Avoid Disaster w/ Superinvestor Howard Marks (RWH063)
Summary
AI: Marks believes AI will change the world but warns profits may not accrue to investors, likening sentiment to past bubbles and cautioning against lottery-ticket speculation.
Fixed Income: He highlights a post–sea change environment where credit instruments can deliver solid returns, emphasizing the appeal of contractual cash flows and the “negative art” of avoiding losers.
High Yield Bonds: Discussed as a viable source of mid-to-high single-digit yields, with a reminder that most investors should access this via diversified funds/ETFs due to the arcane nature of credit analysis.
Distressed Debt: He underscores contrarian deployment in crises, citing Oaktree’s aggressive 2008 buying as an example of idiosyncratic, committee-free decision-making in inefficient markets.
Gold: Skeptical stance given lack of intrinsic value and cash flows; notes long-term returns trail equities despite recent gains and warns against being swayed by short-term performance.
Bitcoin: Similarly flagged as non-cash-flowing and hard to value analytically; inclusion in portfolios is belief-driven rather than intrinsic-value based.
Market Outlook: Advocates “taking the market’s temperature” over forecasts, becoming defensive at exuberant extremes and more aggressive in fear-driven lows, with AI enthusiasm compared to the late-1990s internet boom.
Risk Management: Emphasizes choosing between “fewer losers” and “more winners,” calibrating risk posture, avoiding leverage-driven blowups, and maintaining patience and discipline.
Transcript
(00:00) I wrote a memo called fewer losers or more winners. You have to make a choice. And if you're going to try to win in investing, which means win in our business means having superior results. How can you possibly get superior results? And the answer is you either have more of the things that go up or less of the things that go down or both. (00:26) Most people can't do both because the skillful aggressive player might be able to get more of the winners. The skillful defensive player might be able to have fewer of the losers. Very few people have enough equipment to do both. Most people that means you have to choose. Before we dive into the video, if you've been enjoying the show, be sure to click the subscribe button below so you never miss an episode. It's a free and easy way to support us and we'd really appreciate it. Thank you so much. (00:56) Hi folks. I'm absolutely thrilled to welcome back a very special guest today, Howard Marx, who's the chairman of Oak Tree Capital Management. It's been a landmark year both for Oak Tree and Howard. Oakree recently celebrated its 30-year anniversary and since Howard co-founded the firm in 1995, it's been a spectacular success. (01:18) It's grown into a globally revered leader in alternative investments with something like $218 billion in assets under management and more than,400 employees around the world. And a few weeks ago, Howard also celebrated another landmark which is 35 years of writing his extraordinary memos which are such a trove of clear and lucid investment wisdom that they've earned a devoted following of I think more than 300,000 subscribers. (01:45) Howard marked that anniversary by publishing a free compilation of 45 of the best memos which I spent the last couple of days rereading. I would say personally that nobody other than Warren Buffett has done more to distill and share the enduring truths of investing. So today we're going to focus in some depth on some of the most important things that Howard's figured out in his 56 years. (02:10) not only as one of the great investors of our time, but I would say also one of the great teachers of the investing world. So, Howard, it's lovely to see you again. Thank you so much for joining us. Thank you, William. With a with a uh introduction like that, I'm tempted to say go on. Okay. Well, we're off to a good start then. (02:29) I wanted to start by asking you about a really important dinner that you had in Minneapolis in 1990 that had a profound impact on you both in terms of inspiring your first memo but also I think subsequently in shaping Oak Tree's investment philosophy. Why was that dinner such a seminal event and what did you learn from it? Well, I had dinner with a guy named David Van Bencotton who ran the pension fund for General Mills and uh he was a good friend and good client and he told me that he'd been running the plan for 14 years and in the 14 years that their equity portfolio had never been above the 27th percentile of pension fund (03:12) equity portfolios or below the 47th so solidly in the second quarter for 14 years in a row. But interestingly, as a result, for the 14 years overall, they were in the fourth percentile. Now, that's incredible math. You would say, well, if you bounce back and forth between 27 and 47, on average, you're probably about 37. No, fourth. (03:40) How could that be? And the answer turns out to be that most investors shoot for the stars and occasionally shoot themselves in the foot and wreck their record. And once you have a big loss, it takes a long time to get back to scratch. So I thought that was really important. So I wrote the first memo called the route to performance. As you say, it had a great impact on us. And I knew you were going to ask this question. So I went back and looked at the first memo. (04:03) And it happens to say in there, simply put, what the pension funds record tells me is that in equities, if you can avoid the losers and losing years, the winners will take care of themselves. And when we started Oak Tree in 1995, I wrote that down and that became our motto and it still is. If you can avoid the losers, the winners will take care of themselves. (04:29) I think that's an extremely important thing in investing. investing success is not about a swing to the fences. It's about steadily steady excellence, shall we say. And it's interesting. I remember you pointing out in one of your memos that Graham and Dodd had written all the way back in 1940 that there's something very distinctive about bond investing that's congruent with this, that it's a negative art, as they put it. (04:55) Can you explain that? I went back to read the 1940 edition because the owner of the book asked Seth Clarman to update it and Seth asked me to do the part on fixed income. So I went back and reread it and I got kind of mad when I saw that. I said why are they denigrating what I do calling it a negative art and then I realized what they were saying. (05:16) What they were saying was that if there are a 100 bonds out there and they're all 8% bonds and you know that 90 will pay and 10 will default, it doesn't matter which of the 90 that pay you buy because they're all 8% bond. They all get the same return. The only thing that matters is that you don't buy any of the 10 that default. (05:41) So in other words, you improve your performance not by what you buy, by what you exclude. So it's a negative art and in fixed income where you're promised a return and the only moving part that's remaining is whether the company keeps its promise that all you have to do is weed them out and you get the promised return. So that that's what I meant when I said the winners take care of themselves. (06:06) And it was a very good mindset when I started the high yield bond business in 78 to think that way. I didn't have those words for it but I thought that way. And then when we went into other businesses like Bruce K's distressed debt funds in 88 and emerging market equities in 98 and things like that now we're not doing straight fixed income. (06:25) It's not enough to just not have any losers. We actually try to find some winners but we maintain that motto because I think that the risk conscious mindset is a great guidepost. You've written several memos over the years, usually about one a decade, about the parallels between investing and sports, and you're obviously a keen tennis player yourself. (06:50) And one of my favorites is called What's Your Game Plan, which is, I think, from 2003. And you talk about the best tennis players and best baseball players and the lessons. And one of the things that struck me as I was rereading it the other day is you point out that it's very important for them to play within themselves and yet there's also when you look at the greatest tennis players for example this need at times to be maximally aggressive and and it tallies with what you've said to me before about how risk avoidance usually goes handinhand with return avoidance. Can (07:22) you unpack that a little bit? This nuance that it's it's not about risk avoidance. It's more about the intelligent bearing of risk. William, it's a great coincidence. I happened to have lunch yesterday with a guy named Charlie Ellis and Charlie Ellis wrote the article in I believe 1975 that gave rise to this whole line of thinking and it was called the losers game and he said there are two styles of tennis. (07:53) The professional has to win a winner to win a point because if he hits a mild return, his opponent will hit a winner and put the point away. So, they have to hit winners, but they're so good at what they do that it's mostly under their control. And in fact, in professional tennis, they keep track of something called unforced errors because there are so few. But the amateur tennis player, because they don't have control as much, has to just try to content themselves with not hitting losers. (08:25) And if I can get it over the net and within the bounds of the court 10 times in a row, chances are good that my opponent will stop at nine and I'll win the point, not having hit a winner, but only avoided hitting losers. So the point is, if you think about it, that investing is not like championship tennis because we don't have that much control of the outcome. (08:43) There's too much randomness, too much uncertainty, too many things that are unknowable. And so if you're in a game like we're in, swinging for the fences, trying to hit winners, it can get you carried out. I think it's better to play within yourself, emphasize consistency, not take the big risk, you know, the grand gesture, but rather strive for consistency and and competency. (09:08) That's a lot of what we've done. You've written a lot over the years about various dazzling blowups like Amarance, the energy fund that imploded back in 2006, or Long-Term Capital Management, which imploded back in 1998. When you think about the lessons of all of the firms that didn't survive over the period that Oak Tree has gone from strength to strength, what is it that we need to learn both as professional investors or as regular amateur investors? Well, one of the quotes that I've been using the most in the last decade or so, William, is attributed to Mark Twain, (09:47) and he said, "It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for certain that just ain't true. And if you think about it, no sentence that starts with I don't know but or I could be wrong but ever got anybody into big trouble. You get big trouble when you say I'm 100% sure that XYZ. (10:08) And then you take bold bets and if you take a bold bet on a premise which turns out to be incorrect, you can be finished long term. did that because they thought that their method was infallible and it produced tiny skinny tiny returns. But they would lever that up into big returns by using a lot of borrowed money. (10:29) But when you have a problem on leverage, your losses are magnified and you can get carried out as they were. And I think that Amaran too bet boldly and incorrectly and got carried out. You wrote a great memo. I think it was called pigeed, which is the less glamorous name for amaranth. And um right, there was a lovely sentence in there where you said, "You can successfully invest in volatile assets if you're sure of being able to ride out a storm, but if you lack that certainty and face the possibility of withdrawals or margin (11:00) calls, a little volatility can mean the end." And then you said in this very pathy way, you have to be able to survive life's low points. Can you talk a little bit about that? That seems like such a simple but really critical point about investing. (11:19) Well, another of my favorite implications is never forget about the 6-ft tall person who drowned crossing the stream that was 5 ft deep on average. And people have to think about that for a minute. But if you think about it, I think you realize that the notion of surviving on average is meaningless and irrelevant. You have to survive every day in order to reach the finish line. (11:43) And that means you have to survive on the worst days. And if you have a portfolio or an investment which is directed at maximizing the results if everything you hope comes true, chances are you expose yourself to the possibility of being carried out if what turns out to be true is something different. So that's really what it's about. (12:07) And a lot of investment management decisions come down to the question of whether you're going to try to maximize your gains if things go the way you hope and believe or minimize your losses if they don't. You can't do both at the same time. There's no strategy having maximum returns under good fortune but being fine if things turn out badly. You have to make a choice. (12:35) And in fact, this brings us back in a way to what we were discussing a minute ago. Uh few years ago, I wrote a memo called fewer losers or more winners. You have to make a choice. And if you're going to try to win in tennis or in investing, which means win in our business means having superior results. How can you possibly get superior results? And the answer is you either have more of the things that go up or less of the things that go down or both. (13:08) Most people can't do both because the skillful aggressive player might be able to get more of the winners. The skillful defensive player might be able to have fewer of the losers. Very few people have enough equipment to do both. Most people are subject in some way to their biases, either aggressive or defensive. (13:27) So most people that means you have to choose but it should be a conscious choice. And how many people ever sit down and say I'm going to succeed by having more winners or I'm not going to pursue that many winners. I'm going to succeed by having fewer losers. But if you don't answer that question and make a conscious decision, how can you find a winning strategy? You wrote an important memo related to this back in 2024 called ruminating on asset allocation where you talked about how one of the keys is to achieve this desired balance between aggressiveness (13:58) and defensiveness or maximizing growth of capital or maximizing preservation of capital. And you talked about the importance of finding a targeted risk posture and then recalibrating around that appropriate posture. And it strikes me as such a profoundly important and practical idea. (14:19) Can you talk about that? This idea that we should figure out our risk profile and how we should do it. I mean, what what we should think about in terms of our intestinal fortitude or our our responsibilities or our time horizon. What's the process that we should go through to decide what that targeted risk posture should be? Well, I always think about and guess at the process that people follow. (14:47) And I don't think that many people are that rigorous in their thinking. And I think most people say, well, you know, I'm going to make investments. What does that mean? Well, I'm going to try to buy a bunch of things that'll go up and make me money. But I think especially if you're an institutional investor or investing for others, you have to be a little more thoughtful. So, I wrote a memo. (15:04) You probably remember when I'm going to guess eight years ago or something called calibrating. Yeah. In which I said well you think about the speedometer of a car and zero is no risk and 100 is maximum possible risk and every person every institution every money manager should figure out where in that continuum they should be normally for this client or for me or for my employer or my institution. (15:36) What is the right risk posture for me normally? And as you say, let's talk about individuals. It's the function of age, wealth, income, the relationship between wealth and income and needs, number of dependence, level of aspiration, proximity to retire, and then the last one you touched on is intestinal fortitude. (15:59) So you take all that together and you figure out where in zero to 100 is the right place for you. normally and you say, "Well, I'm young. I don't have that many dependents. I'm aggressive. I can stay with it. If I make a mistake, I I have plenty of time left in my career to recover." So, I can be an 80 or an 85. You say, "Okay, that's my posture. (16:22) " And you figure out, by the way, there's no place you can look to find out, well, which combination of assets will produce an 85. But it's just a mind. It's just a way to direct your thinking. and and 85 you would say well that's pretty risky and it's aggressive but you know we're trying to do better and we're willing to take the risk of doing worse. (16:41) Then the question is after that is do you going to stay there all the time or are you going to try to vary it over time as the opportunities arise in the marketplace and then the next question is if if you will try to vary it what about today? Where do you want to be today? I think it's a constructive way to think about your posture. (17:01) I wrestle with that question a lot and I was thinking about it a lot this week as I was rereading your memos because you said I think in a memo called what really matters investors should find a way to keep their hands off their portfolios most of the time and and earlier in one called selling out you said when I was a boy there was a popular saying don't just sit there do something but for investing I'd invert it don't just do something sit there and so there's this tension where for most of us we just do better not to do anything. (17:32) And yet sometimes you do have to recalibrate. I had dinner a couple of weeks ago with Nick sleep and I was saying to him, I'm kind of worried at the moment, you know, like because I've done well over the last 16 years, thank God. I don't really want to give back 50%. And he sort of said to me, don't fiddle, William. Just don't fiddle. Stop fiddling. (17:51) And he's like, if it goes down 50%, that's fine. You'll just buy more and it'll be fine. you know, how do you wrestle with this question as a regular investor? Well, you look, first of all, on all these questions that we're talking about today and the many more that I'm sure you have for me, there are no right answers. (18:08) There's only a range of possibilities. There are choices, none of them perfect. And the question is, where do you want to come out on the continuum? Usually, you don't want to be at either extreme. You don't want to trade every day, and you don't want to never trade. for example, most people are not 100% maximizers or 100% preservers. So, it's a choice and it's a personal choice and and as I say, importantly, no right or wrong. (18:32) Now, I I mean, Nick's attitude is a little too idealistic in my opinion. And you know, I believe that there are good opportunities once in a while, not every day, once in a while, there are good opportunities to become a little more aggressive or a little more defense. And I wouldn't do a lot because it's easy to be wrong, but I wouldn't let all those opportunities go. (18:59) And and you know that I think we've done good things for our clients by doing that. But you know, I was talking to my son Andrew when I wrote my book, Mastering the Market Cycle, and I said, "I thought our calls had been about right." And he said, "Yeah, Dad, that's because you did it five times in 50 years." So certainly not every day. (19:16) There's not every something wise to do every day. And by the way, that memo, what really matters, I think, is is one of the better ones that garnered roughly the least attention or response. But I told the story in there about there was a study done of clients at fidelities and they concluded that the best performance belonged to the accounts of the people who were dead. (19:41) Now then added that Fidelity has not been able to find that study and neither has anybody else. So it's probably apocryphal but you get the point. And I think that overtrading is a mistake. And not only is it not productive on balance and costly, but it can be counterproductive because if you get excited and buy at the high and then depressed and sell at the low, you're doing the opposite of what you should do and buy and hold is highly superior. (20:14) I just think that for people who have ability and temperament, there are occasions when you want to behave counterally and become a little more defensive because the market is precarious and a little more aggressive because it is generous. You've written a lot about the futility of making macro predictions and forecasts and how rarely one should use them. (20:41) And so I was particularly struck when I was reading one of your memos and you were talking I think it was probably taking the temperature from 2023 where you were talking about those five very successful market calls which really are not even over 50 years they're actually over the last 25 years I think in 2000 then 2004 to7 2008 2012 and 2020 can you explain the nuance here because I think it's really important right that there are times where the market is sufficiently crazy that you've actually sort of jettisoned your usual disdain for macro forecasts. I guess it's just that the odds of of you being right about it being so extreme have been (21:18) better. Can you talk about unpacking that kind of nuance there? Well, number one, I think, as you say, there were five times essentially you say they're all in the last 25 years. So, well, that means it took me 30 years to get up the nerve and feel that I had enough insight to make a call. And the first one was the first day of 2000. It was about the tech bubble. (21:41) And the second thing that's worth noting is that I didn't know anything about tech stocks or technology or the internet or or any of those things. And I call the process taking the temperature because what it is, it's about assessing the behavior of the people around me. You know, Buffett always says everything best and he said that the less prudence which others conduct their affairs, the greater the prudence with which we must conduct our affairs. (22:08) So when everybody is behaving like they're carefree, not a worry in the world, there's no risk they don't think they can surmount and anyway they don't see that many risks, then we should run for the hills because their exuberance has probably moved prices so high that that it's dangerous. (22:27) And then in contrast, when people are depressed and they can never think that there'll ever be another positive step or another upday in the market and all they want to do is get out and they've had it, all that stuff, their pessimism and level of depression usually renders things so cheap that that's the time to become highly aggressive. It's called contrarian. It's called counteryclical. (22:52) I think that as my son said five times in 50 years, there were compelling times to do it. Times when the argument was the logic was compelling and the probability of being right was high. And so we made the call. We took action. I can tell you that I never did it without trepidation. As Mark Twain says, I was never certain, but it felt like the right thing. (23:16) And so it was worth trying. But, you know, in the investment business, even when you're even when you think you're right, you shouldn't assume that it's more than 8020 and maybe it's really 7030 or something like that. But if you know what you're doing, it's worth trying. But nobody gets it right all the time. (23:34) And by the way, I always say, William, if instead of five times, what if I had tried to do it 50 times or 500 times? Or I think about the fact that after 56 years, you multiplied that by 365. So I'm approaching 20,000 days of my working career if you count the weekends. And what if I had made 5,000 calls, made a call every four days. (24:03) What if I said I every four days I got either say buy or sell? I think that my record would be 50/50 at best. So you just can't do it all the time. You have to wait until it's compelling and then pray that you're right. I was very struck by a quote from David Swenson that's one of your favorite quotes from him that comes I think from pioneering portfolio management which I'll read because it's very related to this ability to take idiosyncratic positions. (24:30) and he said, "Active management strategies demand uninstitutional behavior from institutions, creating a paradox that few can unravel. Establishing and maintaining an unconventional investment profile requires acceptance of uncomfortably idiosyncratic portfolios which frequently appear downright imprudent in the eyes of conventional wisdom. (24:50) And I'm curious how you've managed to create an institution that even as it grew huge never became bureaucratic or ruled by consensus or overly conventional and hidebound because I think that's actually part of the success of Oak Tree is that somehow you and Bruce Kh and and Sheldon and the like you've managed to maintain this kind of willingness to be idiosyncratic and unconventional Even as you've become kind of much more institutionalized and more globally important. (25:22) Well, I don't think we have become institutionalized. I think we just become bigger. My dad used to say that marriage is a wonderful institution for people who like living in institutions. And I don't. And the best lessons we learn are learned early. And my first job was at City Bank and I was there 16 years. (25:41) And I learned that I don't like institutional living. And at the bank, if you would say, well, let's try to do this or let's pay this person this or let's promote that person that, they would say, you know what, listen, we can't because there are institutional constraints. And this word institutional is a hell of a word. (25:59) By the way, when I was a boy, if they said, oh, he lives in an institution, that meant an insane asylum. But anyway, I try like crazy to avoid bureaucratic tendencies. And I wrote a memo in in the early days, it must have been around 05 or so, called Dare to Be Great. And it was mostly a rant against bureaucracy and committees because when I was 29 and at the tender age of 29, I became the director of research at City Bank. (26:30) They put me on five committees and as I recall, they would meet for a minimum of 16 hours a week and I almost shot myself. I have a short attention span and I don't talk that much and I don't like to listen to other people that much. And I found that those meetings went as long as the person who wanted them to go to the longest wanted them to go. (26:48) And if you think about it, if you come up with some brilliant insight, what David called idiosyncratic. And you know, you give it a shot. By the way, it's idiosyncratic. Why? Because everybody else is doing the opposite. That's what makes it great. and you want to do it because you think you have some insight about why they're all wrong and their actions have made it wrong in the market. (27:12) Can you imagine trying to convince a committee of 10 people to get the majority of them to support it? Well, how the hell can you do that? Because there's a reason why most people in the market aren't taking that approach because it's hard to see. So, if most people are doing A, how can you convince the majority of a committee to do B? If you have idiosyncratic insight, if you have a young Warren Buffett working for you, you better just let him do his thing rather than say, "Well, you Warren, you can't make any trades until you convince the majority of the committee." So, this is one of the most (27:44) important things in investing and bureaucracy and great investing are counterindicated as the doctors would say. When Lehman Brothers went bankrupt in midepptember of '08, we had raised the biggest distress debt fund in history by a factor of about three, we had 10 billion dollars sitting on the shelf. Lehman goes under. Most people think the financial world is going to melt down. (28:10) Question is, where do you spend the money? And you know, people would say, well, why don't you just analyze the future? There is no such thing as analyzing the future, especially when you have unprecedented events taking place. And so Bruce and I figured out that we should spend the money. He ran the fund in question and he bravely invested an average of $450 million a week for the next 15 weeks. (28:27) That's $7 billion in one quarter. But I don't think we could have convinced the committee. The good news is we had pre-raised the money so we didn't have to convince the clients the best time to invest is during a crisis. You can't raise any money during the crisis because people are frozen into inaction. (28:47) So it was certainly idiosyncratic. I talked to a friend of mine who wrote for one of the newspapers. He said, 'What are you doing? I said, 'Oh, we're buying.' He says, 'You are like, we were insane. It was certainly idiosyncratic and it was certainly uncomfortable. We certainly weren't sure we were right, but it seemed like the right thing to do. So, you do it. (29:06) You have to overcome your discomfort. I wouldn't try to convince 20 people that I was right. And what is it, Howard, that makes Bruce so extraordinary as an investor? because I've never really heard him talk much. And then I was listening a couple of days ago to a conversation that you'd had on your podcast, the Oak Tree podcast, where you and he and Sheldon talked about the early days of the firm. (29:29) And I was surprised that sort of he just came across this really affable, decent, smart guy with a tremendous focus on on family and decency and building an enduring institution. Tell tell us what he's like because he's so clearly been a key figure in in Oak Tree's success. Yeah. Well, he approached me. I was at TCW. He approached me in ' 87. (29:51) He was a lawyer. He had done some investing for Eli Broad, who was the biggest leader in LA. And he had this idea of forming a distress debt fund, which we did in 888. And I think it was the one of the very first from a mainstream financial institution. We raised on the first closing, we raised $65 million. (30:12) And then the second close brought it up to a grand sum of 96. We thought we had all the money in the world. But the point is that Bruce is extremely analytical. He's like a chess player. He and he is a chess player. And he looks moves ahead, highly competitive in a what you describe a low-key manner, but you know really smart and really focused and great executor. And we have enjoyed a partnership for now 37 years, 38. (30:44) And it's one of the one of the shining things in my life, you know, after my family relationships and friendships. You know, Warren Buffett wrote a letter a couple weeks ago about stepping down and he talked about his relationship with Charlie Motor. (31:02) And he he said that in Charlie, he had a big brother who was protective. And the way I see it, Charlie was the wise philosopher who gave Warren advice and Warren was the six years younger implement who performed the analytical leg work and did the investing. What I really loved in that brief mention he said and the words I told you so were never mentioned. (31:32) And you know, so what Bruce and I have done with each other, our relationship is very similar to that. We both acknowledge so healthily, we both acknowledge that the other can do things we can't do, which is such a great thing because that's the only basis for a healthy partnership. (31:50) Once you start thinking that you can do everything you can do and everything the other person can do, your partner should is doing. But we both acknowledge that each can do things the other can't. And it's been extremely complimentary and nobody has ever said I told you so on any mistakes. There are plenty mistakes made all the time. And I think that we have supported each other and spending 7 billion in the fourth quarter of of 08 would have been very difficult without support. (32:22) You got to buck somebody up and never say I would I would never have done that. You know this fact also that he came to you originally and said let's get into distressed debt raises a really important point that I think comes up in a lot of your writing going back I think as far as the getting lucky memo in 2014 where you said the easiest way to win at investing is by sticking to inefficient markets and I think actually way back in 1995 in how the game should be played you wrote study the micro like mad in order to know your subject better than others you can expect to succeed only if (32:53) you have a knowledge advantage. Can you talk about that because it strikes me as something that I see again and again with the great investors like with your friend Joe Greenblat where he initially got rich partly through his brilliance in special situations or Bill Ruain who told me I just try to learn as much as I can about seven or eight good ideas and it seems like this focus on specializing narrowly but also in a in an inefficient market has been absolutely central to your success. Well, let's take the counterfactual. (33:27) So, remember I said you got to be thoughtful when you sit down to start investing. You have to think, what are the elements that are going to make me a success? And again, success means doing better than others. So, you can't say I'm smart. You're not the smartest person in the world, and everybody else in in the business is pretty smart. (33:45) You can't say I went to the best schools. That doesn't count for that much. You can't say you know I have this generalizable intelligence that I can apply to every asset class and know more than others in every asset class. You have to develop a knowledge advantage and you have to usually that comes from number one developing an an approach which is the right approach and that you implement consistently and from knowing more than the other people. It may be having more data, although that's hard because the SEC's job is to make sure (34:16) that everybody has the same data. Or it may be doing a better job with the data or having more insight in looking at it. Or it may be in what you said going into inefficient markets where the information is not evenly distributed. But you got to have some source of superiority. (34:40) Otherwise, how can you expect to win? You know, investing is an incredibly competitive game and winning consists of beating a bunch of other people who are similarly intelligent, numerate, computer literate, hardworking and very highly motivated. So you you have to have an edge and I think that specialization is one way to try to get an edge. The other thing though is it's really important the concept of the less efficient market. (35:08) When I try to illustrate market efficiency to people what I say is well what if when I got out of University of Chicago in ' 69 I had been approached by a guy and he says look I'm a bookmaker and I book bets on football and I have concluded that I can make a lot of money on football if I know which team is going to win the coin toss at the beginning of the game. (35:30) So, I'm going to give you 15 PhDs and a Cray superco computer and all you have to do is predict the coin toss at the beginning of every game. Now, if it's a fair coin, it can't be done. It's a waste of time because there's no edge. And that's an efficient market. (35:50) An efficient market is a market where everybody knows as much as you do and there's no edge and you're wasting your time. So, our definition of a less efficient market is a market where hard work and skill can pay off. Later this year, I'm going to be launching a richer, wiser, happier master class for a very small select group of people who like to study with me over the course of a year. (36:15) We're going to meet once a month over Zoom, typically for about 2 hours per session, to discuss the themes in my book, Richer, Wiser, Happier. We'll also meet in person at a couple of really special events. I'm going to cap the group at a maximum of 20 people. So, this is an unusual opportunity to study very directly with me and a small group. What sort of people am I looking for to join the master class? Well, really anyone who's deeply interested in exploring how to live a life that's truly richer, wiser, and happier. (36:45) This is the second time that I've taught a richer wiser happier master class and I'm planning to do this again because it's really been a totally joyful experience for me over the last year. The group has included an amazing array of 20 people from six different countries and I can tell you that the current members are an incredibly interesting, accomplished and really delightful array of people. (37:10) They include some extremely successful fund managers, some investment analysts, wealth advisers, heads of family offices, CEOs, entrepreneurs, a management consultant, really renowned physicist turned quant investor, and a friend of mine who's a highly successful professional gambler. The common denominator here, I think, is that they're all united in this desire to live a truly abundant life, and they're also all great learners. (37:35) One of the most joyful things for me personally has been to see the friendships form between these remarkable people as they learn from each other and support each other. In any case, if this sounds like something that might appeal to you, please email my friend and fellow podcast host Kyle Grievy, which is kyle etheinvespodcast.com. Are you looking to connect with highquality people in the value investing world? Beyond hosting this podcast, I also help run our tip mastermind community, a private group designed for serious investors. Inside, you'll meet vetted members who are entrepreneurs, private investors, and (38:15) asset managers. People who understand your journey and can help you grow. Each week, we host live calls where members share insights, strategies, and experiences. Our members are often surprised to learn that our community is not just about finding the next stockpick, but also sharing lessons on how to live a good life. (38:34) We certainly do not have all the answers, but many members have likely faced similar challenges to yours. And our community does not just live online. Each year, we gather in Omaha and New York City, giving you the chance to build deeper, more meaningful relationships in person. (38:52) One member told me that being a part of this group has helped him not just as an investor, but as a person looking for a thoughtful approach to balancing wealth and happiness. We're capping the group at 150 members. And we're looking to fill just five spots this month. So, if this sounds interesting to you, you can learn more and sign up for the weight list at thevestorpodcast.com/mastermind. (39:15) That's thespodcast.com/mastermind. or feel free to email me directly at claytheinvestorspodcast.com. If you enjoy excellent breakdowns on individual stocks, then you need to check out the intrinsic value podcast hosted by Shaun Ali and Daniel Mona. Each week, Shawn and Daniel do in-depth analysis on a company's business model and competitive advantages. (39:42) And in real time, they build out the intrinsic value portfolio for you to follow along as they search for value in the market. So far, they've done analysis on great businesses like John Deere, Ulta Beauty, AutoZone, and Airbnb. And I recommend starting with the episode on Nintendo, the global powerhouse in gaming. (40:03) It's rare to find a show that consistently publishes highquality, comprehensive deep dives that cover all of the aspects of a business from an investment perspective. Go follow the intrinsic value podcast on your favorite podcasting app and discover the next stock to add to your portfolio or watch list. You know, I was as you said in I wrote in getting lucky in January 14th that I was lucky to find some inefficient markets early in my career. (40:33) August of 78, I got the phone call that changed my life from the head of the bond department at City Bank. He says there's some guy named Milin or something in California and he deals in something called high yield bonds. Do you think you can figure out what that is? That was it. But they were called junk bonds. Most people wouldn't touch them with a 10-ft pole. That was 78. (40:53) You know, the big pools of money in America are the public pension funds, states, mostly cities. I didn't get my first public pension fund account for 18 years. They wouldn't go there because they were reputationally and politically unpalatable. Oh, great. (41:12) You mean it's an asset class that I can buy that nobody else will buy at any price? Well, maybe it's full of bargains. That's the way these things work. But if you look at the things that everybody thinks are great and will gladly buy it at any price, why should you think you can get a bargain there? You know, when I started in 1969, City Bank, where I worked, was an investor in what were called the Nifty50, the greatest stocks in America. (41:36) And if you bought them the day I got to work in September of 69, and you held them tenaciously, faithfully for 5 years, you lost about 95% of your money because at the time you bought them, everybody thought they were the greatest thing since sliced bread. (41:54) So, it's something you have to watch out for and you have to look at the things that are less the road less taken. You talk about the nifty50 and and that blow up which obviously had a profound effect on your career and your philosophy. And I've been thinking a lot about this question that you raised in some of your memos about how we can prepare for these extreme exogenous events, whether it's a market crash or a pandemic or a war or or whatever it might be given that we can't predict them. And you wrote in one of your memos, I think it was the second of your memos on uncertainty in 2020. We can do (42:25) so by recognizing that they will inevitably occur and by making our portfolios more cautious when economic developments and investor behavior render markets more vulnerable to damage from untoward events. Can you talk a little bit about that? Because I I think this whole question of how to deal with uncertainty is at the absolute core of what you do as an investor. (42:53) Well, first of all, one of the great sayings is that there are two kinds of people who lose money in the market. The people who know nothing and the people who know everything. So, I hope I never know nothing, but I never think I know everything. And specifically, I believe that the macro future is unpredictable. But there are things that can give us a hint at what lies ahead. (43:13) So I wrote my second book, Mastering the Market Cycle, published in 2018, and it talked about tendencies. And I said, we never know what the market's going to do, but we can have a feeling for when its tendency will be to do well or its tendency will be to do poorly. And its tendency will largely be determined by where we are in the cycle. (43:39) So when things have been going great and prices have been rising as you say for 16 years and PE ratios are high and bond yield spreads which are a barometer of fear are narrow we can assess that the tendency of the market may be to do less well and act accordingly. You don't have to make any predictions. (44:02) None of those five calls I talked about a little while ago was based on a prediction. It was based on an observation. And what I say, William, is we never know where we're going. We sure as hell ought to know where we are. And are prices and valuations high. Is risk being ignored? Are people acting in an exuberant, buoyant way? These are the questions that can tell you what the odds are even though you don't know what the future holds. And I never care for the title of that, but I had a more ariodite title in mind. (44:31) I thought Mastering the Market Cycle was a little cheesy, but it's what the publisher wanted because they thought they'd sell more books. But I like the subtitle of the book, and of course, subtitles don't get much attention, but the subtitle of that book was getting the odds on your side. You never know what's going to happen. (44:52) You can have a sense sometimes for what the odds of a certain event are. And when the market is high in its cycle, the odds are against you. And when it's low in a cycle, the odds are in your favor. But you know, the odds can be in your favor and you can lose money for the next year or two or three and vice versa. (45:11) I think when I wrote my book richer wiser happier where you you were one of the central characters. I think in a way that was my biggest revelation over the five years of working on the book and digesting that material was that we have this fundamental problem that the future is unknowable and yet as you often write we have to make decisions about the future. (45:30) And it struck me, I think probably deeply influenced by you, was that there are all of these ways in which you, even though you have no control, you can very subtly stack the odds in your in your favor. It kind of is simultaneously like most truth sort of benal and incredibly profound. (45:51) Can you talk a little bit about that idea because it seems like a sort of guiding principle that actually I think runs through all of the great investors lives is this ability. I mean, you see it with someone like Ed Thorp, right, who you know, like just to very subtly stack the odds by say not playing games that you're illquipped to win or by making sure you analyze the evidence in a very rational independent way, whether it's about COVID or markets or anything like that. (46:18) Can you unpack that a little? Well, you know, I mean, there are so many thoughts on that subject, but one of the things that Warren Buffett has been most outspoken about is in baseball, you should get up to the plate and you should wait for a good pitch. And first of all, you have to have a sense for what's a good pitch and what's a bad one. (46:35) And he tells the story that Ted Williams, not only was Ted Williams waiting for good pitches, but he he was very studious about his accomplishments and he charted all his batting and he figured out where was the pitch and what was the result. and he figured out he broke the the strike zone into 18 spots. And he said, "Well, if the ball is in spot number one, two, or four, I tend to get a single. If it's in five or six, I tend to get a double. (46:55) And if it's if it's in seven or eight, I tend to strike out." So, you got to figure out what's a good pitch and you got to wait for it, he says. And Buffett has always advocated patience and not hyperactivity. But he points out that in investing, unlike baseball, in baseball, if you stand there with the bat on your shoulder and you let three pitches go by in the strike zone, you're out. (47:17) But in investing, you can wait more. You don't get called out on strikes. Now, it's not exactly true because if you're a professional investor, you're investing for others, and you sit there with the bat on your shoulder and the market goes up for 16 years, you might be called out. (47:34) Warren had the particular benefit that he was never thought he might get fired. But the rest of us might. But still patience is very important and waiting for a good pitch objectively and your kind of pitch, your kind of investment. You can do that. You know, we talked before about playing within yourself. Figure out the kinds of things you're looking for. (47:54) You can't buy something because you think it's attractive to others. It has to be attractive to you and has to satisfy your criteria. And you should have a set of criteria. So these are the things you can do to get the odds on your side. I think there's another really critical related lesson that I've tried to deeply internalize from you over the years, which is not to fool oneself about the conditions, the environment in which we find ourselves. And I often I couldn't find it when I was rereading your memos this week, but there's a really (48:24) beautiful quote from your intellectual hero Peter Bernstein that I often quote that I'll probably go garbble where he said something like, "The market is not a very accommodating machine. it won't give you high returns just because you need them or want them. Right. (48:42) And can you talk about that because I I think that's also so distinctive to your approach and and it's such a profound and central idea. This idea of of accommodating yourself to reality as it is, not as you wish it might be. Well, first of all, the good news is that on the occasion of the anniversary of the memos, we published an online digital compilation. (49:03) And uh by the way it's free so the price is right but uh it's searchable so if you want to find that quote you can find it next time you know I mean the thing is don't kid yourself and Charlie Mer always used to say delightfully he used to quote the philosopher deastines who said for that which a man wishes that he will believe and we tend to do that and that's injurious let's say you're a stock broker and you get paid on commission and you say well there's always something good to buy and so you buy every day for your clients and you make a lot of commissions. Well, guess what? Some days there's nothing good to (49:36) buy and you have to accept that and be mature about it and be patient and hold back. It all goes with being mature, analytical, patient, insightful, understanding yourself and your biases, understanding the process of how money is made, and then waiting until the odds are on your side to turn up the wick. (50:01) Now, I believe you should have investments all the time, but sometimes you do it more aggressively and sometimes you do it more defensively. You wait for those golden moments to really turn up the wick and become more aggressive. And you've made the point that Charlie really made most of his hay on about four big bets in the course of his lifetime. (50:18) Well, Charlie used to say that four big bets. And I think he either he or Warren said that Warren had eight, but Charlie Yeah, Charlie would say that he made all his money on four things. You've written a a lot about Charlie over the years, mentioning, for example, his great line, I think, at a lunch that you had with him once, where he said, "It's not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid. (50:38) " Can you talk a little bit about what you learned from Charlie, not just about investing, but really about a life well-lived? Well, look, he was brilliant. He was extremely well read. He loved thinking and he would just think about stuff and he developed these things he called mental models for thought and he had what he called the lattis work of mental models and you know it's like a toolkit. (51:05) A lot of what we do as adults and as investors is what you might call pattern recognition. And the great thing about having lived a while and paid attention to what's gone around you and applying some intelligence is that you know XYZ happens. You don't have to stay one. (51:25) What was that? What is it? Why did it happen? What does it mean? What should I do about it? At some point, you might reach a point where you say, "Oh, that's one of those. I know what to do about that." And you have to have a toolkit so you know which tools to apply. And that was Charlie. And so very smart, incredibly thoughtful in interior life, very outspoken, said exactly what he thought all the time regardless of who he was saying to or what it was. (51:51) You know, he was a good kind person, but he was the furthest thing from PC that you ever met. And he would just say what he thought was right. And in fact, I think he has a biography. Yeah. There's a biography of him out. It came out maybe 20 years ago or something. And the title is Damn Right. Because that's what he would say. (52:10) He's Well, Charlie think, you know, and uh emphatic. I mean he just was obviously brilliant but had this process and unharnessed brilliance will get you only so far but he harnessed it into a process and you know he came up with a lot of the philosophical points that guided Warren. The big one he's credited with is that he convinced Warren to stop looking in the gutter for cigar butts that others had thrown away that had one puff left. (52:37) And instead, instead of trying to buy okay companies at great prices, try to buy great companies at okay prices. And that's why Buffett and Berkshire became what they did. You talked there a little bit about patent recognition and the ability to say this is one of those. (52:58) And obviously there's a lot of interest at the moment in your view of the current investment environment. And I know you've been on a big trip around Asia and the like over the last 3 weeks meeting with lots of clients. I'm sure you're hearing a lot of these questions. In August you wrote a piece called the calculus of value where you said the market has moved from elevated to worrisome. (53:16) And I'm wondering when you look at this period compared say to 197374 or 99 2000 or 2007 to 2008 what is it that rhymes in terms of where we stand in the pendulum between greed and fear and optimism and pessimism and risk tolerance and risk aversion? And what makes you not think that we're at that kind of extreme yet? if that's still the case that you don't yet think we're at that kind of extreme most likely. Well, I don't have my finger on the poll, so I don't know where we are today or this week or but I think that (53:51) when you look for comparisons, the strongest comparison, not a perfect comparison, and I'm not saying this is true in degree, will you, but in kind, the strongest comparison is to the TMT internet.com bubble of 98, 99, 2000. The nifty50 was different because it was not around one novel technology and it was around established great companies for the most part. (54:29) I mean there were no technological marvels that crapped out in the nifty50 and then the years 0567 with the subprime and the mortgage back securities subprime mortgage back securities is not comparable because that was not a technological innovation that was a financial invention. Nobody thought that subprime mortgage is going to change the business of housing. The houses were unaffected. (54:48) It's just that they said well we can make money by giving financing to a new class of buyers which turned out to be a bad idea. People who wouldn't document their earnings or their assets. So this is comparable to the internet bubble. You know people said the internet will change the world. Guess what it did? Can you imagine today's world without the internet? It's completely changed in a million ways including the fact that we're talking over it. So this is comparable. It's a technological innovation that I think is going to (55:19) change the world. But my recollection is we had a clearer view of how the internet would change the world. And the view of many in 99 2000 has become true. And I think a lot of the excitement surrounded e-commerce and e-commerce has become a major force. (55:41) It just feels to me like we had a vision of how that was going to work out and it mostly came true. Today, I think we have less of that. I personally, I'm not an expert. I'm the furthest thing from an expert in the world. But I've never heard anybody tell me how AI is going to change the world. We know it's a powerable force. It can think, it can process data. (56:01) It has access to all the data that's ever been compiled. Exactly what it's going to do, how that's going to be a business, how people are going to make money at it, how it's going to impact life, I think is less clear. But I I do think that the two are comparable. And in both cases, there was a new new thing that fired the imagination. And most bubbles are around something new. In ' 69, it was growth stock investing. (56:22) In ' 06, it was subprime mortgages. In 99, it was the internet. In 1720 was the South Sea Company. And in 1620, it was Tula Bulbs in Hollow. So I always make this point that the bubbles are very very around something new because the imagination is untrained and it can go off in a flight of fancy and you can imagine trees growing through the sky. (56:47) You're never going to have a bubble in paper stocks or timber stocks. You know it's too prosaic. People can say well you know we can tell how many houses you're going to build. We know how much wood is needed in each house. We can't tell where we're going to get it from. (57:05) So, you know, you can't have these tree sky moments in the prosaic areas. It's always something new. You had a very interesting conversation recently, Howard, that I was listening to yesterday with Edward Chancellor, author of Devil Take the Heindmost, which had had an important impact on you when you first saw the 2000 bubble, right? And one of the things you said in that conversation, you made two bold statements. You said, number one, AI will change the world. (57:29) Number two, most of the companies people are investing in today, in other words, to profit from AI will end up worthless. And then you said, when the naive or hopeful investor takes the leap that the irresistible trend will produce sure profits, that's when you get into trouble. Well, I should go back and reread that memo, I think. But I, you know, that's right. (57:50) And and change the world and investors making money are not the same thing. And in fact, Warren Buffett pointed out and I think he said this about the internet. I think it was his in his 2000 annual meeting. There's no doubt that the internet will produce a great increase in productivity. It's not clear that it'll have a positive impact on profitability. And I think the same is true of AI. (58:16) My concern is I saw that CNN is running an ad. I on my travel I watch CNN International and they're drumming up interest in a show and the anchor says to a guest, you say that AI has the ability to eliminate half of entry-level jobs. That was the whole conversation cuz then they cut to something else. But the point is that may be true and obviously if you can reduce the US GDP and eliminate half the entry- level jobs, it could be more profitable or or certainly more productive. (58:47) But the question is will it be more profitable? To whom will the savings acrew? If different companies are competing to provide the AI service, maybe they'll compete on price to the point where it's not profitable for them. Or if the people who employ AI service compete for market share, maybe all the savings will go to the consumer in the form of lower prices. (59:12) So exactly how the laborsaving tool with AI is going to turn into profits, I don't think anybody can say. You often like to ask Howard, what's the mistake here? And so obviously we don't have any idea how this is going to pan out, but when you ask yourself what would be the likely mistakes worth avoiding at a time like this, particularly for either naive and credulous investors or just for smart investors who get sucked into euphoria, what are the likely mistakes we ought to be trying to avoid here? What I've seen in euphoria after euphoria is number (59:47) one, you shouldn't make the assumption that today's leaders are certain to be the leaders of tomorrow. They may well be, but you should bet your life on. Number two, you shouldn't assume that because the leaders are selling at high prices that it's a good idea to invest in the lagards because they're cheaper. (1:00:04) People say, well, they have a low probability of success, but maybe a big payoff, so I should buy it. And that's what I call lottery ticket mentality. And you know if they have a low probability success you should accept that that means chances are good of unsuccess. And then on the AI, I'm led to believe that you can make binary bets in companies that have nothing else going on, which will be sinker swim bets, or you can invest in pre-existing great tech companies, which will get moderate benefits from AI if they're successful, but still be in business and profitable if it's not that big a deal. And now (1:00:45) we're back to the very beginning of our conversation. Do you want to have a novel entrepreneurial startup pure play which has no revenues and no profits today but could be a moonshot if it works or do you want to invest in a great tech company which is already existing and making a lot of money where AI could be incremental but not life-changing. It's a choice. (1:01:11) What's your style? What's your game plan? I mean, if you're going to make binary bets on novel companies, you have to understand how risky that is. There's also been a lot of speculation, obviously, both on gold, which recently hit more than $4,000 an ounce, and on Bitcoin. And I I was looking back at one of your old memos where you were saying either you believe in gold or you don't. (1:01:35) and you you compared it to whether you believe in God or not that there's there's no analytical way in my opinion you wrote to value an asset that doesn't produce cash flow and I've never been able to bring myself to buy Bitcoin either and it's it's now down about a third since uh October to $90,000 a coin and you you've debated this obviously a lot with your son Andrew. (1:01:56) Um, how do you feel now when you look at Bitcoin and gold and you kind of try to wrestle with whether they belong in someone's portfolio? Well, you know, look, I and Oakree consider ourselves value investors. And what the value investor does is you look at a situation, whether it's a stock, a company, a bond, a building, whatever it might be, and you try to figure out its intrinsic value. (1:02:26) And then you see how the price today compares to that intrinsic value. And intrinsic value invariably comes from the fact that it can make money, that it can be profitable and produce cash flow. And so, you know, let's say I have a building and it produces a million dollars a year in profit. I'd like to sell it. You'd like to buy it. (1:02:43) We can have a discussion. And I say, I'd like $12 million for it. In which case, you'll get an 8% rate of return. and you say, "No, I want to pay $8 million for it because I want a 12% return because it's risky." And I say, "No, you can have to pay $11 million because I'll give you a 9% return, but that'll go up over time. (1:03:01) " So, we can talk, but we're talking in a range centered around the value. But if you're doing Bitcoin or gold or diamonds or paintings, there is no intrinsic value. And I always talk about oil. Oil, as I recall, oil, William, was $147 a barrel in June or July of '07 and then $35 a barrel in January. Nothing changed about oil. It was still black. It still made the lights go. We were using it faster than we were finding it. (1:03:32) Oil doesn't have an intrinsic value. And all these assets, all they're worth, their price is what the market will bear. How can you invest analytically? If I say to a gold fan or a Bitcoin fan, well, what do you think the price will be in a year, how do they reach that conclusion? What do they base it on if they don't have cash flow to base that conclusion on? And what I think I said in the memo, you can invest in it out of superstition. (1:04:03) Gold, you can invest in it because you think it'll go up. You can invest in it because you think it'll be a store of value because it always has. But you can't invest in it analytically on the basis of something called intrinsic value. I still think that's true. So the people who bought gold a year ago have made a ton of money. I just happened to look at the numbers at my lunch before coming here to do this phone call with you. (1:04:28) And if you uh bought gold at the end of 2010, I think you've had a 7.7% annual return since then. And if you bought the S&P at the same time, you've had a 12.7% rate of return. So, it's not that gold is a disaster, but you shouldn't be distracted by the gains of the last month. It's been a lackluster investment. you wrote a really important memo called Sea Change in I think December 2022 where you talked about really the end of an era where we could rely on declining interest rates that had gone on since 1980. And one thing you wrote in that memo was investors can now potentially (1:05:11) get solid returns from credit instruments, meaning they no longer have to rely as heavily on riskier investments to achieve their overall return targets. Can you talk a little bit about the best way for regular investors to take advantage of opportunities in areas like high yield bonds and the like? Because this is an area where my ignorance really runs deep and obviously your knowledge runs very deep. (1:05:35) Like if we actually want to get equity like returns in a fairly worrisome environment, what do you do? What's a smart practical way for a regular investor to do that? Well, you know, high yield bonds, for example, are part of a group of assets. I call them lending assets. The world calls them debt or fixed income or bonds or notes or loans, but they all fall under the same heading. (1:06:06) And they're all instruments where you give somebody your money, they rent it from you, and they promise to pay you interest every six months and then give you your money back at the end. And you can take those facts and do a calculation and figure out what the rate of return will be if you lend them money at that rate of interest today and and they pay you back at the end. (1:06:24) And it's called fixed income because the outcome is fixed. It's a contractual relationship that promises a fixed return. And so there's only one moving piece in the whole equation. Once you've bought it and the interest rate is set and the price at maturity is set, you've paid a fixed price. (1:06:44) There's only one moving piece which is the probability that they'll keep the promise of interest in principle and it's the job of the credit analyst to assess that and it's a fairly arcane thing. You know people buy stocks because they like the idea of the company or they like the product or something like that. I don't think it's a great idea but they do. Credit analysis is more arcane. (1:07:01) You can't say well I like they make good hamburgers so I'm going to buy their ponds. It's a totally different story. So for most people who are listening, well, let me say this. In most areas, the amateur should go into funds or ETFs or some managed product. Remember what Charlie Mer said. It's not easy. Investor thinks it's easy as stupid. (1:07:24) So that's true in the things I do, but it's also true in my opinion for stocks, mutual funds, ETFs, index funds, something like that. And investing is a funny business. It's very easy to get an average return. It's very hard to get an above average return. (1:07:44) But if you're content with an average return, uh you can get managed products at a relatively low cost and have a high probability of getting an average return. And the point is that you know high yield bonds yield around seven. Other forms of credit may have a slightly higher return. And if you're happy with that, there are lots of managed products that'll deliver it. Going back to this general question that we've been discussing about dealing with risk and dealing with uncertainty. (1:08:07) You often quote one of your favorite addages which is um from Elroy Dimson who said risk means more things can happen than will happen. And it feels like the range of possible things that can happen today is wider than it's been in in the past. And I'm wondering how you deal with it not only as an investor but actually personally this sense you know as you as you talk to your kids or as you talk to your grandkids like how one actually keeps an even keel in a period where you often quote a lovely line from Peter Bernstein who said we walk every day into the great unknown. How do we deal (1:08:45) with it? Well, first of all, I've concluded in the last few months, William, that the toughest questions I get are the ones that start with how. Huh? Because I I can tell you what you have to do. You have to keep an even keel. I can tell you that it may be desirable if you if you want to be quote safe to have a more defensive portfolio, but how to make that decision and how to keep an even keel is a little harder. (1:09:19) But obviously if you let your emotions run away with you, if you buy when things get exciting, which usually means when prices are high, and you sell when things get depressing, which usually means prices are low, it's obviously going to be very counterproductive. (1:09:37) Uh, so I think the even keel is essential, and I think most of the people that you've met with and written about have a pretty even keel. So that's my strongest recommendation. And this goes back to not being hyperactivity, not trading, not trading all the time. Don't just do something. Sit there. Let you know investing is not a it's not a fluke that it works. (1:09:58) It's not a pachinko game or a roulette wheel. It works over time because economies grow and companies improve their profitability over time. And the most important thing for investors is to get on that gravy train and stay on it. Invest. Invest early, invest a lot, and don't tamper with it. (1:10:24) And having your your emotions under control is essential if you're going to be able to do that last thing of don't tamper with it. And getting on the gravy train and staying on it and not tampering with it is much more important than getting on, getting off, picking the right times to get in, picking the right times to get out, picking exactly the stocks that'll go up the most and avoiding the stocks that will go up the least. (1:10:43) That's all kind of just embroidering around the edges. The most important thing is to be a long-term investor. You also said to me something that really helped me in the chapter that I wrote about you in my book about just not overreaching. like the big question being how much you push the envelope. And I I I think that's another really key thing is just ensuring survival. (1:11:06) But I was also very struck you quoted something in your risk revisited again memo from 2015 where you said in my personal life I tend to incorporate another of Einstein's comments which is I never think of the future. It comes soon enough. (1:11:22) And I was wondering whether you were being kind of fasile and a little bit facicious or whether actually that is something that helps you get through uncertainty that that idea. I'm not a futurist. I don't think that my vision of the future is bound to be more right than anybody else's. So no, I don't think about it that much. (1:11:41) And I just try to do, you know, all these things are a little bit counterintuitive and a lot little illogical. I just try to think of we're laboring in the here and now to buy things that are going to do okay. Well, then you say, "Yeah, but Howard, in order to know whether someone's going to do okay, don't you have to have a view of the future?" Yeah. Well, you kind of do, but don't think you know everything. Don't think you have it right. (1:11:59) You quoted Elroy Dempson. The future is not a set single thing that if you're smart enough, you can figure it out what it's going to be and it's going to materialize and make you right. It's a probability distribution. It's a range of possibilities in each thing whether it's GDP growth next year or inflation next year or who's going to win the next election and who's going to win the next World Series or you know whether we're going to have geopolitical peace or any of these things. Only one thing will happen but many things can and you (1:12:29) should accept that. You should accept that it introduces uncertainty into the equation and you shouldn't form a certainty around one outcome and bet heavily on it unless you have special expertise which very few people do. So I think that humility is a great way to stay out of trouble. (1:12:52) And I once wrote in some memo or other about my favorite fortune cookie. You probably read that one too. But it said that the cautious seldom error or write great poetry. Every person has to decide for themselves. Do I want to try to write great poetry and get rich if my bets are right or do I want to avoid erring and be sure that I'll do okay if my bets are wrong? It's a choice. You can't have both. (1:13:18) Or you can try to do both, but you have to put your emphasis on one or the other. You can't emphasize both at the same time. And so, you know, this is a matter of mindset that I think most people should adopt. And life is uncertain, the future's uncertain, investing is uncertain. Are you going to go for winners or are you going to try to avoid losers? I wanted to ask you one last quick question. (1:13:41) I was struck the other day when I was listening to a conversation between you and your oak tree co-founders Bruce Kh and Sheldon Stone that Sheldon said that when he first met you back in 1983 and came to work with you in high yield debt, you talked even then about the importance of having a balanced life and having time to enjoy your personal life. (1:14:04) And Bruce also talked about the importance of family to you and and all of the founders of Oak Tree. And I was very struck as I was looking back on your life that you found plenty of time to play tennis and bat gammon and card games with friends like Bruce Newberg and to buy and decorate and fix up houses and spend time with your kids and grandkids. And you mentioned even that you'd spent thousands of hours playing back gam and card games with Bruce Newberg over 40 years. (1:14:29) What advice do you have for investors or or other professionals who clearly need to work really hard to compete and yet you also want to have a balanced life in some form and you don't want to just look back and be like, "Yeah, I made an enormous amount of money and I never got to hang out with my family at all or my friends or to enjoy my hobbies. (1:14:49) " Well, you know, we all have to choose what's important to us. Charlie Mer used to say, "Oh, that guy that guy's a maniac." a maniac was somebody who only cared about working hard and making money. You have to decide whether that's for you and it's not for me. (1:15:06) And uh the trightest of all the sayings is that nobody on their deathbed ever said, "I wish I worked more." And I think it's true. And that's not how I'm living my life. And I have, as you say, pursuits that I enjoy greatly. I wouldn't give them up. And once you have enough money or more than enough money, why should you give away part of your enjoyment to have more? I think the greatest saying that I always use when I give advice to young people is from the writer Christopher Moley who said there is only one success to be able to live your life in your own way. (1:15:39) Now the hard part is figuring out what your way is. What is it that you know you're 22 you're figuring out a career course. What is it that will make you happy at 70? Not easy to know. We change. We sometimes have an inaccurate vision of ourselves. (1:15:59) If I described myself to you 40 years ago, I would not describe the person I am today. Mainly because I maybe I was wrong and maybe I changed. But yet, our goal should be to get to the end and say, "I'm happy with the choices I made." Again, that that should be a choice that is made consciously and just pursuing work and money and career and prestige because other people are doing it because it's glorified in the media or because you want to emulate XYZ, become the richest man in the world. You shouldn't do it unless it's really right for you. And I don't think it's right for most people. (1:16:32) So, I think live your life your way. Figure out what's good for you and pursue it. I feel like when I look at your life, you've done a great job of setting things up so that it suits you. So, you're you're writing memos, which you love doing. You're not making individual investments yourself. You're not managing lots of employees. (1:16:50) You're you're setting the firm's investment philosophy and meeting clients. And there's something really lovely about seeing the way you've set yourself up in this sort of very internally aligned way. So, it's a great model for us all. Thank you. (1:17:11) Well, you know, William, my idol, Warren Buffett, always says he skips to work in the morning and I feel I do and I'm happy to go to work and I like what I do. I hope to keep doing it for a long time to come. I hope so, too. Thank you so much, Howard. It's been a real delight chatting with you, and I've really learned so much from you over the years, and I really tried to not just read these memos, but really truly internalize the lessons. (1:17:30) And I know that I'm one of many thousands of people whose lives are actually tangibly better because you've shared these lessons. So, thank you. Thank you. It's a pleasure speaking with you and let's do it again. I look forward to it. All right. Take care. Thanks, Howard. People say we're always bearish. That's not actually true, but we are almost invariably skeptical. (1:17:48) What doubting Thomas's this is a market of credul conformity. Actually, you know, people nothing succeeds like success anywhere, but especially on Wall Street. I think George Soros himself said we'll see a bubble just jump on it to get there early and uh you will get it in time. No, just I'll tell you when you'll know. (1:18:07) But there are so many ways to make money on Wall Street. I happen to have cultivated a following that is innately skeptical.
Avoid Disaster w/ Superinvestor Howard Marks (RWH063)
Summary
Transcript
(00:00) I wrote a memo called fewer losers or more winners. You have to make a choice. And if you're going to try to win in investing, which means win in our business means having superior results. How can you possibly get superior results? And the answer is you either have more of the things that go up or less of the things that go down or both. (00:26) Most people can't do both because the skillful aggressive player might be able to get more of the winners. The skillful defensive player might be able to have fewer of the losers. Very few people have enough equipment to do both. Most people that means you have to choose. Before we dive into the video, if you've been enjoying the show, be sure to click the subscribe button below so you never miss an episode. It's a free and easy way to support us and we'd really appreciate it. Thank you so much. (00:56) Hi folks. I'm absolutely thrilled to welcome back a very special guest today, Howard Marx, who's the chairman of Oak Tree Capital Management. It's been a landmark year both for Oak Tree and Howard. Oakree recently celebrated its 30-year anniversary and since Howard co-founded the firm in 1995, it's been a spectacular success. (01:18) It's grown into a globally revered leader in alternative investments with something like $218 billion in assets under management and more than,400 employees around the world. And a few weeks ago, Howard also celebrated another landmark which is 35 years of writing his extraordinary memos which are such a trove of clear and lucid investment wisdom that they've earned a devoted following of I think more than 300,000 subscribers. (01:45) Howard marked that anniversary by publishing a free compilation of 45 of the best memos which I spent the last couple of days rereading. I would say personally that nobody other than Warren Buffett has done more to distill and share the enduring truths of investing. So today we're going to focus in some depth on some of the most important things that Howard's figured out in his 56 years. (02:10) not only as one of the great investors of our time, but I would say also one of the great teachers of the investing world. So, Howard, it's lovely to see you again. Thank you so much for joining us. Thank you, William. With a with a uh introduction like that, I'm tempted to say go on. Okay. Well, we're off to a good start then. (02:29) I wanted to start by asking you about a really important dinner that you had in Minneapolis in 1990 that had a profound impact on you both in terms of inspiring your first memo but also I think subsequently in shaping Oak Tree's investment philosophy. Why was that dinner such a seminal event and what did you learn from it? Well, I had dinner with a guy named David Van Bencotton who ran the pension fund for General Mills and uh he was a good friend and good client and he told me that he'd been running the plan for 14 years and in the 14 years that their equity portfolio had never been above the 27th percentile of pension fund (03:12) equity portfolios or below the 47th so solidly in the second quarter for 14 years in a row. But interestingly, as a result, for the 14 years overall, they were in the fourth percentile. Now, that's incredible math. You would say, well, if you bounce back and forth between 27 and 47, on average, you're probably about 37. No, fourth. (03:40) How could that be? And the answer turns out to be that most investors shoot for the stars and occasionally shoot themselves in the foot and wreck their record. And once you have a big loss, it takes a long time to get back to scratch. So I thought that was really important. So I wrote the first memo called the route to performance. As you say, it had a great impact on us. And I knew you were going to ask this question. So I went back and looked at the first memo. (04:03) And it happens to say in there, simply put, what the pension funds record tells me is that in equities, if you can avoid the losers and losing years, the winners will take care of themselves. And when we started Oak Tree in 1995, I wrote that down and that became our motto and it still is. If you can avoid the losers, the winners will take care of themselves. (04:29) I think that's an extremely important thing in investing. investing success is not about a swing to the fences. It's about steadily steady excellence, shall we say. And it's interesting. I remember you pointing out in one of your memos that Graham and Dodd had written all the way back in 1940 that there's something very distinctive about bond investing that's congruent with this, that it's a negative art, as they put it. (04:55) Can you explain that? I went back to read the 1940 edition because the owner of the book asked Seth Clarman to update it and Seth asked me to do the part on fixed income. So I went back and reread it and I got kind of mad when I saw that. I said why are they denigrating what I do calling it a negative art and then I realized what they were saying. (05:16) What they were saying was that if there are a 100 bonds out there and they're all 8% bonds and you know that 90 will pay and 10 will default, it doesn't matter which of the 90 that pay you buy because they're all 8% bond. They all get the same return. The only thing that matters is that you don't buy any of the 10 that default. (05:41) So in other words, you improve your performance not by what you buy, by what you exclude. So it's a negative art and in fixed income where you're promised a return and the only moving part that's remaining is whether the company keeps its promise that all you have to do is weed them out and you get the promised return. So that that's what I meant when I said the winners take care of themselves. (06:06) And it was a very good mindset when I started the high yield bond business in 78 to think that way. I didn't have those words for it but I thought that way. And then when we went into other businesses like Bruce K's distressed debt funds in 88 and emerging market equities in 98 and things like that now we're not doing straight fixed income. (06:25) It's not enough to just not have any losers. We actually try to find some winners but we maintain that motto because I think that the risk conscious mindset is a great guidepost. You've written several memos over the years, usually about one a decade, about the parallels between investing and sports, and you're obviously a keen tennis player yourself. (06:50) And one of my favorites is called What's Your Game Plan, which is, I think, from 2003. And you talk about the best tennis players and best baseball players and the lessons. And one of the things that struck me as I was rereading it the other day is you point out that it's very important for them to play within themselves and yet there's also when you look at the greatest tennis players for example this need at times to be maximally aggressive and and it tallies with what you've said to me before about how risk avoidance usually goes handinhand with return avoidance. Can (07:22) you unpack that a little bit? This nuance that it's it's not about risk avoidance. It's more about the intelligent bearing of risk. William, it's a great coincidence. I happened to have lunch yesterday with a guy named Charlie Ellis and Charlie Ellis wrote the article in I believe 1975 that gave rise to this whole line of thinking and it was called the losers game and he said there are two styles of tennis. (07:53) The professional has to win a winner to win a point because if he hits a mild return, his opponent will hit a winner and put the point away. So, they have to hit winners, but they're so good at what they do that it's mostly under their control. And in fact, in professional tennis, they keep track of something called unforced errors because there are so few. But the amateur tennis player, because they don't have control as much, has to just try to content themselves with not hitting losers. (08:25) And if I can get it over the net and within the bounds of the court 10 times in a row, chances are good that my opponent will stop at nine and I'll win the point, not having hit a winner, but only avoided hitting losers. So the point is, if you think about it, that investing is not like championship tennis because we don't have that much control of the outcome. (08:43) There's too much randomness, too much uncertainty, too many things that are unknowable. And so if you're in a game like we're in, swinging for the fences, trying to hit winners, it can get you carried out. I think it's better to play within yourself, emphasize consistency, not take the big risk, you know, the grand gesture, but rather strive for consistency and and competency. (09:08) That's a lot of what we've done. You've written a lot over the years about various dazzling blowups like Amarance, the energy fund that imploded back in 2006, or Long-Term Capital Management, which imploded back in 1998. When you think about the lessons of all of the firms that didn't survive over the period that Oak Tree has gone from strength to strength, what is it that we need to learn both as professional investors or as regular amateur investors? Well, one of the quotes that I've been using the most in the last decade or so, William, is attributed to Mark Twain, (09:47) and he said, "It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for certain that just ain't true. And if you think about it, no sentence that starts with I don't know but or I could be wrong but ever got anybody into big trouble. You get big trouble when you say I'm 100% sure that XYZ. (10:08) And then you take bold bets and if you take a bold bet on a premise which turns out to be incorrect, you can be finished long term. did that because they thought that their method was infallible and it produced tiny skinny tiny returns. But they would lever that up into big returns by using a lot of borrowed money. (10:29) But when you have a problem on leverage, your losses are magnified and you can get carried out as they were. And I think that Amaran too bet boldly and incorrectly and got carried out. You wrote a great memo. I think it was called pigeed, which is the less glamorous name for amaranth. And um right, there was a lovely sentence in there where you said, "You can successfully invest in volatile assets if you're sure of being able to ride out a storm, but if you lack that certainty and face the possibility of withdrawals or margin (11:00) calls, a little volatility can mean the end." And then you said in this very pathy way, you have to be able to survive life's low points. Can you talk a little bit about that? That seems like such a simple but really critical point about investing. (11:19) Well, another of my favorite implications is never forget about the 6-ft tall person who drowned crossing the stream that was 5 ft deep on average. And people have to think about that for a minute. But if you think about it, I think you realize that the notion of surviving on average is meaningless and irrelevant. You have to survive every day in order to reach the finish line. (11:43) And that means you have to survive on the worst days. And if you have a portfolio or an investment which is directed at maximizing the results if everything you hope comes true, chances are you expose yourself to the possibility of being carried out if what turns out to be true is something different. So that's really what it's about. (12:07) And a lot of investment management decisions come down to the question of whether you're going to try to maximize your gains if things go the way you hope and believe or minimize your losses if they don't. You can't do both at the same time. There's no strategy having maximum returns under good fortune but being fine if things turn out badly. You have to make a choice. (12:35) And in fact, this brings us back in a way to what we were discussing a minute ago. Uh few years ago, I wrote a memo called fewer losers or more winners. You have to make a choice. And if you're going to try to win in tennis or in investing, which means win in our business means having superior results. How can you possibly get superior results? And the answer is you either have more of the things that go up or less of the things that go down or both. (13:08) Most people can't do both because the skillful aggressive player might be able to get more of the winners. The skillful defensive player might be able to have fewer of the losers. Very few people have enough equipment to do both. Most people are subject in some way to their biases, either aggressive or defensive. (13:27) So most people that means you have to choose but it should be a conscious choice. And how many people ever sit down and say I'm going to succeed by having more winners or I'm not going to pursue that many winners. I'm going to succeed by having fewer losers. But if you don't answer that question and make a conscious decision, how can you find a winning strategy? You wrote an important memo related to this back in 2024 called ruminating on asset allocation where you talked about how one of the keys is to achieve this desired balance between aggressiveness (13:58) and defensiveness or maximizing growth of capital or maximizing preservation of capital. And you talked about the importance of finding a targeted risk posture and then recalibrating around that appropriate posture. And it strikes me as such a profoundly important and practical idea. (14:19) Can you talk about that? This idea that we should figure out our risk profile and how we should do it. I mean, what what we should think about in terms of our intestinal fortitude or our our responsibilities or our time horizon. What's the process that we should go through to decide what that targeted risk posture should be? Well, I always think about and guess at the process that people follow. (14:47) And I don't think that many people are that rigorous in their thinking. And I think most people say, well, you know, I'm going to make investments. What does that mean? Well, I'm going to try to buy a bunch of things that'll go up and make me money. But I think especially if you're an institutional investor or investing for others, you have to be a little more thoughtful. So, I wrote a memo. (15:04) You probably remember when I'm going to guess eight years ago or something called calibrating. Yeah. In which I said well you think about the speedometer of a car and zero is no risk and 100 is maximum possible risk and every person every institution every money manager should figure out where in that continuum they should be normally for this client or for me or for my employer or my institution. (15:36) What is the right risk posture for me normally? And as you say, let's talk about individuals. It's the function of age, wealth, income, the relationship between wealth and income and needs, number of dependence, level of aspiration, proximity to retire, and then the last one you touched on is intestinal fortitude. (15:59) So you take all that together and you figure out where in zero to 100 is the right place for you. normally and you say, "Well, I'm young. I don't have that many dependents. I'm aggressive. I can stay with it. If I make a mistake, I I have plenty of time left in my career to recover." So, I can be an 80 or an 85. You say, "Okay, that's my posture. (16:22) " And you figure out, by the way, there's no place you can look to find out, well, which combination of assets will produce an 85. But it's just a mind. It's just a way to direct your thinking. and and 85 you would say well that's pretty risky and it's aggressive but you know we're trying to do better and we're willing to take the risk of doing worse. (16:41) Then the question is after that is do you going to stay there all the time or are you going to try to vary it over time as the opportunities arise in the marketplace and then the next question is if if you will try to vary it what about today? Where do you want to be today? I think it's a constructive way to think about your posture. (17:01) I wrestle with that question a lot and I was thinking about it a lot this week as I was rereading your memos because you said I think in a memo called what really matters investors should find a way to keep their hands off their portfolios most of the time and and earlier in one called selling out you said when I was a boy there was a popular saying don't just sit there do something but for investing I'd invert it don't just do something sit there and so there's this tension where for most of us we just do better not to do anything. (17:32) And yet sometimes you do have to recalibrate. I had dinner a couple of weeks ago with Nick sleep and I was saying to him, I'm kind of worried at the moment, you know, like because I've done well over the last 16 years, thank God. I don't really want to give back 50%. And he sort of said to me, don't fiddle, William. Just don't fiddle. Stop fiddling. (17:51) And he's like, if it goes down 50%, that's fine. You'll just buy more and it'll be fine. you know, how do you wrestle with this question as a regular investor? Well, you look, first of all, on all these questions that we're talking about today and the many more that I'm sure you have for me, there are no right answers. (18:08) There's only a range of possibilities. There are choices, none of them perfect. And the question is, where do you want to come out on the continuum? Usually, you don't want to be at either extreme. You don't want to trade every day, and you don't want to never trade. for example, most people are not 100% maximizers or 100% preservers. So, it's a choice and it's a personal choice and and as I say, importantly, no right or wrong. (18:32) Now, I I mean, Nick's attitude is a little too idealistic in my opinion. And you know, I believe that there are good opportunities once in a while, not every day, once in a while, there are good opportunities to become a little more aggressive or a little more defense. And I wouldn't do a lot because it's easy to be wrong, but I wouldn't let all those opportunities go. (18:59) And and you know that I think we've done good things for our clients by doing that. But you know, I was talking to my son Andrew when I wrote my book, Mastering the Market Cycle, and I said, "I thought our calls had been about right." And he said, "Yeah, Dad, that's because you did it five times in 50 years." So certainly not every day. (19:16) There's not every something wise to do every day. And by the way, that memo, what really matters, I think, is is one of the better ones that garnered roughly the least attention or response. But I told the story in there about there was a study done of clients at fidelities and they concluded that the best performance belonged to the accounts of the people who were dead. (19:41) Now then added that Fidelity has not been able to find that study and neither has anybody else. So it's probably apocryphal but you get the point. And I think that overtrading is a mistake. And not only is it not productive on balance and costly, but it can be counterproductive because if you get excited and buy at the high and then depressed and sell at the low, you're doing the opposite of what you should do and buy and hold is highly superior. (20:14) I just think that for people who have ability and temperament, there are occasions when you want to behave counterally and become a little more defensive because the market is precarious and a little more aggressive because it is generous. You've written a lot about the futility of making macro predictions and forecasts and how rarely one should use them. (20:41) And so I was particularly struck when I was reading one of your memos and you were talking I think it was probably taking the temperature from 2023 where you were talking about those five very successful market calls which really are not even over 50 years they're actually over the last 25 years I think in 2000 then 2004 to7 2008 2012 and 2020 can you explain the nuance here because I think it's really important right that there are times where the market is sufficiently crazy that you've actually sort of jettisoned your usual disdain for macro forecasts. I guess it's just that the odds of of you being right about it being so extreme have been (21:18) better. Can you talk about unpacking that kind of nuance there? Well, number one, I think, as you say, there were five times essentially you say they're all in the last 25 years. So, well, that means it took me 30 years to get up the nerve and feel that I had enough insight to make a call. And the first one was the first day of 2000. It was about the tech bubble. (21:41) And the second thing that's worth noting is that I didn't know anything about tech stocks or technology or the internet or or any of those things. And I call the process taking the temperature because what it is, it's about assessing the behavior of the people around me. You know, Buffett always says everything best and he said that the less prudence which others conduct their affairs, the greater the prudence with which we must conduct our affairs. (22:08) So when everybody is behaving like they're carefree, not a worry in the world, there's no risk they don't think they can surmount and anyway they don't see that many risks, then we should run for the hills because their exuberance has probably moved prices so high that that it's dangerous. (22:27) And then in contrast, when people are depressed and they can never think that there'll ever be another positive step or another upday in the market and all they want to do is get out and they've had it, all that stuff, their pessimism and level of depression usually renders things so cheap that that's the time to become highly aggressive. It's called contrarian. It's called counteryclical. (22:52) I think that as my son said five times in 50 years, there were compelling times to do it. Times when the argument was the logic was compelling and the probability of being right was high. And so we made the call. We took action. I can tell you that I never did it without trepidation. As Mark Twain says, I was never certain, but it felt like the right thing. (23:16) And so it was worth trying. But, you know, in the investment business, even when you're even when you think you're right, you shouldn't assume that it's more than 8020 and maybe it's really 7030 or something like that. But if you know what you're doing, it's worth trying. But nobody gets it right all the time. (23:34) And by the way, I always say, William, if instead of five times, what if I had tried to do it 50 times or 500 times? Or I think about the fact that after 56 years, you multiplied that by 365. So I'm approaching 20,000 days of my working career if you count the weekends. And what if I had made 5,000 calls, made a call every four days. (24:03) What if I said I every four days I got either say buy or sell? I think that my record would be 50/50 at best. So you just can't do it all the time. You have to wait until it's compelling and then pray that you're right. I was very struck by a quote from David Swenson that's one of your favorite quotes from him that comes I think from pioneering portfolio management which I'll read because it's very related to this ability to take idiosyncratic positions. (24:30) and he said, "Active management strategies demand uninstitutional behavior from institutions, creating a paradox that few can unravel. Establishing and maintaining an unconventional investment profile requires acceptance of uncomfortably idiosyncratic portfolios which frequently appear downright imprudent in the eyes of conventional wisdom. (24:50) And I'm curious how you've managed to create an institution that even as it grew huge never became bureaucratic or ruled by consensus or overly conventional and hidebound because I think that's actually part of the success of Oak Tree is that somehow you and Bruce Kh and and Sheldon and the like you've managed to maintain this kind of willingness to be idiosyncratic and unconventional Even as you've become kind of much more institutionalized and more globally important. (25:22) Well, I don't think we have become institutionalized. I think we just become bigger. My dad used to say that marriage is a wonderful institution for people who like living in institutions. And I don't. And the best lessons we learn are learned early. And my first job was at City Bank and I was there 16 years. (25:41) And I learned that I don't like institutional living. And at the bank, if you would say, well, let's try to do this or let's pay this person this or let's promote that person that, they would say, you know what, listen, we can't because there are institutional constraints. And this word institutional is a hell of a word. (25:59) By the way, when I was a boy, if they said, oh, he lives in an institution, that meant an insane asylum. But anyway, I try like crazy to avoid bureaucratic tendencies. And I wrote a memo in in the early days, it must have been around 05 or so, called Dare to Be Great. And it was mostly a rant against bureaucracy and committees because when I was 29 and at the tender age of 29, I became the director of research at City Bank. (26:30) They put me on five committees and as I recall, they would meet for a minimum of 16 hours a week and I almost shot myself. I have a short attention span and I don't talk that much and I don't like to listen to other people that much. And I found that those meetings went as long as the person who wanted them to go to the longest wanted them to go. (26:48) And if you think about it, if you come up with some brilliant insight, what David called idiosyncratic. And you know, you give it a shot. By the way, it's idiosyncratic. Why? Because everybody else is doing the opposite. That's what makes it great. and you want to do it because you think you have some insight about why they're all wrong and their actions have made it wrong in the market. (27:12) Can you imagine trying to convince a committee of 10 people to get the majority of them to support it? Well, how the hell can you do that? Because there's a reason why most people in the market aren't taking that approach because it's hard to see. So, if most people are doing A, how can you convince the majority of a committee to do B? If you have idiosyncratic insight, if you have a young Warren Buffett working for you, you better just let him do his thing rather than say, "Well, you Warren, you can't make any trades until you convince the majority of the committee." So, this is one of the most (27:44) important things in investing and bureaucracy and great investing are counterindicated as the doctors would say. When Lehman Brothers went bankrupt in midepptember of '08, we had raised the biggest distress debt fund in history by a factor of about three, we had 10 billion dollars sitting on the shelf. Lehman goes under. Most people think the financial world is going to melt down. (28:10) Question is, where do you spend the money? And you know, people would say, well, why don't you just analyze the future? There is no such thing as analyzing the future, especially when you have unprecedented events taking place. And so Bruce and I figured out that we should spend the money. He ran the fund in question and he bravely invested an average of $450 million a week for the next 15 weeks. (28:27) That's $7 billion in one quarter. But I don't think we could have convinced the committee. The good news is we had pre-raised the money so we didn't have to convince the clients the best time to invest is during a crisis. You can't raise any money during the crisis because people are frozen into inaction. (28:47) So it was certainly idiosyncratic. I talked to a friend of mine who wrote for one of the newspapers. He said, 'What are you doing? I said, 'Oh, we're buying.' He says, 'You are like, we were insane. It was certainly idiosyncratic and it was certainly uncomfortable. We certainly weren't sure we were right, but it seemed like the right thing to do. So, you do it. (29:06) You have to overcome your discomfort. I wouldn't try to convince 20 people that I was right. And what is it, Howard, that makes Bruce so extraordinary as an investor? because I've never really heard him talk much. And then I was listening a couple of days ago to a conversation that you'd had on your podcast, the Oak Tree podcast, where you and he and Sheldon talked about the early days of the firm. (29:29) And I was surprised that sort of he just came across this really affable, decent, smart guy with a tremendous focus on on family and decency and building an enduring institution. Tell tell us what he's like because he's so clearly been a key figure in in Oak Tree's success. Yeah. Well, he approached me. I was at TCW. He approached me in ' 87. (29:51) He was a lawyer. He had done some investing for Eli Broad, who was the biggest leader in LA. And he had this idea of forming a distress debt fund, which we did in 888. And I think it was the one of the very first from a mainstream financial institution. We raised on the first closing, we raised $65 million. (30:12) And then the second close brought it up to a grand sum of 96. We thought we had all the money in the world. But the point is that Bruce is extremely analytical. He's like a chess player. He and he is a chess player. And he looks moves ahead, highly competitive in a what you describe a low-key manner, but you know really smart and really focused and great executor. And we have enjoyed a partnership for now 37 years, 38. (30:44) And it's one of the one of the shining things in my life, you know, after my family relationships and friendships. You know, Warren Buffett wrote a letter a couple weeks ago about stepping down and he talked about his relationship with Charlie Motor. (31:02) And he he said that in Charlie, he had a big brother who was protective. And the way I see it, Charlie was the wise philosopher who gave Warren advice and Warren was the six years younger implement who performed the analytical leg work and did the investing. What I really loved in that brief mention he said and the words I told you so were never mentioned. (31:32) And you know, so what Bruce and I have done with each other, our relationship is very similar to that. We both acknowledge so healthily, we both acknowledge that the other can do things we can't do, which is such a great thing because that's the only basis for a healthy partnership. (31:50) Once you start thinking that you can do everything you can do and everything the other person can do, your partner should is doing. But we both acknowledge that each can do things the other can't. And it's been extremely complimentary and nobody has ever said I told you so on any mistakes. There are plenty mistakes made all the time. And I think that we have supported each other and spending 7 billion in the fourth quarter of of 08 would have been very difficult without support. (32:22) You got to buck somebody up and never say I would I would never have done that. You know this fact also that he came to you originally and said let's get into distressed debt raises a really important point that I think comes up in a lot of your writing going back I think as far as the getting lucky memo in 2014 where you said the easiest way to win at investing is by sticking to inefficient markets and I think actually way back in 1995 in how the game should be played you wrote study the micro like mad in order to know your subject better than others you can expect to succeed only if (32:53) you have a knowledge advantage. Can you talk about that because it strikes me as something that I see again and again with the great investors like with your friend Joe Greenblat where he initially got rich partly through his brilliance in special situations or Bill Ruain who told me I just try to learn as much as I can about seven or eight good ideas and it seems like this focus on specializing narrowly but also in a in an inefficient market has been absolutely central to your success. Well, let's take the counterfactual. (33:27) So, remember I said you got to be thoughtful when you sit down to start investing. You have to think, what are the elements that are going to make me a success? And again, success means doing better than others. So, you can't say I'm smart. You're not the smartest person in the world, and everybody else in in the business is pretty smart. (33:45) You can't say I went to the best schools. That doesn't count for that much. You can't say you know I have this generalizable intelligence that I can apply to every asset class and know more than others in every asset class. You have to develop a knowledge advantage and you have to usually that comes from number one developing an an approach which is the right approach and that you implement consistently and from knowing more than the other people. It may be having more data, although that's hard because the SEC's job is to make sure (34:16) that everybody has the same data. Or it may be doing a better job with the data or having more insight in looking at it. Or it may be in what you said going into inefficient markets where the information is not evenly distributed. But you got to have some source of superiority. (34:40) Otherwise, how can you expect to win? You know, investing is an incredibly competitive game and winning consists of beating a bunch of other people who are similarly intelligent, numerate, computer literate, hardworking and very highly motivated. So you you have to have an edge and I think that specialization is one way to try to get an edge. The other thing though is it's really important the concept of the less efficient market. (35:08) When I try to illustrate market efficiency to people what I say is well what if when I got out of University of Chicago in ' 69 I had been approached by a guy and he says look I'm a bookmaker and I book bets on football and I have concluded that I can make a lot of money on football if I know which team is going to win the coin toss at the beginning of the game. (35:30) So, I'm going to give you 15 PhDs and a Cray superco computer and all you have to do is predict the coin toss at the beginning of every game. Now, if it's a fair coin, it can't be done. It's a waste of time because there's no edge. And that's an efficient market. (35:50) An efficient market is a market where everybody knows as much as you do and there's no edge and you're wasting your time. So, our definition of a less efficient market is a market where hard work and skill can pay off. Later this year, I'm going to be launching a richer, wiser, happier master class for a very small select group of people who like to study with me over the course of a year. (36:15) We're going to meet once a month over Zoom, typically for about 2 hours per session, to discuss the themes in my book, Richer, Wiser, Happier. We'll also meet in person at a couple of really special events. I'm going to cap the group at a maximum of 20 people. So, this is an unusual opportunity to study very directly with me and a small group. What sort of people am I looking for to join the master class? Well, really anyone who's deeply interested in exploring how to live a life that's truly richer, wiser, and happier. (36:45) This is the second time that I've taught a richer wiser happier master class and I'm planning to do this again because it's really been a totally joyful experience for me over the last year. The group has included an amazing array of 20 people from six different countries and I can tell you that the current members are an incredibly interesting, accomplished and really delightful array of people. (37:10) They include some extremely successful fund managers, some investment analysts, wealth advisers, heads of family offices, CEOs, entrepreneurs, a management consultant, really renowned physicist turned quant investor, and a friend of mine who's a highly successful professional gambler. The common denominator here, I think, is that they're all united in this desire to live a truly abundant life, and they're also all great learners. (37:35) One of the most joyful things for me personally has been to see the friendships form between these remarkable people as they learn from each other and support each other. In any case, if this sounds like something that might appeal to you, please email my friend and fellow podcast host Kyle Grievy, which is kyle etheinvespodcast.com. Are you looking to connect with highquality people in the value investing world? Beyond hosting this podcast, I also help run our tip mastermind community, a private group designed for serious investors. Inside, you'll meet vetted members who are entrepreneurs, private investors, and (38:15) asset managers. People who understand your journey and can help you grow. Each week, we host live calls where members share insights, strategies, and experiences. Our members are often surprised to learn that our community is not just about finding the next stockpick, but also sharing lessons on how to live a good life. (38:34) We certainly do not have all the answers, but many members have likely faced similar challenges to yours. And our community does not just live online. Each year, we gather in Omaha and New York City, giving you the chance to build deeper, more meaningful relationships in person. (38:52) One member told me that being a part of this group has helped him not just as an investor, but as a person looking for a thoughtful approach to balancing wealth and happiness. We're capping the group at 150 members. And we're looking to fill just five spots this month. So, if this sounds interesting to you, you can learn more and sign up for the weight list at thevestorpodcast.com/mastermind. (39:15) That's thespodcast.com/mastermind. or feel free to email me directly at claytheinvestorspodcast.com. If you enjoy excellent breakdowns on individual stocks, then you need to check out the intrinsic value podcast hosted by Shaun Ali and Daniel Mona. Each week, Shawn and Daniel do in-depth analysis on a company's business model and competitive advantages. (39:42) And in real time, they build out the intrinsic value portfolio for you to follow along as they search for value in the market. So far, they've done analysis on great businesses like John Deere, Ulta Beauty, AutoZone, and Airbnb. And I recommend starting with the episode on Nintendo, the global powerhouse in gaming. (40:03) It's rare to find a show that consistently publishes highquality, comprehensive deep dives that cover all of the aspects of a business from an investment perspective. Go follow the intrinsic value podcast on your favorite podcasting app and discover the next stock to add to your portfolio or watch list. You know, I was as you said in I wrote in getting lucky in January 14th that I was lucky to find some inefficient markets early in my career. (40:33) August of 78, I got the phone call that changed my life from the head of the bond department at City Bank. He says there's some guy named Milin or something in California and he deals in something called high yield bonds. Do you think you can figure out what that is? That was it. But they were called junk bonds. Most people wouldn't touch them with a 10-ft pole. That was 78. (40:53) You know, the big pools of money in America are the public pension funds, states, mostly cities. I didn't get my first public pension fund account for 18 years. They wouldn't go there because they were reputationally and politically unpalatable. Oh, great. (41:12) You mean it's an asset class that I can buy that nobody else will buy at any price? Well, maybe it's full of bargains. That's the way these things work. But if you look at the things that everybody thinks are great and will gladly buy it at any price, why should you think you can get a bargain there? You know, when I started in 1969, City Bank, where I worked, was an investor in what were called the Nifty50, the greatest stocks in America. (41:36) And if you bought them the day I got to work in September of 69, and you held them tenaciously, faithfully for 5 years, you lost about 95% of your money because at the time you bought them, everybody thought they were the greatest thing since sliced bread. (41:54) So, it's something you have to watch out for and you have to look at the things that are less the road less taken. You talk about the nifty50 and and that blow up which obviously had a profound effect on your career and your philosophy. And I've been thinking a lot about this question that you raised in some of your memos about how we can prepare for these extreme exogenous events, whether it's a market crash or a pandemic or a war or or whatever it might be given that we can't predict them. And you wrote in one of your memos, I think it was the second of your memos on uncertainty in 2020. We can do (42:25) so by recognizing that they will inevitably occur and by making our portfolios more cautious when economic developments and investor behavior render markets more vulnerable to damage from untoward events. Can you talk a little bit about that? Because I I think this whole question of how to deal with uncertainty is at the absolute core of what you do as an investor. (42:53) Well, first of all, one of the great sayings is that there are two kinds of people who lose money in the market. The people who know nothing and the people who know everything. So, I hope I never know nothing, but I never think I know everything. And specifically, I believe that the macro future is unpredictable. But there are things that can give us a hint at what lies ahead. (43:13) So I wrote my second book, Mastering the Market Cycle, published in 2018, and it talked about tendencies. And I said, we never know what the market's going to do, but we can have a feeling for when its tendency will be to do well or its tendency will be to do poorly. And its tendency will largely be determined by where we are in the cycle. (43:39) So when things have been going great and prices have been rising as you say for 16 years and PE ratios are high and bond yield spreads which are a barometer of fear are narrow we can assess that the tendency of the market may be to do less well and act accordingly. You don't have to make any predictions. (44:02) None of those five calls I talked about a little while ago was based on a prediction. It was based on an observation. And what I say, William, is we never know where we're going. We sure as hell ought to know where we are. And are prices and valuations high. Is risk being ignored? Are people acting in an exuberant, buoyant way? These are the questions that can tell you what the odds are even though you don't know what the future holds. And I never care for the title of that, but I had a more ariodite title in mind. (44:31) I thought Mastering the Market Cycle was a little cheesy, but it's what the publisher wanted because they thought they'd sell more books. But I like the subtitle of the book, and of course, subtitles don't get much attention, but the subtitle of that book was getting the odds on your side. You never know what's going to happen. (44:52) You can have a sense sometimes for what the odds of a certain event are. And when the market is high in its cycle, the odds are against you. And when it's low in a cycle, the odds are in your favor. But you know, the odds can be in your favor and you can lose money for the next year or two or three and vice versa. (45:11) I think when I wrote my book richer wiser happier where you you were one of the central characters. I think in a way that was my biggest revelation over the five years of working on the book and digesting that material was that we have this fundamental problem that the future is unknowable and yet as you often write we have to make decisions about the future. (45:30) And it struck me, I think probably deeply influenced by you, was that there are all of these ways in which you, even though you have no control, you can very subtly stack the odds in your in your favor. It kind of is simultaneously like most truth sort of benal and incredibly profound. (45:51) Can you talk a little bit about that idea because it seems like a sort of guiding principle that actually I think runs through all of the great investors lives is this ability. I mean, you see it with someone like Ed Thorp, right, who you know, like just to very subtly stack the odds by say not playing games that you're illquipped to win or by making sure you analyze the evidence in a very rational independent way, whether it's about COVID or markets or anything like that. (46:18) Can you unpack that a little? Well, you know, I mean, there are so many thoughts on that subject, but one of the things that Warren Buffett has been most outspoken about is in baseball, you should get up to the plate and you should wait for a good pitch. And first of all, you have to have a sense for what's a good pitch and what's a bad one. (46:35) And he tells the story that Ted Williams, not only was Ted Williams waiting for good pitches, but he he was very studious about his accomplishments and he charted all his batting and he figured out where was the pitch and what was the result. and he figured out he broke the the strike zone into 18 spots. And he said, "Well, if the ball is in spot number one, two, or four, I tend to get a single. If it's in five or six, I tend to get a double. (46:55) And if it's if it's in seven or eight, I tend to strike out." So, you got to figure out what's a good pitch and you got to wait for it, he says. And Buffett has always advocated patience and not hyperactivity. But he points out that in investing, unlike baseball, in baseball, if you stand there with the bat on your shoulder and you let three pitches go by in the strike zone, you're out. (47:17) But in investing, you can wait more. You don't get called out on strikes. Now, it's not exactly true because if you're a professional investor, you're investing for others, and you sit there with the bat on your shoulder and the market goes up for 16 years, you might be called out. (47:34) Warren had the particular benefit that he was never thought he might get fired. But the rest of us might. But still patience is very important and waiting for a good pitch objectively and your kind of pitch, your kind of investment. You can do that. You know, we talked before about playing within yourself. Figure out the kinds of things you're looking for. (47:54) You can't buy something because you think it's attractive to others. It has to be attractive to you and has to satisfy your criteria. And you should have a set of criteria. So these are the things you can do to get the odds on your side. I think there's another really critical related lesson that I've tried to deeply internalize from you over the years, which is not to fool oneself about the conditions, the environment in which we find ourselves. And I often I couldn't find it when I was rereading your memos this week, but there's a really (48:24) beautiful quote from your intellectual hero Peter Bernstein that I often quote that I'll probably go garbble where he said something like, "The market is not a very accommodating machine. it won't give you high returns just because you need them or want them. Right. (48:42) And can you talk about that because I I think that's also so distinctive to your approach and and it's such a profound and central idea. This idea of of accommodating yourself to reality as it is, not as you wish it might be. Well, first of all, the good news is that on the occasion of the anniversary of the memos, we published an online digital compilation. (49:03) And uh by the way it's free so the price is right but uh it's searchable so if you want to find that quote you can find it next time you know I mean the thing is don't kid yourself and Charlie Mer always used to say delightfully he used to quote the philosopher deastines who said for that which a man wishes that he will believe and we tend to do that and that's injurious let's say you're a stock broker and you get paid on commission and you say well there's always something good to buy and so you buy every day for your clients and you make a lot of commissions. Well, guess what? Some days there's nothing good to (49:36) buy and you have to accept that and be mature about it and be patient and hold back. It all goes with being mature, analytical, patient, insightful, understanding yourself and your biases, understanding the process of how money is made, and then waiting until the odds are on your side to turn up the wick. (50:01) Now, I believe you should have investments all the time, but sometimes you do it more aggressively and sometimes you do it more defensively. You wait for those golden moments to really turn up the wick and become more aggressive. And you've made the point that Charlie really made most of his hay on about four big bets in the course of his lifetime. (50:18) Well, Charlie used to say that four big bets. And I think he either he or Warren said that Warren had eight, but Charlie Yeah, Charlie would say that he made all his money on four things. You've written a a lot about Charlie over the years, mentioning, for example, his great line, I think, at a lunch that you had with him once, where he said, "It's not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid. (50:38) " Can you talk a little bit about what you learned from Charlie, not just about investing, but really about a life well-lived? Well, look, he was brilliant. He was extremely well read. He loved thinking and he would just think about stuff and he developed these things he called mental models for thought and he had what he called the lattis work of mental models and you know it's like a toolkit. (51:05) A lot of what we do as adults and as investors is what you might call pattern recognition. And the great thing about having lived a while and paid attention to what's gone around you and applying some intelligence is that you know XYZ happens. You don't have to stay one. (51:25) What was that? What is it? Why did it happen? What does it mean? What should I do about it? At some point, you might reach a point where you say, "Oh, that's one of those. I know what to do about that." And you have to have a toolkit so you know which tools to apply. And that was Charlie. And so very smart, incredibly thoughtful in interior life, very outspoken, said exactly what he thought all the time regardless of who he was saying to or what it was. (51:51) You know, he was a good kind person, but he was the furthest thing from PC that you ever met. And he would just say what he thought was right. And in fact, I think he has a biography. Yeah. There's a biography of him out. It came out maybe 20 years ago or something. And the title is Damn Right. Because that's what he would say. (52:10) He's Well, Charlie think, you know, and uh emphatic. I mean he just was obviously brilliant but had this process and unharnessed brilliance will get you only so far but he harnessed it into a process and you know he came up with a lot of the philosophical points that guided Warren. The big one he's credited with is that he convinced Warren to stop looking in the gutter for cigar butts that others had thrown away that had one puff left. (52:37) And instead, instead of trying to buy okay companies at great prices, try to buy great companies at okay prices. And that's why Buffett and Berkshire became what they did. You talked there a little bit about patent recognition and the ability to say this is one of those. (52:58) And obviously there's a lot of interest at the moment in your view of the current investment environment. And I know you've been on a big trip around Asia and the like over the last 3 weeks meeting with lots of clients. I'm sure you're hearing a lot of these questions. In August you wrote a piece called the calculus of value where you said the market has moved from elevated to worrisome. (53:16) And I'm wondering when you look at this period compared say to 197374 or 99 2000 or 2007 to 2008 what is it that rhymes in terms of where we stand in the pendulum between greed and fear and optimism and pessimism and risk tolerance and risk aversion? And what makes you not think that we're at that kind of extreme yet? if that's still the case that you don't yet think we're at that kind of extreme most likely. Well, I don't have my finger on the poll, so I don't know where we are today or this week or but I think that (53:51) when you look for comparisons, the strongest comparison, not a perfect comparison, and I'm not saying this is true in degree, will you, but in kind, the strongest comparison is to the TMT internet.com bubble of 98, 99, 2000. The nifty50 was different because it was not around one novel technology and it was around established great companies for the most part. (54:29) I mean there were no technological marvels that crapped out in the nifty50 and then the years 0567 with the subprime and the mortgage back securities subprime mortgage back securities is not comparable because that was not a technological innovation that was a financial invention. Nobody thought that subprime mortgage is going to change the business of housing. The houses were unaffected. (54:48) It's just that they said well we can make money by giving financing to a new class of buyers which turned out to be a bad idea. People who wouldn't document their earnings or their assets. So this is comparable to the internet bubble. You know people said the internet will change the world. Guess what it did? Can you imagine today's world without the internet? It's completely changed in a million ways including the fact that we're talking over it. So this is comparable. It's a technological innovation that I think is going to (55:19) change the world. But my recollection is we had a clearer view of how the internet would change the world. And the view of many in 99 2000 has become true. And I think a lot of the excitement surrounded e-commerce and e-commerce has become a major force. (55:41) It just feels to me like we had a vision of how that was going to work out and it mostly came true. Today, I think we have less of that. I personally, I'm not an expert. I'm the furthest thing from an expert in the world. But I've never heard anybody tell me how AI is going to change the world. We know it's a powerable force. It can think, it can process data. (56:01) It has access to all the data that's ever been compiled. Exactly what it's going to do, how that's going to be a business, how people are going to make money at it, how it's going to impact life, I think is less clear. But I I do think that the two are comparable. And in both cases, there was a new new thing that fired the imagination. And most bubbles are around something new. In ' 69, it was growth stock investing. (56:22) In ' 06, it was subprime mortgages. In 99, it was the internet. In 1720 was the South Sea Company. And in 1620, it was Tula Bulbs in Hollow. So I always make this point that the bubbles are very very around something new because the imagination is untrained and it can go off in a flight of fancy and you can imagine trees growing through the sky. (56:47) You're never going to have a bubble in paper stocks or timber stocks. You know it's too prosaic. People can say well you know we can tell how many houses you're going to build. We know how much wood is needed in each house. We can't tell where we're going to get it from. (57:05) So, you know, you can't have these tree sky moments in the prosaic areas. It's always something new. You had a very interesting conversation recently, Howard, that I was listening to yesterday with Edward Chancellor, author of Devil Take the Heindmost, which had had an important impact on you when you first saw the 2000 bubble, right? And one of the things you said in that conversation, you made two bold statements. You said, number one, AI will change the world. (57:29) Number two, most of the companies people are investing in today, in other words, to profit from AI will end up worthless. And then you said, when the naive or hopeful investor takes the leap that the irresistible trend will produce sure profits, that's when you get into trouble. Well, I should go back and reread that memo, I think. But I, you know, that's right. (57:50) And and change the world and investors making money are not the same thing. And in fact, Warren Buffett pointed out and I think he said this about the internet. I think it was his in his 2000 annual meeting. There's no doubt that the internet will produce a great increase in productivity. It's not clear that it'll have a positive impact on profitability. And I think the same is true of AI. (58:16) My concern is I saw that CNN is running an ad. I on my travel I watch CNN International and they're drumming up interest in a show and the anchor says to a guest, you say that AI has the ability to eliminate half of entry-level jobs. That was the whole conversation cuz then they cut to something else. But the point is that may be true and obviously if you can reduce the US GDP and eliminate half the entry- level jobs, it could be more profitable or or certainly more productive. (58:47) But the question is will it be more profitable? To whom will the savings acrew? If different companies are competing to provide the AI service, maybe they'll compete on price to the point where it's not profitable for them. Or if the people who employ AI service compete for market share, maybe all the savings will go to the consumer in the form of lower prices. (59:12) So exactly how the laborsaving tool with AI is going to turn into profits, I don't think anybody can say. You often like to ask Howard, what's the mistake here? And so obviously we don't have any idea how this is going to pan out, but when you ask yourself what would be the likely mistakes worth avoiding at a time like this, particularly for either naive and credulous investors or just for smart investors who get sucked into euphoria, what are the likely mistakes we ought to be trying to avoid here? What I've seen in euphoria after euphoria is number (59:47) one, you shouldn't make the assumption that today's leaders are certain to be the leaders of tomorrow. They may well be, but you should bet your life on. Number two, you shouldn't assume that because the leaders are selling at high prices that it's a good idea to invest in the lagards because they're cheaper. (1:00:04) People say, well, they have a low probability of success, but maybe a big payoff, so I should buy it. And that's what I call lottery ticket mentality. And you know if they have a low probability success you should accept that that means chances are good of unsuccess. And then on the AI, I'm led to believe that you can make binary bets in companies that have nothing else going on, which will be sinker swim bets, or you can invest in pre-existing great tech companies, which will get moderate benefits from AI if they're successful, but still be in business and profitable if it's not that big a deal. And now (1:00:45) we're back to the very beginning of our conversation. Do you want to have a novel entrepreneurial startup pure play which has no revenues and no profits today but could be a moonshot if it works or do you want to invest in a great tech company which is already existing and making a lot of money where AI could be incremental but not life-changing. It's a choice. (1:01:11) What's your style? What's your game plan? I mean, if you're going to make binary bets on novel companies, you have to understand how risky that is. There's also been a lot of speculation, obviously, both on gold, which recently hit more than $4,000 an ounce, and on Bitcoin. And I I was looking back at one of your old memos where you were saying either you believe in gold or you don't. (1:01:35) and you you compared it to whether you believe in God or not that there's there's no analytical way in my opinion you wrote to value an asset that doesn't produce cash flow and I've never been able to bring myself to buy Bitcoin either and it's it's now down about a third since uh October to $90,000 a coin and you you've debated this obviously a lot with your son Andrew. (1:01:56) Um, how do you feel now when you look at Bitcoin and gold and you kind of try to wrestle with whether they belong in someone's portfolio? Well, you know, look, I and Oakree consider ourselves value investors. And what the value investor does is you look at a situation, whether it's a stock, a company, a bond, a building, whatever it might be, and you try to figure out its intrinsic value. (1:02:26) And then you see how the price today compares to that intrinsic value. And intrinsic value invariably comes from the fact that it can make money, that it can be profitable and produce cash flow. And so, you know, let's say I have a building and it produces a million dollars a year in profit. I'd like to sell it. You'd like to buy it. (1:02:43) We can have a discussion. And I say, I'd like $12 million for it. In which case, you'll get an 8% rate of return. and you say, "No, I want to pay $8 million for it because I want a 12% return because it's risky." And I say, "No, you can have to pay $11 million because I'll give you a 9% return, but that'll go up over time. (1:03:01) " So, we can talk, but we're talking in a range centered around the value. But if you're doing Bitcoin or gold or diamonds or paintings, there is no intrinsic value. And I always talk about oil. Oil, as I recall, oil, William, was $147 a barrel in June or July of '07 and then $35 a barrel in January. Nothing changed about oil. It was still black. It still made the lights go. We were using it faster than we were finding it. (1:03:32) Oil doesn't have an intrinsic value. And all these assets, all they're worth, their price is what the market will bear. How can you invest analytically? If I say to a gold fan or a Bitcoin fan, well, what do you think the price will be in a year, how do they reach that conclusion? What do they base it on if they don't have cash flow to base that conclusion on? And what I think I said in the memo, you can invest in it out of superstition. (1:04:03) Gold, you can invest in it because you think it'll go up. You can invest in it because you think it'll be a store of value because it always has. But you can't invest in it analytically on the basis of something called intrinsic value. I still think that's true. So the people who bought gold a year ago have made a ton of money. I just happened to look at the numbers at my lunch before coming here to do this phone call with you. (1:04:28) And if you uh bought gold at the end of 2010, I think you've had a 7.7% annual return since then. And if you bought the S&P at the same time, you've had a 12.7% rate of return. So, it's not that gold is a disaster, but you shouldn't be distracted by the gains of the last month. It's been a lackluster investment. you wrote a really important memo called Sea Change in I think December 2022 where you talked about really the end of an era where we could rely on declining interest rates that had gone on since 1980. And one thing you wrote in that memo was investors can now potentially (1:05:11) get solid returns from credit instruments, meaning they no longer have to rely as heavily on riskier investments to achieve their overall return targets. Can you talk a little bit about the best way for regular investors to take advantage of opportunities in areas like high yield bonds and the like? Because this is an area where my ignorance really runs deep and obviously your knowledge runs very deep. (1:05:35) Like if we actually want to get equity like returns in a fairly worrisome environment, what do you do? What's a smart practical way for a regular investor to do that? Well, you know, high yield bonds, for example, are part of a group of assets. I call them lending assets. The world calls them debt or fixed income or bonds or notes or loans, but they all fall under the same heading. (1:06:06) And they're all instruments where you give somebody your money, they rent it from you, and they promise to pay you interest every six months and then give you your money back at the end. And you can take those facts and do a calculation and figure out what the rate of return will be if you lend them money at that rate of interest today and and they pay you back at the end. (1:06:24) And it's called fixed income because the outcome is fixed. It's a contractual relationship that promises a fixed return. And so there's only one moving piece in the whole equation. Once you've bought it and the interest rate is set and the price at maturity is set, you've paid a fixed price. (1:06:44) There's only one moving piece which is the probability that they'll keep the promise of interest in principle and it's the job of the credit analyst to assess that and it's a fairly arcane thing. You know people buy stocks because they like the idea of the company or they like the product or something like that. I don't think it's a great idea but they do. Credit analysis is more arcane. (1:07:01) You can't say well I like they make good hamburgers so I'm going to buy their ponds. It's a totally different story. So for most people who are listening, well, let me say this. In most areas, the amateur should go into funds or ETFs or some managed product. Remember what Charlie Mer said. It's not easy. Investor thinks it's easy as stupid. (1:07:24) So that's true in the things I do, but it's also true in my opinion for stocks, mutual funds, ETFs, index funds, something like that. And investing is a funny business. It's very easy to get an average return. It's very hard to get an above average return. (1:07:44) But if you're content with an average return, uh you can get managed products at a relatively low cost and have a high probability of getting an average return. And the point is that you know high yield bonds yield around seven. Other forms of credit may have a slightly higher return. And if you're happy with that, there are lots of managed products that'll deliver it. Going back to this general question that we've been discussing about dealing with risk and dealing with uncertainty. (1:08:07) You often quote one of your favorite addages which is um from Elroy Dimson who said risk means more things can happen than will happen. And it feels like the range of possible things that can happen today is wider than it's been in in the past. And I'm wondering how you deal with it not only as an investor but actually personally this sense you know as you as you talk to your kids or as you talk to your grandkids like how one actually keeps an even keel in a period where you often quote a lovely line from Peter Bernstein who said we walk every day into the great unknown. How do we deal (1:08:45) with it? Well, first of all, I've concluded in the last few months, William, that the toughest questions I get are the ones that start with how. Huh? Because I I can tell you what you have to do. You have to keep an even keel. I can tell you that it may be desirable if you if you want to be quote safe to have a more defensive portfolio, but how to make that decision and how to keep an even keel is a little harder. (1:09:19) But obviously if you let your emotions run away with you, if you buy when things get exciting, which usually means when prices are high, and you sell when things get depressing, which usually means prices are low, it's obviously going to be very counterproductive. (1:09:37) Uh, so I think the even keel is essential, and I think most of the people that you've met with and written about have a pretty even keel. So that's my strongest recommendation. And this goes back to not being hyperactivity, not trading, not trading all the time. Don't just do something. Sit there. Let you know investing is not a it's not a fluke that it works. (1:09:58) It's not a pachinko game or a roulette wheel. It works over time because economies grow and companies improve their profitability over time. And the most important thing for investors is to get on that gravy train and stay on it. Invest. Invest early, invest a lot, and don't tamper with it. (1:10:24) And having your your emotions under control is essential if you're going to be able to do that last thing of don't tamper with it. And getting on the gravy train and staying on it and not tampering with it is much more important than getting on, getting off, picking the right times to get in, picking the right times to get out, picking exactly the stocks that'll go up the most and avoiding the stocks that will go up the least. (1:10:43) That's all kind of just embroidering around the edges. The most important thing is to be a long-term investor. You also said to me something that really helped me in the chapter that I wrote about you in my book about just not overreaching. like the big question being how much you push the envelope. And I I I think that's another really key thing is just ensuring survival. (1:11:06) But I was also very struck you quoted something in your risk revisited again memo from 2015 where you said in my personal life I tend to incorporate another of Einstein's comments which is I never think of the future. It comes soon enough. (1:11:22) And I was wondering whether you were being kind of fasile and a little bit facicious or whether actually that is something that helps you get through uncertainty that that idea. I'm not a futurist. I don't think that my vision of the future is bound to be more right than anybody else's. So no, I don't think about it that much. (1:11:41) And I just try to do, you know, all these things are a little bit counterintuitive and a lot little illogical. I just try to think of we're laboring in the here and now to buy things that are going to do okay. Well, then you say, "Yeah, but Howard, in order to know whether someone's going to do okay, don't you have to have a view of the future?" Yeah. Well, you kind of do, but don't think you know everything. Don't think you have it right. (1:11:59) You quoted Elroy Dempson. The future is not a set single thing that if you're smart enough, you can figure it out what it's going to be and it's going to materialize and make you right. It's a probability distribution. It's a range of possibilities in each thing whether it's GDP growth next year or inflation next year or who's going to win the next election and who's going to win the next World Series or you know whether we're going to have geopolitical peace or any of these things. Only one thing will happen but many things can and you (1:12:29) should accept that. You should accept that it introduces uncertainty into the equation and you shouldn't form a certainty around one outcome and bet heavily on it unless you have special expertise which very few people do. So I think that humility is a great way to stay out of trouble. (1:12:52) And I once wrote in some memo or other about my favorite fortune cookie. You probably read that one too. But it said that the cautious seldom error or write great poetry. Every person has to decide for themselves. Do I want to try to write great poetry and get rich if my bets are right or do I want to avoid erring and be sure that I'll do okay if my bets are wrong? It's a choice. You can't have both. (1:13:18) Or you can try to do both, but you have to put your emphasis on one or the other. You can't emphasize both at the same time. And so, you know, this is a matter of mindset that I think most people should adopt. And life is uncertain, the future's uncertain, investing is uncertain. Are you going to go for winners or are you going to try to avoid losers? I wanted to ask you one last quick question. (1:13:41) I was struck the other day when I was listening to a conversation between you and your oak tree co-founders Bruce Kh and Sheldon Stone that Sheldon said that when he first met you back in 1983 and came to work with you in high yield debt, you talked even then about the importance of having a balanced life and having time to enjoy your personal life. (1:14:04) And Bruce also talked about the importance of family to you and and all of the founders of Oak Tree. And I was very struck as I was looking back on your life that you found plenty of time to play tennis and bat gammon and card games with friends like Bruce Newberg and to buy and decorate and fix up houses and spend time with your kids and grandkids. And you mentioned even that you'd spent thousands of hours playing back gam and card games with Bruce Newberg over 40 years. (1:14:29) What advice do you have for investors or or other professionals who clearly need to work really hard to compete and yet you also want to have a balanced life in some form and you don't want to just look back and be like, "Yeah, I made an enormous amount of money and I never got to hang out with my family at all or my friends or to enjoy my hobbies. (1:14:49) " Well, you know, we all have to choose what's important to us. Charlie Mer used to say, "Oh, that guy that guy's a maniac." a maniac was somebody who only cared about working hard and making money. You have to decide whether that's for you and it's not for me. (1:15:06) And uh the trightest of all the sayings is that nobody on their deathbed ever said, "I wish I worked more." And I think it's true. And that's not how I'm living my life. And I have, as you say, pursuits that I enjoy greatly. I wouldn't give them up. And once you have enough money or more than enough money, why should you give away part of your enjoyment to have more? I think the greatest saying that I always use when I give advice to young people is from the writer Christopher Moley who said there is only one success to be able to live your life in your own way. (1:15:39) Now the hard part is figuring out what your way is. What is it that you know you're 22 you're figuring out a career course. What is it that will make you happy at 70? Not easy to know. We change. We sometimes have an inaccurate vision of ourselves. (1:15:59) If I described myself to you 40 years ago, I would not describe the person I am today. Mainly because I maybe I was wrong and maybe I changed. But yet, our goal should be to get to the end and say, "I'm happy with the choices I made." Again, that that should be a choice that is made consciously and just pursuing work and money and career and prestige because other people are doing it because it's glorified in the media or because you want to emulate XYZ, become the richest man in the world. You shouldn't do it unless it's really right for you. And I don't think it's right for most people. (1:16:32) So, I think live your life your way. Figure out what's good for you and pursue it. I feel like when I look at your life, you've done a great job of setting things up so that it suits you. So, you're you're writing memos, which you love doing. You're not making individual investments yourself. You're not managing lots of employees. (1:16:50) You're you're setting the firm's investment philosophy and meeting clients. And there's something really lovely about seeing the way you've set yourself up in this sort of very internally aligned way. So, it's a great model for us all. Thank you. (1:17:11) Well, you know, William, my idol, Warren Buffett, always says he skips to work in the morning and I feel I do and I'm happy to go to work and I like what I do. I hope to keep doing it for a long time to come. I hope so, too. Thank you so much, Howard. It's been a real delight chatting with you, and I've really learned so much from you over the years, and I really tried to not just read these memos, but really truly internalize the lessons. (1:17:30) And I know that I'm one of many thousands of people whose lives are actually tangibly better because you've shared these lessons. So, thank you. Thank you. It's a pleasure speaking with you and let's do it again. I look forward to it. All right. Take care. Thanks, Howard. People say we're always bearish. That's not actually true, but we are almost invariably skeptical. (1:17:48) What doubting Thomas's this is a market of credul conformity. Actually, you know, people nothing succeeds like success anywhere, but especially on Wall Street. I think George Soros himself said we'll see a bubble just jump on it to get there early and uh you will get it in time. No, just I'll tell you when you'll know. (1:18:07) But there are so many ways to make money on Wall Street. I happen to have cultivated a following that is innately skeptical.