Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science pdfdrive com


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Naked Economics Undressing the Dismal Science ( PDFDrive )

Invest for the long run. Have you ever been in a casino when someone wins
big? The casino operators are just as happy as everybody else. Why? Because
they are going to make an extraordinary amount of money in the long run; this is
just one minor hiccup along the way. The beauty of running a casino is that the
numbers are stacked in your favor. If you are willing to wait long enough—and
pose happily for photos as you give a giant check to the occasional big winner—
then you will get rich.
Investing has the same benefits as running a casino: The odds are stacked in
your favor if you are patient and willing to endure the occasional setback. Any
reasonable investment portfolio must have a positive expected return.
Remember, you’ve rented capital to assorted entities and you expect to get
something back in return. Indeed, the riskier the ventures, the more you expect to


get back, on average. So the longer you hold your (diversified) investments, the
longer you have for probability to work its magic. Where will the Dow close
tomorrow? I have no clue. Where will it be next year? I don’t know. Where will
it be in five years? Probably higher than it is today, but that’s no sure thing.
Where will it be in twenty-five years? Significantly higher than it is today; I’m
reasonably certain of it. The idiocy of day trading—buying a stock in hopes of
selling it several hours later at a profit—is that it incurs all the costs of trading
stocks (commissions and taxes, not to mention your time) without any of the
benefits that come from holding equities for the long run.
So there you have it—the sniff test for personal investing. The next time an
investment adviser comes to you promising a 20 or 40 percent return, you know
that one of three things must be true: (1) This must be a very risky investment in
order to justify such a high expected return—think Harvard endowment; (2) your
investment adviser has stumbled upon an opportunity still undiscovered by all
the world’s sophisticated investors, and he has been kind enough to share it with
you—please call me; or (3) your investment adviser is incompetent and/or
dishonest—think Bernie Madoff. All too often the answer is (3).
The fascinating thing about economics is that the fundamental ideas don’t
change. Monarchs in the Middle Ages needed to raise capital (usually to fight
wars), just as biotech startups do today. I have no idea what the planet will look
like in one hundred years. Perhaps we will be settling Mars or converting salt
water into a clean, renewable source of energy. I do know that either of those
undertakings would use the financial markets to raise capital and to mitigate risk.
And I’m positive that Americans will not have become thin and healthy by
eating only grapefruit and ice cream.
*
Your actual return would be much higher, since much of the purchase would be financed. If you put
$50,000 down, for example, you would have earned $250,000 on a $50,000 investment (minus the interest
you paid to carry the mortgage during the period you owned the house).

The expected return is 0.5($400,000) + 0.5($0) = $200,000, which is a 100 percent return on your
$100,000 investment.

This exercise is somewhat oversimplified. The flips of a coin are independent, while the performance of
individual stocks are not. Some events, such as an interest rate hike, will affect the whole market. Thus,
buying two stocks will not offer as much diversification as would splitting your portfolio between two flips
of a coin. Nonetheless, the broader point is valid.


CHAPTER 8
The Power of Organized Interests:

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