Behind The Memo: The Impact of Debt with Howard Marks and Morgan Housel

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In this special episode of Behind the Memo, Howard Marks is joined by Morgan Housel, the bestselling...
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hello and welcome to Behind The Memo by Howard marks I'm Anna shimansky Oak Tre senior Financial writer and today Howard and I are very excited to be joined by a special guest Morgan housel Morgan is the bestselling author of the psychology of money and same as ever and is a partner at the collaborative fund Howard's recent memo the impact of debt is based on a collaborative fund blog post that Morgan wrote entitled how I think about debt so today we are going to be exploring exactly that how to think about debt and specifically how debt
impacts an Investor's longevity so Morgan Howard thanks so much for joining me thank you for having me great to be here anna Morgan I'm G to start with you as I mentioned Howard's recent memo is based on a blog post that you wrote for the collaborative fund so to begin I'd like you to just let our listeners know exactly what the collaborative fund is maybe what the collabor fund blog is and then if you could explain the main argument that you're making in this article yeah so the firm is a private investing firm that does
everything from Venture Capital to public markets investing so I've been a home for my blog I've been a financial writer for 17 years now and it's been where I publish my public blog post contrasting that with the books that I publish so this post that I wrote several weeks ago was a very basic idea this is almost kindergarten 101 Finance of just how to think about debt from a philosophical level and debt I think more than equities tend to be viewed as a mathematical investment it's just you find the value in the spreadsheet but I
think there is almost a philosophical way to think about debt that is outside of the cost of capital and just what the interest rate is and to me it was the more debt you have the narrower the range of volatile outcomes you can endure in life all Investments you get paid for two things in investing one is mispricing the other is the endurance of volatility and when you view debt as a narrowing of the outcomes that you can endure it really takes on a new level of significance so Howard what were some of the ideas
from this piece by Morgan that really jumped out at you and made you want to devote a memo to this well Anna the idea that Morgan just described is incredibly basic but often forgotten especially cyclically I'm sure you'll return to that later but anytime you read about somebody getting into financial trouble a hedge fund melts down whatever it might be it's invariably related to debt basically you can't meltdown and you can't be foreclosed and you can't be forced into bankruptcy if you don't have debt outstanding if you haven't used debt in your financial affairs now
that doesn't mean to say that if you take on a dollar of debt it tips you over into the dangerous category but each Financial actor has a certain amount of money what we call Equity they're worth and with that money you can go out and buy some assets or you can borrow some money and buy more assets and then enjoy the upside the appreciation on more assets if you have $10,000 of equity you can borrow another 10,000 and enjoy the appreciation on 20,000 of assets and that looks like a good idea in the memo I
wrote the impact of debt I mentioned the Pit Boss in Las Vegas who comes around and says now remember the more you bet the more you win when you win this is one of my favorite sayings because it's inarguable it's obvious that the more you bet on your winning hands the more you're going to win but it leaves out the fact that the more you bet on your losing hands the more you're going to lose and if you've done it with borrowed money you can be forced into bankruptcy so this is a really important concept
and then this idea that Morgan had that the more debt you have the narrower the range of bad outcomes you can survive this is really important and it reminded me when I read it Morgan's notes come on a Saturday morning they're one of the first things I read I was reading it and well I hope this is a good thing Morgan but I very often find find myself saying boy this guy thinks a lot like I do and in this case it reminded me of a memo I wrote late in 2008 In the Heat of
the global financial crisis post Leman meltdown called volatility plus leverage equals dynamite and basically what it says is if you put on Leverage The more leverage you have the more you get in trouble the more volatile the assets you buy with the leverage funds the more you get in trouble and the combination of two in the right circumstances can really be fatal I show in the memo through a series of little cartoons that a highly leverage capital structure cannot coexist with highly volatile assets if you want to buy volatile assets your capital structure should be
conservative if you want to use a lot of Leverage you should buy conservative assets but aggressive capital structure plus aggressive assets will get you carried out once in a while those are the two main thoughts that resonated for me one thing I'd add here is that so many investors virtually every investor says I'm a long-term investor at least they aspire to be a long-term investor that's like a core for the vast majority of investors but what that really means you have to do is be willing to forego shorter term gains and that is much more
difficult to do it's easy to say I'm in it for the long term it's much harder to say I'm going to go the next one or five years below my potential and I think that's where so many people get tripped up is that you have to be willing to say I could be leveraged up here and earn more over the next one year over the next five years but it's going to make me less durable but if I can stick around for the next 30 Years the returns that compound to that are going to be
absolutely extraordinary and there's this great saying from Pimco that I used to love I don't know if they use this phrase anymore but back in the early days of Pimco they had a phrase called strategic mediocrity which meant that in any given one year period they were rarely going to be in the top half ranked against their peers but in every 10-year period they would always be in the top 10% maybe top 5% and that I think is really important one of the most fascinating investing stories that I think is so overlooked because it's so
fascinating is a guy named Rick guran who was an absolutely lovely gentleman passed away not too long ago and if you go back to the 1960s in Omaha there were three investors who made all of their Investments together and that was Warren Buffett Charlie Munger and Rick guran they were a trio and what became the duo of Warren and Charlie that we all know and so several years ago a hedge fund manager named monish P had dinner with Buffett and monish said what happened to Rick Eran he was all over the early history of birkshire
and now he's not what happened to this guy and Warren told a story which was that Warren Charlie and Rick made all the same Investments together Rick did one thing different which was that he invested very heavily on margin and in I think it was a 1974 bar Market he got cled Warren had a saying that stopped me in my tracks I thought it was so fascinating he said Rick was just as smart as us but he was in a hurry that is amazing and I don't think it's an exaggeration to say Warren and Charlie
have gone through their entire life intentionally at 70% of their potential they could have been levered they could have gone into debt and earned higher returns but they willingly operated below their potential because they were more focused on endurance and the fact that Buffett's been compounding for 80 years now or whatever it is is the sole reason that he has the net worth and has accumulated the assets that he has and so much easier to say I'm in it for the long term than it is to willingly operate below your potential in the short term
well Morgan a great observation it's one I hadn't heard from you before including the story of Rick Garen but every investor has to make a choice at some point in time between optimizing and maximizing optimizing means you try to do well but you also try to set up your fairs so that you'll be able to last for the long term as Morgan describes maximizing is just try to get the most you can the soonest you can and that's the essence of what mortgage just went through it and this whole thing brings me back to one
of my three favorite adages that in total I think sum up the whole well 90% of what you have to know in the financial world but never forget the person who was six feet tall who drowned crossing the stream that was 5 feet deep on average the concept of surviving on average is meaningless you got to survive every day and that means you have to importantly survive on the bad days and if you have set up your Affairs to maximize every step you take to maximize Beyond an optimal Point reduces your probability of survival when
you take on debt to own bigger positions to amplify your winnings when you win it's like putting rocks in a knapsack and you're trying to cross that stream the more rocks you have in the knapsack the less likely you are to get across the stream when you hit a low Point everybody makes Investments for one reason they think they're going to win nobody buys Investments well I want to have a diversified portfolio so I should have some winners and some losers every investment that everybody makes they think they're winners but at the same time they're
not all going to be winners and you have to be prepared for when things go against you and that means optimizing taking a reasonable approach in terms of the sum of your aggressive capital structure and your aggressive Investments rather than maximizing I think so much of investing history too is people claiming that an event they say nobody could have seen this coming who knew this was going to happen and invariably the event is something that has occurred regularly every decade for the last 500 years so I hope to be an investor for the next 30
to 50 years let's say what are the odds that during that period I'm going to experience a 50% bare market and unemployment at 10% and inflation over 10% what are the odds I'm going to experience those 100% the odds are 100% that I will experience those things so when you come across somebody that has a portfolio that cannot endure anything close to that basically what they're saying is Well I will unwind this portfolio before that happens and the odds of that happening round to zero as well and that's why going through this endeavor at below
your potential is actually the way to maximize wealth over the long term Anna you're not going to get a chance to get a word in edgewise Mak my job too easy but what Morgan says is extremely important I love the book that I read in the middle 9 called a short history of financial Euphoria by John Kenneth GB and he says in there that one of the two outstanding characteristics of the investment universe is shortness of memory when people have lived through a good time they project that it will go on forever and that the
extreme negative occurrences that Morgan describes which are a part of History are soon forgotten and anybody who has memory of those negative events and harps on them is dismissed as an old fogy out of step with the modern times unable to appreciate the wonders of the new industry the new Financial mechanisms whatever they might be this is so important what you've both talked about so much here is investor psychology of investors not understanding how much risk they're actually taking and that really being one of the riskiest things well the riskiest thing in the world is
the belief that there's no risk because when people believe that the environment is safe they will amp up the riskiness of the things they do to make sure that there's lots of risk so real risk is self-reinforcing if you will on the heels of Good Times people invariably tend to forget the possibility of negative outcomes and we know the result this is a good contributor to the cyclicality in our world this forgetfulness of past lessons it's very simple when greed and Prudence do battle greed wins it's very simple so you have to be quite mature
and adult in your approach to make sure that you assert some Prudence to balance the grade I would say too that at the high level there are two forms of investing risk one I guess you could call it macro risk which is what is the market going to do to me what's the economy going to do to me and the other is psychological risk which is how am I going to respond to that both of those are easy to forget and easy to understate because for macro risk I think we tend to look back at
the Great Depression the inflation of the 70s and say well that happened then but it couldn't happen anymore we've learned our lesson which might be true for those specific events what's easy to overlook is that we're not going to have another Great Depression that played out exactly like the one did in the 1930s but we can have other things that have equally terrible consequences the early months of covid by some metrics were worse than the early days of the Great Depression so it's true that we're not going to have that again we're not going to
have that war again we'll have other new Wars that we are underestimating today and then for psychological risk people tend to think that they have learned their lessons in the past so you have an investor who says I panicked in October of 2008 but I learned my lesson I'm not going to do it again and most of the evidence in behavioral Finance is yes you will that is an ingrained part of your personality that is your brain chemistry that caused you to panic then and you will probably Panic again in the future the solution to
that is just Embrace that that's who you are and have an asset allocation that understands that what's really important here is that when things are going well in the economy and the market if you were to ask someone how would you feel if the market fell 30% let's say and when things are going well people imagine a world in which everything is the same as it is today except stock prices are 30% cheaper and in that world people are like oh that would be great that'd be an opportunity I would love it what you overlook
is that the reason the market might fall 30% is because there's a terrorist attack or a war or a recession or a pandemic and in that context if I said how would you feel if the market fell 30% because there's a virus that shuts down the global economy and might kill you and your family that context people are like I don't know I I I might actually Panic sell myself in that situation so it's very difficult to understand how you will respond psychologically in the trenches In the Heat of the Moment Howard obviously that speaks
to something that you've already been talking about a little bit today this cycle of attitudes in relation to leverage so could you just explicitly say what you mean by that which is something you talk about also in this memo well as Morgan describes there's nothing more volatile than attitudes real ity or what we call in the investment business fundamentals change modestly the economy grows 2 to 3% a year in a really good year 4% and a really bad 1% obviously the changes are not that radical company profits rise and fall more because companies have leverage
they have operating leverage and financial leverage and so company profits are much more volatile than the economy but stock prices for example very like crazy they fluctuate up and down if you see a chart of stock prices relative to compy earnings what you're seeing is the radical volatility of psychology relative to reality when things go well as Morgan and I have been describing and people feel strong and they feel encouraged and they feel that they'll prudently take advantage of the potential of the future by amping up their portfolio they take a very positive attitude toward
the future toward the use of Leverage toward the purchase of risky assets at the same time the financial institutions are feeling equally good about so they become willing to lend more to a given investor for a given purpose so the leverage in portfolios goes up as the good times roll on The Leverage is rewarded through magnified profits and that causes the investor to do even more of it and as stock prices rise the investor buys more and with more and more borrowed money increasing the riskiness of the portfolio as the times become riskier then eventually
something turns down the companies don't do as well the market s stock prices decline the investor now starts to take magnified losses he might get a margin call or he might just liquidate and get out on his own and uses less and less leverage and sells stocks at lower and lower prices because they can't stand the pressure they had overestimated their ability to live with risk and their attitude towards leverage becomes more harsh at the same time that the banks become unwilling to provide leverage and in fact try to rec call some of the leverage
they put out in the past so everything goes swimmingly on the way up and people take on more and more risk and people get depressed and things go terribly when things swing down until at the bottom portfolios tend to be less levered and to hold fewer assets even though they have become much cheaper so it's a highly cyclical process but it follows the pattern of most other things especially in the financial world and especially when human nature is involved I think to add on to what Howard just said it's so important to realize how inevitable
these Cycles are that whenever you have a boom bust cycle it doesn't mean that people have lost their minds it doesn't mean that we've all gone crazy it doesn't even necessarily mean that regulators and politicians have made mistakes they're completely inevitable there was a great Economist named Heyman Minsky and he came up with this idea called the financial instability hypothesis and to grossly simplify it basically what he said was when there are no recessions people get optimistic when they get optimistic they go into debt when they go into debt the economy is fragile and when
the economy is fragile you have a recession and inherent in that was a lack of recessions plants the seeds from the next recession and that's why you're always going to have recessions the same thing applies to the stock market any asset class that a lack of volatility is what plants the seeds for future volatility in the stock market if there was no volatility people would very rationally bid valuations up when valuations go up they become fragile when you become fragile you get volatility it's completely inevitable and I think that's because this is what causes people
to underestimate volatility at least intuitively they think well there will be a recession when people go crazy or when politicians screw up whatever it might be it's like no you don't need any of that you don't need people to screw up you can just have natural volatility in all asset classes based off of what himman msky figured out 50 years ago so that's why these things are completely inevitable they don't require a car crash so to speak in the economy it's just the natural tendency of What markets do what Morgan just Illustrated so eloquently is
the cause and effect nature of cyclical events I wrote a book a few years ago called mastering the market cycle and I said in there that people might think that a cycle consists of a series of events which typically follow in a given progression so you have a and then B happens and then after a while C happens and sometimes D happens and then it goes on to E and that's followed by F no a happens it causes b b causes c c causes D and if you replay Morgan description of the process through which
the occurrence of a recession is ensured you see this causality and you make a big mistake if you think about Cycles without thinking about causality I think the the great example is the Boom in mortgages and especially subprime mortgages that led to the global financial crisis basically to put it short people looked at history they said there's never been a nationwide wave of mortgage defaults and so they engaged in practices that guaranteed there would be a nationwide wave of mortgage defaults it's that simple I think it's important too there's an interesting thing here that's a
great thing for the overall world there's lots of theories for why this is the case but we have far fewer recessions today than we used to if you go back and look at the economic history of the late 19th century early 20th century we would consistently have recessions every 18 months and they tended to be pretty shallow but every 18 months you would have a recession things were very volatile one explanation for why this has occurred is because Central Bankers have become better at managing the business cycle some people disagree with that but one thing
that's happen that is inarguable is that we have far fewer recessions now than we used to not uncommon now to go five or 10 years in between recessions which is great from a social perspective it makes it much harder as an investor I think because it makes it easier to forget what happened you have investors who have been in the market for 10 years who have never experienced a major fall and that makes it very difficult this is great quote from kanes where he says a Speculator is one who takes risks for which he is
aware an investor is one who takes risks for which he is unaware a lot of investors really don't understand how volatile the asset or the economy that they're investing into really is because the time between these big events can be so long this makes me think of something that Howard has written about quite a bit recently in his sea change memos which is this idea that many investors working today many of them have never lived through period in which interest rates were really going up they've gotten so used to money being so cheap and now
we may be shifting into this new environment so in light of everything know we've been discussing here what do you think just thinking of some of the ramifications of shifting into this new era well you're right andna you really had to be working in the 70s to have seen interest rates that were anything other than either declining or ultra low that's 45 years ago most people retired before they reach 45 years on the job so there are very few people who are working today who remember the 70s and in fact it was very hard to
get a job in our industry in the 70s because times were so terrible so you probably had to get your job in the 60s like I did and there are even fewer of us around today people have lived through this period and they think that's normal but the impact of declining interest rates over the 40-year period from 1980 to 2020 was gradual slow but pervasive it made assets worth more it reduced carrying costs on levered positions it stimulated the economy it made companies more profitable it made it easier to avoid bankruptcy and default all things
that made the environment easy but this was not a normal environment this was a highly salutary benign environment and if people assemble their portfolios and select their level of Leverage on the assumption that the environment will always be as benign as it was on average over that period they're likely eventually to run into one of the negative environments that Morgan described or even an environment which is simply less helpful the owners of assets using borrowed money when they run into interest rates that are stable at higher levels they're going to see less appreciation in the
assets they own the cost of capital is not going to decline so leveraged investment strategies will be less successful than they were I think that's axiomatic two things I would add to what Howard just said the first I've joked that the three most important investing skills are patience diversification and having your Peak investing years align perfectly with a 40-year decline in interest rates those are the three things you need to do well over time one thing I would add to this topic that I think is really important is that it becomes dangerous to use history
as a perfect guide of the future history by and large is the study of surprises and the irony that people use the study of surprises to try to gain a map of the future causes a lot of disappointment so it's common for people who have not experienced a rising interest rate environment to say well what happened in the 1970s the last time this occurred and they go back and say oh what did well gold did well small caps did well whatever it was and they say great well we should do that now and that's just
not how the world Works things adapt it's an utterly different economy today than it was back then very different social standards investing ideas whatnot so I think a lot of people stumble into problems when they just look back and say well what worked last time and kind of like back test it from there the world adapts in a way that doesn't allow you to do that my solution to this is just going back historically and saying how do people psychologically act during these events that tends to be repeatable the behaviors tend to be repeatable even
if the specific investing ideas are by and large not this is what Mark Twain had in mind when he said if in fact he said it that history does not repeat but it does rhyme in other words the events of History the facts of History the Investments That benefited from declining interest rates those things will not repeat but the themes of history and certainly as Morgan says human behavior will rhyme from cycle to cycle so if you were a strict student of history and you believe that it could be extrapolated you might go out and
buy railroad stocks which were great beneficiaries in the 1860s and70s but I dare say you should say what is the environment going to look like in the years ahead how will investors react to that environment in the years ahead what new Investments should I be looking to to take advantage of it certainly not the ones that did well 150 years ago my favorite quote here is from voler who says history never repeats itself but man always does I think that's a great summary of investing history the events never repeat but the behaviors always do I
think this is so interesting to keep in mind right now because it does seem like we're at a time when it may be that some fundamental things in the economy could be shifting we have ai obviously we do have this new potential interest rate environment you also have all of these geopolitical changes and when people think about how much debt they can take on how much risk they can take on on the one hand it seems like okay if everything's changing how can anyone use anything from history to figure out how to move forward but
as both of you are saying maybe there are these behavioral Cycles these behavioral shifts that people can look to I think at the high level you can say I have no idea what going to cause the next recession or when it will occur but I have a very good idea of how people will respond to it because that's really never changed same with bare markets and whatnot I think the vast majority of attention in the financial world is put towards forecasting when these things are going to occur and the track record of that is very
poor I think it's just much better to have a good idea of what happens whenever they do occur because that is something that we can learn from history and you know that these behaviors have been happening for hundreds of years go back and look at how people were responding to Bare markets in the 1800s and re sessions in the 1800s it's no different than it is today I've talked about this example many times but there's an incredible investing book called The Great Depression a diary written by this Ohio bankruptcy attorney named Benjamin Roth who kept
a very elaborate diary during the Great Depression in the 1930s and if you read that diary it will instantly occur to you that exactly what he's describing in 1932 1933 is what happened in 2008 how people were responding to it the behaviors were no different and then Benjamin Roth himself has a diary entry where he says what is so astounding about 1932 is that it seems like exactly what people were experiencing in 1894 whenever the previous Great Depression was and so these things just keep repeating over and over again even if the events that cause
them are very different we've been talking a lot about people taking on too much risk taking on too much debt underestimating risk but I'm also thinking about the other side of it which is the risk of not taking enough risk so I'd like you both to speak about that well well the memo before last was entitled The indispensability of risk and the point is that risk avoidance usually results in return avoidance risk is the element that fuels gains you make money as an investor by taking risk and having your decisions validated as I say it's
riskmanagement not risk avoidance in that memo I said most people understand this intellectually but human nature makes it hard hard for many to accept the idea that the willingness to live with some losses is an essential ingredient in investment success now this sounds like an oxymoron how can losses be part of success and it's not that We crave to lose money but we have to understand that exposing yourself to the possibility of losses is an essential part in an investment plan designed to produce success and if you bear the risk of losses once in a
while you're going to have some losses so it shouldn't come as a shock when you have some Investments that turn out to be unsuccessful and it doesn't mean you did a bad job the question is how many what ratio to the winners how big were the losers how big were the winners Warren Buffett lately has been attributing the bulk of his success I think he says 12 ideas Charlie Monger used to say four ideas and he would tell you what they were but the point is you make a lot of invest ments it's kind of
like throwing bread on the waters some of them succeed as you hoped some of them will surprise you others will disappoint and produce losses but if you do a good job on average that's what successful investing is all about one thing I to add here is just the definition of risk in general if you live in Florida then getting caught in a thunderstorm is not a risk it's inevitable it's going to happen there's no question about it and I think if you are an investor then dealing with a 10 or 20% decline in the P
500 is not a risk it's an inevitability it's going to happen maybe you don't know when or how long it's going to last but it's going to happen that's just a definition of risk in your own personal life getting in a fatal car accident is a risk because it's not going to happen to 99.9% of people so that really is a risk but if you are an investor and your definition of risk is something that is guaranteed to happen to you you have a faulty definition of risk what you're dealing with is just run-of-the-mill volatility
and back to what I said earlier you get paid for two things in investing one is mispricing the other is the endurance of volatility for the vast majority of investors professional or otherwise what you're going to be paid for over the long term is the endurance of volatility so when you experience a decline if you say this is a risk I didn't see this coming somebody screwed up I made a mistake you're viewing it all wrong what you are experiencing is the cost of admission over time and your ability to put up with it is
what you get paid for over the long run andna one of the stories I love to tell is that I started to manage high yield bonds for City Bank in 1978 and I was interviewed on one of the first cable shows the financial news network I think was called around 81 and the interviewer said how can you invest in high yield bonds when you know some arm are going to default and for some reason the perfect answer popped into my head I said how can the life insurance companies which are the most conservative companies in
America insure people's lives when they know they're all going to die and this goes back to what Morgan said a bit ago the question is are you taking risks you're aware of or risks you're unaware of the life insurance company knows everybody's going to die and they can analyze their health individually they can diversify their portfolios but most importantly they charge a rate for the insurance which assumes that the deaths will occur and still produce a profit that's exactly what I saw hob Bond investing as we take credit risk we diversify our portfolios we study
our borrowers and we invest only when we think the extra yield we get called the yield spread is sufficiently compensatory for the risk we're taking I call that the intelligent bearing of risk for profit that is what you have to do but to say my job is to avoid risk my job is to have no risk in my portfolio that's really Folly so I think bringing it back to what we were talking about at the beginning of today's episode it's really trying to put oneself in a position where one can endure the inevitable risk and
that goes back to the idea of optimizing levels of debt not maximizing levels of debt I think it's different for everyone I've talked about this for my own personal finance where the level of debt I have in my household finances is zero not on the house not on anything and to me there's two reasons for that one is maybe just psychology I have two young kids and it makes me feel good they have that level of stability but the other that I think is tactical is as I mentioned a million times a four I just
want to maximize for endurance because I know that if I can be an average investor for for an above average period of time it's going to lead to extraordinary returns it's just pick the variable that you want to maximize for the vast majority of investors want to maximize four returns that's the knee-jerk reaction of like of course that's what you should do I want to earn the highest returns I actually don't think that's the case for most investors what you want are the best returns that you can sustain for the longest period of time that's
what you want I heard the story recently and this is a secondhand story that I'm paraphrasing so if I get some of these details wrong don't sue me I think it was in 2002 the dot wreckage and there were lots of bonds that were trading at huge discounts and Amazon had a couple of bonds I'm making these numbers up but let's say Amazon had a 10-year bond that was yielding 12% and a five-year bond that was yielding 15% let's say that shouldn't exist you shouldn't have a longer term bond that yields less because there's a
higher chance that the company can go bankrupt for the longer duration but there was one big investor who was scooping up the longer dated bonds at a lower interest rate and it turned out that that investor was Warren Buffett and asked why that was the case he said because earning 12% for 10 years is a much better opportunity than earning 15% for 2 years so when you're maximizing for endurance and time a lot of these investing questions that trip people up in the short term become much clearer so before we end this discussion today any
final thoughts from either of you about everything we've been talking about today I'll jump in one that sticks out to me how I mentioned this early on at the start of the conversation and I did as well these topics that we're discussing today are literally kindergarten Finance 101 topics but they are the easiest to forget I think a lot of times in the financial industry where you can make a lot of money it is a magnet for people who have very high IQs and have phds and are very analytically skilled and those people tend to
be the ones who are the most likely to forget the basics that matter most maybe it's similar to Medicine where you have a lot of people who are studying mRNA and like the most advanced topics but so much of what matters in medicine is eat your vegetables don't smoke and get hours of sleep and the people who have the biggest brains are the ones who are most likely to ignore that because it's not intellectually stimulating so a lot of times in investing I think Howard has been the master of this over the decades the people
who are the most successful are the ones who are smart enough to get it right but also humble enough to pay attention to the basics that so many people ignore well Churchill said he was a humble man and he had a lot to be humble about but the truth is and showing why this is a complicated process is because when the good times are rolling and everybody's making a ton of money and all the events are positive it's really easy to forget the lessons we've been talking about today and in the bad times people fixate
on them and conclude that there will never be a good time again and they fail they depart from The Fray so it's all about balance risk versus safety Prudence versus greed using maybe some leverage but only an amount you can endure financially and emotionally I thought this was a great conversation it's really a thrill to have Morgan on I think even more that we think very similarly and I want to thank him for participating in our podcast well thank you Howard it's been an honor to do this hopefully we can do it again and thank
you for everything I've learned from you over the years before we close I want to inform our listeners that we'll be losing Anna Services she's wrapping up her career at oakry as our senior Financial writer and moving on to an exciting new job at Reuters and I want to wish her all the best of luck and thank her for the success she's created for these podcasts oh Howard thank you so much that means a lot and Morgan also again thank you so much for coming on the show today this was a really really wonderful discussion
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