts much earlier
than most of the investing legends that we discussed on the show.
But because many of his concepts are just buried in boring old economic textbooks,
they aren't widely known to the general investing community.
Another often cited problem with Keynes was that he went broke twice.
And while these two events were obviously very painful for him,
I also think that they were basically his tuition to help him understand that he just couldn't rely on his great intellect to deliver meaningful and sustainable returns.
As a result of reflecting on this, he drastically evolved his thinking about time horizons and went from trying to generate returns, you know, as fast as possible to understanding that the key to investing success was lengthening his holding periods and avoiding the overactivity that just plagues the average investor.
Some of the biggest gifts that he had to the investing world were around understanding that markets are largely social systems.
If you make the mistake of thinking that the market is permanently rational, you will go crazy,
simply because it's going to make irrational decisions nearly all the time.
Another great lesson that he imparted was to differentiate between speculation and investing.
When you understand how each of these is defined, it really helps to ensure that you're investing in acting in ways that are congruent with success.
Now, one of the biggest lessons that I learned from Keynes was regarding concentration.
And not necessarily just to put all of your money into your best ideas, but also to understand
that there's certain ideas that simply don't deserve to have large amounts of capital behind
them.
And it's not necessarily a mistake to have a few of these bets in your portfolio once you look
at them through a probabilistic lens.
Now, let's dive right into the fascinating evolution and lessons from John Maynard Keynes.
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Now for your host, Kyle Greve.
Welcome to The Investors Podcast.
I'm your host Kyle Greve, and today we're going to examine lessons from an economist
that basically all investors can learn from.
Sounds kind of strange, doesn't it?
Most of the time, most investors, including me, rightfully show just outright disdain for
economists simply because they confidently attempt to kind of paint these accurate pictures
of what's happening in the economy, only to be correct at pretty much the same rate as a coin flip.
But today's economist, John Maynard Keynes, is a member of the eminent dead who is definitely worth
learning from. I won't be going over his economic theories at all in this episode, as they
aren't nearly as interesting to me as what we can learn from his very, very successful
investing career and money management adventures.
Now, the biggest misconception about Keynes is that he was simply just an economist.
And while he's obviously best known for his contribution to economics, which still reverberate
today, he was actually an exceptional investor as well.
So what most people don't know about Keynes is that he managed the King's College chess front
from 1931 until 1945.
And he also managed separate accounts starting somewhere in the early 1920s.
Now, it's pretty hard to get a complete picture of his results from both of these times,
but some others have tried to collect them.
So in the great book called Concentrated Investing, they cite research showing that,
from August of 1922 to August of about 1946,
Keynes' annual returns were about 16% per annum,
beating the UK index by nearly 6% per annum.
Another fascinating aspect of Keynes was that he evolved very significantly as an investor
as he gained more and more experience.
While he always had some sort of an ego,
he kind of shifted away from relying on his economic insights
for trading to a much better approach.
And that was to become an investor
who had concentrated his bets in a few great businesses
that he could hold for multiple years.
Keynes wrote, as time goes on,
I get more and more convinced that the right method in investment
is to put fairly large sums into enterprises,
which one thinks one knows something about,
and in the management of which one thoroughly believes.
Now, you may be asking,
why should I bother listening to an investor
who was born in the 19th century
and whose career ended shortly after World War II?
But I think any modern investor can learn from Keynes' mistakes
and from the strategies that he eventually came to see
as powerful at generating exceptional returns.
And the interesting thing about a strategy that I'll be diving much more into here briefly
was that it's a strategy that many great investors already have employed in the decades since
Keynes passed away.
And I think it will be used by many great investors and investing legends that are being made
today.
Now, Keynes' early career helps us understand why he began primarily as a speculator and later
transition to a more long-term-based investor.
So one of Keynes' earlier bets was made in 1919 right after World War.
1. Keynes had been in the middle of editing his book, The Economic Consequences of Peace.
So he felt that he had a very good grasp of the economic impacts of World War I.
After spending time studying currency markets, he formed a view that he was bullish on US dollars
and bearish on most European currencies. So he placed his bets and he was actually quite
successful in this one, earning about £6,000 in profits.
Now, the initial success here led him to team up with a former colleague to form a syndicate
predicated on speculating specifically on currency fluctuations.
They raised about 30,000 pounds from family and friends. He quickly made a 30% return
during just the first three months of operations. But just a few months later, the fund was actually
completely crushed. Cains ultimately had to actually take out a loan and liquidate portions of his
personal portfolio just to clear his debts to the syndicate, but he did so. So while Cains was able
to make trades based on his valuable insights, he was also often wrong about the timing and the scale
of his decisions. He was very focused at this time on being kind of this top-down macro-heavy focus
investor and he believed that was his edge in the market. The problem with this is that, as Keynes famously
said, markets can remain irrational longer than you can stay solvent. And at the time, he didn't
have a framework for how much investor behavior affected markets, but he later remedied that.
Now, I like to think of myself as a fundamentals-based investor, but I have to admit that I picked
businesses for their macro tailwinds before. And once those macro tailwinds and, once those macro tailwinds
end, things get pretty ugly. One choice I made was on a tiny microcap that manufactures a variety
of trusses and engineered wood products. I bought this business back in 2023. From 2021 to
23, Canada, where this business is domiciled, saw surge in new builds, mainly because we had a large
influx of new immigrants increasing our population numbers, but also because interest rates were just
very, very low. So builders could borrow cheaply, which increased their returns, and buyers could also
borrowed cheaply, allowing them to bid up the prices of homes. It was a win for the business.
The problem was that I assume that this level of new builds was maybe a little bit more sustainable
into the future. And unfortunately, I was wrong. It wasn't. I still hold this business because I realized
that the cycle will eventually turn upwards again at some point. And even bottom cycle,
they are still generating profits, albeit at a much lower rate than what I originally hypothesized.
So while this wasn't a macroeconomic play, it was an error on my end not to better understand the industry's
natural cyclicality so I can make better decisions about the business's medium-term outlook.
Now, back to Keynes.
Lucky for him, he came across a book that completely changed his investing strategy.
The book was titled Common Stocks as Long-Term Investments by Edgar Lawrence Smith.
It was one of the earliest books to measure the quantitative performance of stocks versus
bonds in the U.S. from around 1866 until 1922.
And the hypothesis was simple.
Equities outperformed bonds during periods of inflation due to the corporation's prices.
passing power. During periods of inflation, bonds had no such advantage because their coupon payments
were completely fixed. Cains could see this hypothesis working in practice. So in Germany, for instance,
where hyperinflation was completely rampant, shoppers were actually entering grocery stores with a trolley
full of nearly worthless cash, only to leave with a handful of tiny items. So clearly, the value of bonds
and cash during that time in Germany was not a wise place to have money. Smith later updated his work and
actually discovered that stocks also outperform bonds even during deflationary times.
But the big finding that Smith really imparted to Keynes was in the compounding nature of
stocks that were not offered by bonds.
Companies could reinvest profits, creating an environment for compounding to take place.
And if prices dropped, companies could theoretically invest in things like manufacturing equipment
at really low prices, which would eventually pay off very handsomely once prices normalized.
So not only did equities provide a stable cash flow stream similar to bonds,
But they could also increase capital gains, a feature that was obviously completely not available
to bondholders.
So what this shift meant was Keynes was now relying on a much different process.
Instead of focusing on macro and then finding bets that fit his narrative, he was actually
looking more for businesses that could just compound and value.
Now, I'm sure he probably considered some macroeconomic forecast in his analysis, but he focused
much more on other factors, which we'll get to here shortly.
So when you make this shift, you change your process, which is hopefully going to impact
your outcomes. So for any investor that's stuck on, you know, making macroeconomic predictions and
asking whether the market will go up or down, I think Keynes would tell you to focus on your
process and what you prioritize. A really good business can do well in all sorts of market
environments. And this is despite what happens with index funds. Just because an index is expensive
doesn't mean there aren't cheap, exceptional businesses out there that can make great investments.
You just have to be willing to go out there and find them. Now, another crucial problem that
Keynes overcame that many investors seem to struggle with is this problem of market timing.
When Kane's first approach investing, he did so from an ego-driven perspective.
He once said that his superior knowledge of economic cycles gave him the means of forecasting
the future superior to the ordinary.
But boy, was he wrong.
Before the Great Depression, Keynes traded commodities, futures, including rubber, wheat, cotton,
and tin.
But as the Depression began, these trades turned against him and very quickly.
Due to his, quote, superior knowledge, unquote, he believed that these lower prices were simply a feature of a regular business cycle.
But where he erred was in believing that the Great Depression was just another part of a cycle, and it wasn't.
Making things even worse, Kane set up his positions across different industries, believing that diversification would balance things out.
As a position in one commodity decreased, he believed he was hedged because other positions would rise.
Because of this strategy, he stayed in his positions well into the depression.
and the results were ugly.
He'd already gone broke in the 1920s, and this time he lost nearly 80% of his capital
on these more speculative bets, as he once again believed that he could accurately predict the market.
But by 1936, when another one of his books, the general theory of employment, interest, and money
was published.
It's clear that he had had a lightbulb moment.
He writes,
If I may be allowed to appropriate the term speculation for the activity of forecasts in the
psychology of markets, and the term enterprise for the activity of forecasting the perspective
yield of assets over their entire life, it is by no means always the case that speculation
predominates over enterprise. In one of the greatest investment markets in the world, namely
New York, the influence of speculation in the above sense is enormous. Even outside the field
of finance, Americans are apt to be unjuly interested in discovering what average opinions
believes average opinion to be, and this national weakness finds its nemesis in the stock market.
It is rare, one is told, for an American to invest as many Englishmen do for income,
and he will not readily purchase an investment except in the hope of capital appreciation.
This is only another way of saying that when he purchases an investment,
the American is attaching his hopes not so much on its prospective yield as to a favorable
change in the conventional basis of valuation, i.e. that he is, in the above sense, a speculator.
Now, this is a great quote worth unpacking because it contains a ton of wisdom. So the first
interesting point concerns his distinction here between a speculator and an enterprising investor.
As Benjamin Graham later concluded, there are two types of investors. Those who speculate,
or are those who attempt to figure out what others think about a stock in its price,
then profit once there's someone else to sell it to at a higher price. Then there's the
enterprising investor who focuses more on intrinsic value.
Keynes used prospective asset yield.
There's still nothing wrong with this, although I believe the markets have evolved significantly
since Keynes' day.
For instance, he seems to discourage profiting from stocks based on capital gains.
I personally prefer to make nearly 100% of my returns from capital gains, and there are
very good reasons for this.
So the first one here is capital allocation.
A business can do things like pay down debt, make distributions to shareholders in the forms
of dividends or share of purchases, or my personal favorite,
just reinvest into the business. In Keynes' days, most businesses were very asset-heavy manufacturing
businesses. And since many investors had to deal with scams, they treated dividends as part of their
due diligence. If a business paid a dividend, chances are that its books weren't cooked and they were
paying shareholders with real money. But today, in many markets around the world, especially in
North America, where I'm largely concentrated, the risk of scams is very low. Are they still out there?
Yes. But the regulatory bodies that we have out there to protect us tend to be very good.
at filtering them out. And I don't think many Western investors into public equities are really that
worried about this potential problem when they invest. So let's look at a business that I own and one that my
co-host Stig pitched on TIP 557. The business is Technion. Now, I have a very good idea of when I
started buying this because it was before my wife went into labor. And one thing that I admired about
this company, which is a serial acquire of niche industrial businesses, is that it made a very good
capital allocation decision early on. So they had actually been paying a dividend.
But since they were able to find some just very good acquisition candidates with high returns,
it actually made no sense to pay a dividend.
So they actually just canceled the dividend and decided to allocate all profits back into the business.
To me, this shows management is thinking like an owner.
As a shareholder, I'd rather have a business like Technion, which has a track record of great acquisitions,
keeps acquiring businesses rather than giving me cash.
In my view, the act of paying cash to shareholders is a signal that the management has nowhere else to invest its profits.
And in many businesses, paying a dividend is actually the best possible capital allocation decision.
So if we looked at a business such as Costco, I think we all know that it's a very, very good
business and there's no argument there. Costco boasts a 22% return on invested capital, which is a very
good number. But they would not be able to sustain this number if they put 100% of their profits
back into the business. In the last 12 months, they've reinvested about $1.2 billion, but during the
exact same time, they've actually distributed $3.7 billion to shareholders in the form of dividends
and buybacks. Now, since Costco can only develop so many stores at a time, they simply would
not be able to reinvest all of their excess profits at that 22% return. If they tried,
their returns would likely fall below their cost of capital, which, as we know, destroys
shareholder value. So instead of trying to do that, they have made the intelligent capital allocation
decision to distribute a portion of their profits back to shareholders. Now, while I love
Costco, the business, I'm not as crazy about it as an owner of the stock, simply because I prefer
businesses like Technion, which can earn a similar return invested capital to Costco, but reinvest
100% of its profits back into the business. This means, provided that I'm correct on my assumptions
that TechNon will be able to increase its intrinsic value at a rate of rate that's much faster
than Costco, and that's simply because it can compound all of its profits at a very high rate of
return rather than just compound a fraction of profits at a high rate of return.
Now, I would here disagree with Keynes when he said that if you don't invest for income, you are
speculating.
You can even take Keynes' approach of using earning yields as an abstraction of sorts.
If a company has a high prospective earnings yield, then theoretically, if it decided to stop
investing in the business and distribute that cash as shareholders, you would actually be looking
at a business where cash is paid out from the business to shareholders.
That's one way of doing it.
And many investors look at evaluation and yields that way.
But where Keynes was completely correct and where I completely agree with them is that speculators
at their core do not care much for intrinsic value.
They're simply buying a stock because they think someone else will pay them more for it.
And I think most speculators don't even have a view of what the intrinsic value of business actually is.
This is an egregious error that I think all investors should attempt to avoid at all costs.
And Keynes showed exactly why this is such a bad error.
So I mentioned earlier that Keynes was attempting to profit from investing through his superior
knowledge. And while he probably did have superior knowledge compared to the majority of the market,
he was using it not as an enterprising investor, but as a speculator. He may have been right at times
about his currency or commodity type bets. But even the most intelligent speculator cannot
successfully predict how the market will actually interpret that information once it becomes
widely known. Now, from his experience, he gained a key insight. In the short term, the market is
not about the truth. It's about expectations. Most investors spend their time trying to figure out
what other investors will think about specific stocks. As a result, they spend little to no time
trying to figure out what something is really worth. So in the short term, prices don't track
intrinsic value. They track beliefs about change. Let's take a quick break and hear from today's
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Back to the show.
Keynes realized that when you play this game,
you aren't even really playing an investing game.
Instead, you're playing a guessing game of predicting mass psychology.
And given that Keynes went broke twice in his investing career using this strategy,
he knew it was a game that very few people could win consistently.
Keynes writes about this game using a brilliant analogy.
Professional investment may be likened to those of newspaper competitions in which the competitors
have to pick out the six prettiest faces from 100 photographs. The prize being awarded to the
competitor whose choice most nearly corresponds to the average preferences of the competitors as a
whole, so that each competitor has to pick not the faces which he himself finds prettiest,
but those which he thinks are likeliest to catch the fancy of other competitors,
all of whom are looking at the problem from the same point of view. We have very,
reached the third degree where we devote our intelligence to anticipating what average opinion
expects the average opinion to be. But whether you're guessing on stocks or pretty faces,
the chances of you winning that game reliably is this a very unlikely outcome. As I alluded to earlier,
Keynes decided that he would evolve from playing this guessing game which he knew he couldn't win
into a game where he felt he actually did have an advantage. And that was to try to find businesses
where he felt he could understand what they would earn at a given point in the future. Remember I
mentioned his point on understanding earnings yields. This is where understanding a business in depth
comes into play and can offer great results. The first mindset shift that Keynes had was to focus on
the business and not the ticker. Instead of guessing what would happen to the ticker, he focused on
what was happening inside of the business to help generate returns. Instead of focusing on macro
narratives, which he had very unsuccessfully tried to do, he focused on the micro realities
of the business. And the micro realities of the business include things like business models, balance sheets,
earnings power and management quality.
So if you're listening to this and want to understand how to better understand a business,
you should be able to answer the following questions about each business inside of your portfolio.
How do they make money?
How will the business's intrinsic value rise, stagnate, or decrease?
And why would you own this business for the next five years at the stock market closed?
If you can't answer these questions, I think there's a very good chance that you're speculating.
But if you can answer them, you're on the right track.
Another area where investors get confused about a business is in the information available to them
with understanding.
If you want to learn about a business, there's no shortage of information to help you get there.
But everyone has access to the same information.
The edge comes in how well you internalize the information, how well you generate differentiated
opinions, and whether those opinions are actually correct or not.
Do not make the mistake of blindly following someone else's thought process on a business.
One exercise that I like is to try and find areas of good.
analysis that I actually disagree with. The reason I like this exercise is that it forces me to think
critically and not rely on another writer's opinions. Now, I will admit, most of the time,
when I disagree with an author or an analyst, I find out later that I actually do agree with them.
But the point of this exercise is that it really helps me investigate things on my own using
source material rather than just relying on secondhand information, which isn't always accurate
and doesn't always align with my view. For instance, I was recently researching,
a payments company that I'll be pitching to the TIP Mastermind community.
So one of our members sent me a video featuring a fund manager discussing the business.
And in it, he described how the business could be destroyed.
When I heard what he said, that it could be destroyed if certain financial institutions
decided to lower their FX rates, it really got me thinking.
And while I ended up agreeing with what he said, I found myself thinking more deeply about
the subject and even added additional reasons that would make his event even less probable.
I think approaching questions about a business in a distinctive way is a very good way to
develop your own conclusions and opinions, which is very essential if you hope to achieve
differentiated returns compared to the average investor. Another problem with investing today is the
sheer volume of information that we're just constantly bombarded with. And I think this information
really just gives us a false sense of security. If I compared my ability to access information
versus Keynes, I have a massive edge. Where he had to get financials, you know, mailed to
them at my fingertips. I can get them in five seconds if I wanted to. I can also look at all their
competitors and their industry. I can get insights from other analysts and I can watch interviews on
things like YouTube or on podcasts. There's so much information that I have access to. But the best
investors today are skilled at filtering out what is not useful, which is often a lot of the information
that's out there. Now, one example of using deeper knowledge to ignore the noise was a tariff
tantrum that the market had in April of 2025. Now, during this time, one of my largest holdings,
Eritzia was hit very hard, drawing down by about 43%. Now, was I one of the masses that,
that was selling my shares to avoid short-term losses? No. I felt my knowledge of the business
was sufficient to understand that it would be able to weather the storm. They had multiple
suppliers and they could reduce a reliance on China to a single-digit percentage in the next
few quarters, which would significantly reduce the pain of additional tariffs. And since April 8th of
2025 at the bottom of the drawdown, the shares were up nearly 200% as of February 2nd of 2026.
If you have the right insight on a business and can withstand volatility, there's a lot of upside to be
had. Now, as we've seen, Keynes had a great evolution in his investing, but it wasn't just a
strategic evolution. He also improved his temperament and observed what character traits helped him
succeed and which ones made him fail. And his conclusion was very similar to the great Warren
Buffett quote about intelligence. Investing is not a game where the guy with a 160 IQ beats the guy
with 130 IQ. Once you have ordinary intelligence, what you need is temperament to control the
urges that get other people into trouble in investing.
The emotional flaws that Keynes showed early in his investing career are not novel.
I think there's the same problems that all investors face today.
Keynes had two traits about 100 years ago that I think everyone that will be completely familiar
with, and those are overconfidence and impatience.
Keynes' thought process was that he just knew he was right, and because of that, he couldn't
tolerate that he was often early in his predictions.
This forced him to do things like doubling down, not in terms of adding capital,
to a position, but in terms of emotionally speaking.
Keynes was the type of person who had a high degree of intelligence first, then had to learn
temperament as he gained more and more experience and lived through more and more pain.
Does that sound familiar?
We all learn from making mistakes.
I spend all day looking at other legendary investors, their wins, their losses, and even
I continue to make mistakes.
And my most vivid mistakes are not the ones that I've learned vicariously through others.
They were from losing my own cash, from my own decisions.
Sometimes it's stupidity, sometimes it's bad luck, but those lessons are always the ones that sting the worst.
What Keynes did that many investors are unable or unwilling to do is to make temperament into an edge, rather than being a victim of intelligence.
Keynes had two near-death financial events that I've already alluded to.
And this forced him to accept that while he was intelligent, he couldn't rely on that to make good investments.
Instead, he began focusing more and slowing down and avoiding overactivity.
What is experience and observations of the market taught them was how important the right behavior was.
The problem with temperament is that it's simply just not easy to change.
If you've been the type of person who's just gambled their entire life, chances are you're
going to gamble on stocks as well.
And if you treat investing as just another form of gambling, there's a very, very good chance
that you'll just lose money to the house just as you would lose to the house in a casino.
And a really interesting angle to consider when investing is that two investors with two different
temperaments can treat the same stock completely differently. Let's go through a hypothetical case
study of two investors. Their analysis of a business might be the exact same. They see the same
competitive advantages, the same levels of talent and management and capital allocation, and they know
the potential market is just large for that business. They can both see that the business's value
is completely disconnected from its price and then it's trading at a discount to its intrinsic value.
But then something happens. The market becomes volatile. And the stock, which they both look
at and analyzed and thought was cheap, becomes even cheaper due to this market sell-off.
This is part of investing where being a genius does absolutely nothing to help you.
These are the times when temperament is going to benefit you or harm you.
These two investors can be classified by temperament.
One has a temperament of early canes.
They are intelligent and believe their intelligence will give them an advantage over other
investors.
They know that the business we just discussed will benefit from very specific macro tailwinds,
But when they're wrong and they see the market is punishing their stock, they become perplexed,
angry even, that the market is just too stupid to understand what they see.
After a few months of losses, they just end up selling out because they get annoyed,
the market doesn't agree with them and they can't stand the pain of losing any more money.
The second investor has a better temperament for investing.
They realize that the market will often disagree with them on a stock, but they did their work,
and even though the stock price has dropped, nothing has changed fundamentally with the business.
they see this market-wide drop as an opportunity to just actually buy more.
The lower price gives them a larger margin of safety and increases their prospective returns.
As a result, they actually decide to add to their position.
They already have about 5% of their capital in position by costs, but they really like the business and are fine with adding to their current position.
So they decide to back up the truck and get their cost basis to around 10% of their assets.
So what happens next will be familiar to many investors.
The market emerges fund the doldrums and the capital that exited equities,
returns to equities. The businesses that are most clearly continuing to get better are the ones that
tend to be bought up first, and price and value begin to converge. The investor with poor temperament
lost part of his capital simply because he had a short-term mindset and an ego that interfered
with his decision-making. The second investor with a better temperament for long-term investing
doubled down, lowered his cost basis, which increases returns even more once the price began to rise.
Any investor who has been in the market for a few years will run into this exact scenario. You spend 40 hours
searching a business, its competitors, and its industry. You conclude that you like the business
and then it's trading below intrinsic value. Then you buy it and the price inevitably goes down.
We've all been through this. And one mindset shift that I focused on that really helps me deal
with these kind of common problems is to improve my position sizing going in. So when I first
started investing, markets were quite euphoric and it wasn't unusual for a business that I would
buy to go up 50% or more shortly after I bought it. So I was actually coming from a place of fear that
if I didn't weigh a position high enough in the beginning, I would never be able to add to the
position. So, at this point, I decided to get as much money into a position at cost as soon as I could.
But over the years, I've learned this was a mistake for the following reasons.
So the first one here is that there's been exactly zero times that I haven't learned significantly
more about a business after I started owning it. For this reason, I think drawing out the accumulation
phase of a business is very intelligent. The next one is sometimes I realize that I either
don't want to keep owning a business, don't understand certain things that I realize are key to my
thesis, or I might realize that I simply want a lot more of the business, but that comes after
I first start buying it. So by taking smaller stabs at a position, I feel like I'm reducing the risk
of costly analytical errors that I may have overlooked earlier in the analytical process.
The primary risk of investing this way is that I may end up liking a position and only have
maybe a 1 to 5% of my assets in it only to see the price skyrocket. This has happened with
with merely all of my big winners.
And it's even more prevalent in microcaps where the disconnection between price and value
can be even larger, leading businesses to go, you know, 5x in a year.
Yes, this has happened to me.
But to me, investing is a long-term game.
And if I own truly exceptional businesses, then it should remain exceptional for, you know,
two, five, ten years from now.
And that means I have multiple years to add to my position if it takes off in price.
One great example is Terabest Industries.
This is a serial acquire of a variety of steel-related business.
in HVAC, containment,
vessels, water treatment, and oil and gas services.
I first started buying shares in April 20, 24, at about $70.
I already felt like I was kind of late to the party, to be honest,
as it had already doubled over the past year.
But I realized this was a serial acquire with a long road ahead
run by very, very talented capital allocators
who were very well aligned with shareholders.
So, you know, I pulled the trigger.
After buying, I was hoping that the business would go through a down cycle
and maybe lose a few investors causing the price to drop.
But that just didn't happen.
Instead, it went nearly parabolic rising to about $170 in just a year.
But, good news, it dipped twice in 2025.
The first time during the tariff tantrums in April, and again by the end of the year, due to
a quarter with results that weren't quite in line with market expectations.
Now, both of those times were times where I got to add to my position, since I realized
I probably wouldn't get an opportunity like that again.
My first few buys only represented about 3.5% of my portfolio.
This is relatively small for me.
For a compounder, I'm usually fine getting the position to about 18%.
10% by cost basis. But with the ads from those drops, have increased my position size to about
5% by cost basis. I'd still like to add more, and we'll be waiting for more weakness in the coming
years to bring it closer to that 8 to 10% range. Now, I've discussed here how key temperament is
to good investing. And I even hinted that I use temperament to help me position my portfolio accordingly.
One key tenant that Keynes imparted to us was the importance of concentration and why it's vital
to outperformance. Now, based on the limited amount of data that I can find in Walsh's book,
Keynes in the markets and concentrated investing, it appears that Keynes tended to be more diversified
much earlier in his career than later in his career. But later on, when he saw the benefits
of long-term investing, he became more concentrated. So in the book, Concentrated Investing by
Bonello, B. Emma, and Carlisle, they mentioned that he had about 40 to 50 percent of King's
college funds and just a few stocks with single positions well in excess of 10 percent.
This level of concentration came after he learned the importance of understanding individual
businesses was more important than understanding the macro.
And it came from understanding himself better after the errors that he had made early in his
career, as well as the great insights that he had into mass market psychology.
Another reason the concentrated approach worked well for Keynes was his ability to actually
take part in it.
Most financial institutions simply do not allow for a concentrated approach as they aim
to reduce tracking error.
So tracking error is the extent to which a fund's performance deviates from the performance of the market's results.
For a concentrated investor like Keynes, the tracking error was nearly 14%.
So when it's positive, that means a manager is beating the market, and when it's negative, it means that they are losing.
Concentrated portfolios will have large swings in tracking error.
So that means you need shareholders or councils in Keynes' situations who are okay with these heavy swings.
Unfortunately, many people are simply just not okay with it.
They want managers with low tracking error.
Why?
I guess it's because whether you perform well or badly, like everyone else, there's kind of a comfort
to be found.
Regarding this, Keynes wrote, if he is successful, that will only confirm the general
belief in his rashness.
And if in the short run he is unsuccessful, which is very likely, he will not receive much
mercy.
Worldly Wisdom teaches us that it's better for reputation to fail conventionally than
to succeed unconventionally.
Keynes had several experiences with institutions.
At King's College, he was able to run a concentrated portfolio and weighed out volatility and
underperformance.
For instance, in 1938, the fund dropped 23% versus only a 9% drop for the market.
But Keynes also had experience as the investment manager of Natural Mutual Life Assurance Society,
an insurer.
He was appointed to that position way back in 1919, and that portfolio lost 641,000 pounds
in 1937, prompting a letter from the chairman of the insurer, which mentioned that
Kane's inactivity of his pet stocks was resulting in losses. In a response, Keynes replied with
three primary points. One, he didn't believe that he should sell these stocks now that they had dropped
because their intrinsic value hadn't changed. He also felt that the long-term probabilities of
their success still made them good bets. Number two, he had zero shame about holding a stock when
the market bottomed. He was aiming for long-term results, and the short-term fluctuations are not
what he felt he should be assessed on. And thirdly, he just didn't feel like he had done.
a bad job. As an owner of public equities, there will inevitably be negative price fluctuations.
Keynes eventually resigned as a chairman of the insurer. The board could tell that there was another
war brewing and they wanted him to reallocate assets to save for assets like gold or bonds, which
Keynes obviously resisted. Kane said many things that Buffett would later echo. Regarding diversification,
Keynes wrote in his letter to King's College, my theory of risk is that it is better to take a
a substantial holding of what one believes in, then scatter holdings in fields where he has not
the same assurance. But perhaps that is based on the delusion of possessing a worthwhile opinion
on the matter. He then added, the theory of scattering one's investments over as many fields as
possible might be the wisest plan on the assumption of comprehensive ignorance. Very likely,
that would be the safer assumption to make. Cain's actual portfolio management was a little bit
harder to find. There was a great chart in concentrated investing showing his real value ad wasn't
necessarily in making larger positions out of his highest conviction bets. His big value ad was in
making sure that he was underweight in his bottom five positions. That is a very interesting
data point. For instance, was this underweighting a result of the stocks decreasing in price?
Or were these just smaller kind of tracking positions that he just never added to because they
never saw what he wanted to justify making them larger positions? I think this is a very neglected part
of portfolio management.
I've already discussed how I like to manage buying businesses that I want to add to,
but sometimes it's just not so obvious whether a position should be added to, left alone,
trimmed, or completely sold out of.
Kane's improved his abilities of keeping his losses small as he gained experience.
During the 1921 and 1946 period, his bottom five positions accounted for 11.7% of his portfolio.
But from 1940 to 1946, this dropped just 6%.
Good value investors are masters at avoiding losses.
So if you have positions that you like that offer a good upside but also carry higher downsides
than other positions, you may consider minimizing risk by just underweighting them.
You can make the argument, well, why own them then?
And I think the answer to that only comes over time.
If you have a business in your portfolio, let's say that you can lose 50% on a 5% probability,
but make 200% on with a 95% of probability, that's an expected value of 2.8 and you want
to make that bet.
But you have to also focus on the downside here.
So in this case, you might make it a smaller position and as the narrative unfolds and more data
becomes available, you can add to it if you feel like it's becoming de-risked.
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All right.
Back to the show.
The next lesson from Keynes regards markets as social systems.
So I mentioned earlier that Keynes discussed this kind of beauty contest analogy and how that's
basically just a guessing game.
Now, it's an alluring game to play because, you know, it's really easy to talk ourselves
into thinking that we have insights that allow us to win that game.
Keynes once believed that, and it took over a decade to change his mind.
But he eventually did.
And when he decided to reflect on what he learned, he understood that markets don't rely on
the truth over the short term.
Over the short term, they rely on expectations.
The price of a stock isn't a consensus view of its value.
It's a consensus view of belief.
And the market's beliefs can rapidly disconnect from the truth over short period of time.
While they may look stupid to some observers, the market, at its heart, is a social animal.
That's why Keynes was able to maintain his composure and his strategy through tough times.
He knew that in the short term, the market will become disconnected from reality, simply because
of investor psychology.
But over the long term, the truth is what drove value.
The market only stays irrational for short periods of time.
And once it becomes obvious to even the most skeptical investors that they were wrong,
the market will correct itself.
So let's rewind back to November of 2021.
I felt on top of the world because my investment in in mode,
had just turned into a seven bagger after I'd only held the business for just a year and a half.
In Mode, for those who don't know, is a business that specializes in the manufacturing and
distribution of minimally invasive aesthetic devices. But what happened fundamentally to the
business at this time? Did its intrinsic value also go 7X or were there other forces at play?
So EPS had gone up pretty substantially from about 80 cents to $1.80. So there was a great
tailwind from that. But that alone doesn't justify that large of a rise in price. The other part of it
was the PE ratio and PE expansion. So the PE ratio at the same time went from about 22 times
to 50 times. The market clearly was voting that it liked the business. But that elevated PE
ratio simply just wasn't warranted as this was not a recurring revenue machine. It just caught the
attention of momentum focus investors who bit up the price in expectations of continued growth.
I think if Keynes had been observing this investment, he would have told me to sell it once it was
clear that the price was approaching this insanely high PE ratio. I unfortunately held onto my shares,
not because I thought the business was inexpensive, but because I believe it still had a lot of
room to continue to get better. Unfortunately, that never really materialized, but still exited
with multi-baga returns. Now, in concentrated investing, one key theme for a concentrated investor
is that risk can be viewed through a different lens depending on the type of access that you have
to capital. You can either have permanent or non-permanent capital. If you're a fund, you have non-permanent
capital. You run the risk of being forced to sell positions if they aren't doing well. Simply
because you might get redemptions. But on the other hand, is access to permanent capital.
People who invest their own money, you could say have access to this permanent capital
provided they're not using margin. Or you could also take the Warren Buffett approach of just
owning a series of private and public businesses inside of a publicly held corporation.
In that sense, you don't have to worry about being forced to sell positions.
Managers of non-permanent capital are often required to respond to market beliefs rather than
reality. If they're getting redemptions, this often happens when they aren't performing well,
meaning they will often be forced to sell positions that have decreased in price, but not necessarily
decrease in value. Managers of permanent capital do not suffer from the same systemic problems.
If a stock goes down on price and they view that simply as a mistake that the market is making,
then they can just hold the position or even add to it. This strategy is completely different
between these two archetypes because of the constraints that they have. The other point about
the market's expectations is that expectations are often based on narratives. And they completely
ignore fundamentals. You see this all the time in story stocks. So there was recently a commodity
play that I was recently pitched that had a very exciting narrative. The business is called Liberty
Stream and I do not hold any position in it. Essentially, it was a business that treated water,
which was a byproduct of oil drilling. The business discovered some IP to treat this water and as a result
extract lithium, which is a very hot commodity these days due to its use for batteries and the
onshoreing of natural resources.
While I thought the story was very interesting, the market clearly has too.
So the stock price has gone up over 400% over the last year.
My problem with it was that the business just isn't generating any profits and to make it
even worse isn't even generating any revenue.
So it appears that revenue will come online soon, but I simply just can't justify
investing in a narrative with no numbers to back it up.
Could it work?
Yeah, of course.
But there's a literal graveyard full of great stories that never worked.
So I'm okay waiting for validation on a business like this before I decide to invest.
If I wait, chances are I'll pay more, but also have validation that the business can actually
generate revenue and profits.
So let's go over how Keynes battled his emotions.
He came up with his notion that he called a sense of proportion.
And this is a kind of confidence that value would assert itself over time, even though prices
would often try to fool you into thinking that you're wrong.
The next is that he reduced diversification.
Keynes realized that being overly diversified didn't necessarily reduce returns, but increased
psychological noise.
Holding fewer positions reduced this noise, which made them less prone to errors.
Next is lengthening holding periods.
If you set up your investing strategy, as Keyes did, to find a few good key businesses
to hold long term, you don't have to worry too much about short-term fluctuations because
you simply understand your businesses well enough to withstand volatility.
And lastly here, he just owned businesses that didn't really.
require market validation, Keynes improved his immunity to animal spirits by owning businesses
where value could be more easily assessed independently of price. Now, these are key points I think
all investors should take note of because it's very easy to lose our emotions. So constantly
monitor things such as how you feel about your positions and act only on data points that reveal
the truth, not ones that trigger emotions. And you should also avoid acting on data points that
are purely based on narrative.
Next, I want to focus on making investing more systematic rather than reactive.
So Keynes' early investing was based more on a reactive approach, find macroeconomic tailwinds
in the world, then find investments that would move along this hypothesized narrative.
As we now know, the strategy failed Keynes twice.
As a result, his strategy evolved as he learned and improved from his experiences.
He became much more systematic.
He invested in fewer positions, held them longer, developed.
developed a clear criterion for what to find an enterprise, and avoided short-term forecasting
whenever possible. His system wasn't based on hard science, like mathematics. It was designed to
take advantage of his behavioral edges, while reducing opportunities for him to be clever at the wrong time.
This reduction in opportunities to be clever was a complete game changer. It's precisely what Buffett
and Munger later adopted as key to their success. In Berkshire Hathaway's 1989 annual letter to shareholders,
Buffett wrote, after 25 years of buying and supervising a great variety of businesses,
Charlie and I have not learned how to solve difficult business problems.
What we have learned is to avoid them.
To the extent we have been successful, it is because we concentrated on identifying
one-foot hurdles that we could step over, rather than because we acquired any ability
to clear seven-footers.
Keynes knew that he was susceptible to trying to profit from being clever.
He was a highly intelligent person who wrote entire books on
economics and was correct about some incredibly large events such as how German reparations were
likely to cause heavy destabilizing effects and increase the likelihood of another armed conflict
in Europe or around the world. So he designed his process simply to try to sidestep his
tendency to self-sabotage. Another part of his process that worked wonders related to how he
treated his ideas. In his early days, he would trade positions based on his macro insights.
But he developed into a much more investor-focused person who wanted long-term exposure to great
businesses that could compound. This was an important mindset shift. When you shift away from always
trying to find your next trade to being content with what you own and closely monitoring it,
your investing life becomes much simpler. This has been my experience as well. As I've grown as an
investor, I have my pet stocks or businesses that I intend on holding into the future. Instead of
searching for my next big idea, I may deepen my knowledge on what I already know or try to reduce
my gray spots. Here are more areas of my process that have helped me,
remain inactive and avoid being clever.
One, I focus on businesses rather than industries or themes.
Instead of trying to find an attractive industry, which I once did, I just focus on finding
great businesses.
So I remember going back to 2020, I was looking at 3D printer businesses simply because
they were being bit up like crazy.
Now, lucky for me, I never actually found anything that made sense for me, valuation-wise,
so I never actually bought anything there.
But now, I just focus more on finding great businesses.
After I can tell it's good, I brought my research to be.
better understand its competitors and its industry. The second is that I focus on look-through metrics.
When I conduct my quarterly portfolio reviews for the TIP Mastermind community, I don't discuss
which of my positions has declined the most in price. I instead look at the fundamentals.
Which of my businesses appears to be decreasing in growth? Those are the positions that I should
be most fearful of, not the positions that have the largest unrealized losses. Buffett conducted
a thorough experiment. If the market closed for five years, how would you assess the performance
of your businesses. And its conclusion was simple. Look at the operating profits. I choose to look at
things like revenue growth, owners' earnings growth, and returns on invested capital. As long as those
numbers remain above my hurdle rates, I know I've done my job as a capital allocator. Speaking of the
TIP Mastermind community, we're getting close to May, which means the community will be very well
represented in Omaha for the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting. TIP will be hosting a few dinners and
socials in Omaha for our TIP Mastermind community. These events will be great opportunities to meet
kindred spirits in the value investing space, build meaningful relationships, and discuss stock
ideas and investing strategies. We'll be closing the group to new applicants at the end of March,
so if you'd like to join us in Omaha, you can apply to the community by visiting theinvestorspodcast.com
slash mastermind or by sending me a note on LinkedIn. The third one here is to treat your businesses
like artwork. So I stole this mental model from Monich Pabry and I think it's a great one to keep
very top of mind. Long-term investors should view their portfolio as a museum. There will be a few featured
works of art that should never be touched. They will be very rare, but will also be the most valuable
pieces of art that you own. The rest will be decent pieces, but you know, you may want to sell them if they
become too expensive. Then you'll invest in a few pieces of art that turn out to be mistakes.
And those you can just try to sell and recycle that capital back into, you know,
even more art pieces that can become featured in your museum. The point here is to treat your
winners well and remove your losers. And when I'm discussing winners and losers here, I'm not talking
about price. I'm talking about intrinsic value. Price will follow intrinsic value over the long term.
I'd rather have a business that doubles its intrinsic value over a business that had a
zero change in its intrinsic value, but doubled in its price based purely off of multiple expansion.
Those are the three areas of my investing process that have helped me immensely.
Keynes is very well known for the quote, when the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?
But some context about why he said that is very helpful. To understand it about
are we have to rewind all the way back to 1921.
John Maynard Keynes was already a very formidable economist,
and his opinions carried considerable weight.
So when he found himself being grilled by officials during a government hearing,
the detractor claimed that Keynes tended to change his mind on important topics over the years.
And this is where Keynes came back at him with that quote above.
So we can see here that Keynes was already a deep thinker in his early years,
and he was willing to not only make subtle changes,
but also abandon his entire belief systems,
if the information that he had access to updated his beliefs.
Some of his earlier beliefs included that he could beat the market with macroeconomic insights,
that economic cycles were completely forecastable,
and that diversifying with opposing risks would reduce risk.
But over time and through experience, he observed his own experience in each of these concepts,
and all of them failed catastrophically.
The final straw after the 1929 crash cemented that he needed to make some very large-scale adjustments to his beliefs.
otherwise, he was likely to keep making mistakes and one can only go broke so many times.
As a result, his thinking evolved.
He shifted from being a macro-focused investor to looking at individual businesses.
He went from having a trader's mindset to focusing more on owning great businesses that he
could stick with through economic cycles.
Instead of diversifying, believing he could avoid risk that way, he concentrated because
he knew that he could understand a few key businesses better than spreading himself across
multiple companies and concepts.
and then he just moved away from trying to benefit from his forecasting and relied more
on his judgment about a good business.
To an outside observer, Keynes may have appeared inconsistent, but I believe the answer is different.
From a government official's perspective, relying on the expertise of someone like Keynes,
I can see why they might have been upset with Keynes for changing his mind.
But since Keynes was focused on the truth, he had to opt to his beliefs as new information
became accessible to him.
And whether those changes in his beliefs bothered others didn't matter as long as he felt
he was getting closer to the truth.
This is such a powerful concept because it's easy to see how it plays out in real life,
especially in investing.
Investors will have their belief systems,
and some will ride those beliefs to the grave,
even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
When you hear about investors sticking with a business while it's being liquidated,
you can tell exactly what I'm saying.
I'm lucky,
or maybe it's just that I haven't been investing long enough.
None of my businesses that I've ever owned has gone to zero.
I've had some massive losses, but no zeros yet.
Part of the reason for this is that most of the business that I own are relatively conservatively financed and generate a lot of cash.
Businesses with these two attributes are a lot less likely to file for bankruptcy.
And conservatively financed businesses often mean they don't have assets that would go to their debtors over holders of their equity.
But where belief updating has come in handy for me is in analyzing when I'm wrong on an investment.
One big insight I had about belief updating is how I update my thinking when I'm looking at forward returns in kind of that one to three year range.
So when I was a newer investor, I was far too optimistic.
I'd have my bare, base, and bull case.
But I think I attributed far too high of a probability to the base and bull case,
and I'd give too low of a probability to the bear scenario.
So back when I started, I might have given maybe a 20% probability of the bear scenario.
But given that I only tend to be right about 50% of the time,
I realized I should probably shift that bear scenario upward and probably more significantly
even than I ended up doing.
So today, I generally start with about 33% bear case scenario for my comment.
compounders, and for my inflection point businesses, I'm even more pessimistic and I give them
about a 40% bear scenario.
But probabilities are also a very dynamic thing.
They aren't a static data point.
As I've owned businesses for an increased length of time, I can continue to update the probabilities.
On a great business like TerraVest, the bear case becomes less and less likely, which improves
my return and reduces risk.
When I see a business that I own going through this process, I tend to prioritize making it into a
larger position, where this is most valuable in businesses where things aren't going the way that you
want. They may have a bad quarter, and I have to figure out whether it's a one-time thing,
whether management's execution is slipping, or whether it's a long-term issue that I should be
very concerned about. If a business isn't executing, then my bare probability usually increases.
And if it becomes obvious that my returns drop below my hurdle rate because of this belief updating,
then I know I might have a candidate to sell in my portfolio. This helps me avoid becoming
calcified in my beliefs. And it also helps me get rid of positions that are becoming riskier.
Now, as Cain's displayed, the flexibility of his thinking was one of his greatest assets.
If it wasn't, there's probably zero chance that I'd be talking about him today and that he
would be considered an investing great. The hard part about flexible thinking is admitting that you
were wrong, or even more difficult is letting go of an identity that was once tied to
what made you who you are. This makes me think a lot about Twitter. So on Twitter, you get people
who have a good idea, they share their thoughts, and then they become known as, you know, the
Nvidia guy or the meta guy. But once they change their mind and decide to sell the business,
they get a lot of people that start to attack them. Well, it would be easier for them to not
change their mind, as it would appease the random followers of their ideas. This completely
ignores the fact that belief updating is very key to successful investing. I've gotten this to
some degree. So I've discussed businesses like evolution gaming. And when people realize that I no
longer own it. Even, you know, over the last few months, I tend to get bartered with questions
about why I ended up selling it. Now, I have no problem explaining the reasons. I've explained
them on the podcast before and on Twitter. But, you know, the important part of investing is that
investing is done for your wealth and not to appease others. So while you may have to back away
from an idea that you are once known for in the long run, it's the right thing to do if you
observe new data that negates your initial thesis. Taking a bird's eye view of what Keynes live through
really helps us understand how important adaptable thinking was for long-term survival.
Keynes lived through two world wars, currency regime collapses, the Great Depression, and
structural market changes. There is no fixed strategy that would have survived so much disruption.
What actually survived was John's ability to revise his thinking and approve upon older ideas.
He also developed a capacity for patients. But to take advantage of this personality trait,
he had to shift his investing strategy so that patients would reward him rather than keeping him tied
to his sinking ship. And then he realized he needed to focus on things that just changed slowly,
things like business quality and management and the cash flows that have produced. Even looking back
since COVID, it's obvious that some strategies are very short-lived. Yes, you could have just done
well during COVID by simply owning a bunch of technology stocks that were trading at high multiples
and continued to be bid up. But that exact strategy was completely killed during the 2022 bear market
resulting in major losses as investors just were exiting these overpriced businesses. If you'd
decide to take a thematic approach to investing, you must have an exit strategy. I think Keynes
eventually settled on a universal truth. And that was that investing should be long-term oriented
and focused on buying businesses below their intrinsic value. Basically, it's the same value
investing tenants that Benjamin Graham would cover after Keynes had already figured it out.
I'd like to wrap up today's episode about Keynes by mentioning that Kane's investing success
didn't come from being right. It came from being different. His worst investing results came during
periods when he trusted his intelligence and macroeconomic insights the most. He won after abandoning
the ideas that the market rewards things like brilliance, speed, and prediction. His six teachings
that I think apply today are one, markets or social systems. Don't make the mistake of thinking
they are rational in the short term. Two, process matters more than intelligence. Abandoning
the requirement for high intelligence for success will be more powerful than trying to look smart.
3. Speculation and investing are two different things. Reflect on your investments and observe where you may be speculating, then adjust accordingly if necessary.
4. Temperament is the real edge. If you don't have the ability to injure volatility and temporarily look wrong, you won't succeed in investing.
Remove the ego. Five, concentration is earned, not assumed. Most investors should probably start in a diversified manner.
Once you gain experience and have some good ideas that you can tell or outperforming, then begin concentrating into the best ones.
And lastly here, number six, adaptability is a competitive advantage.
Don't fear changing your beliefs, allow them to develop and improve.
It's part of gaining wisdom.
That's all I have for you today.
Want to keep the conversation going?
Then follow me on Twitter at Arrational MR, KTS, or connect with me on LinkedIn.
Just search for Kyle Grief.
I'm always open to feedback, so please feel free to share how I can make this podcast even better for you.
Thanks for listening and I'll see you next time.
Thanks for listening to TIP.
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