The Big Picture

Talk Your Book: How Not To Invest Like Buffett


 

I had fun speaking with Ben & Michael about the new book and whether it is the culmination of my life’s work.

Fun factoid: The sound of Batnick’s eye rolls as he heard the same story for the umpteenth time was always in the back of my head as I wrote the book…

 

 

 

Source:
How Not To Invest Like Buffett.
Michael Batnick, Ben Carlson
Talk Your Book, April 19, 2025

 

 

 

 

 

The post Talk Your Book: How Not To Invest Like Buffett appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Weekend Reads

The weekend is here! Pour yourself a mug of Colombia Tolima Los Brasiles Peaberry Organic coffee, grab a seat outside, and get ready for our longer-form weekend reads:

Trump’s threat to economic data: The federal statistical system is at risk. Declining data quality would compound the harm of an economic downturn or financial crisis. (Slow Boring)

‘Why would he take such a risk?’ How a famous Chinese author befriended his censor Online dissent is a serious crime in China. So why did a Weibo censor help me publish posts critical of the Communist party? (The Guardian)

What America Can Learn From the Americas: Greg Grandin’s sweeping history of the new world shows how immutably intertwined the United States is with Latin America. It may make sense to think of the United States as a wealthy Latin American country, rather than an offshoot of Europe mysteriously governed by cowboys. (TNR)

A New Holy Trinity of Watch Brands for the Non-Billionaire Class: At the world’s biggest watch fair, upper-middle-class dreams are destroyed. (Bloomberg)

How a Secretive Gambler Called ‘The Joker’ Took Down a $57.8 Million Texas Lottery: A global team of gambling whizzes hatched a scheme to snag the jackpot; millions of tickets in 72 hours. (WSJ)

Why America Should Sprawl The word has become an epithet for garish, reckless growth — but to fix the housing crisis, the country needs more of it. (New York Times)

This ‘College Protester’ Isn’t Real. It’s an AI-Powered Undercover Bot for Cops: Massive Blue is helping cops deploy AI-powered social media bots to talk to people they suspect are anything from violent sex criminals all the way to vaguely defined “protesters.” (Wired)

Has the campaign to get smartphones out of schools reached a tipping point? In today’s newsletter: Momentum is growing for stricter smartphone rules for children, as schools, parents, and ​t​he Children’s Commissioner push for bans amid rising concerns? (The Guardian)

When The Sopranos Took Off, James Gandolfini Took Off Too: In a new biography of the Emmy winner, Sopranos cast and crew members recall the difficult era in which their leading man would frequently disappear from set: “At a certain point, HBO was fining him 250 grand a day. And he would say, Fuck it. I can’t come in to work.” (Vanity Fair)

Pierre Boulez Was a Titan of 20th-Century Music. What About Now? The legacy of this composer and conductor may not be in his rarely performed works, but in how we think about music itself. (New York Times)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business next week with Martin Escobari of, General Atlantic, where he is Chairman, and head of the Global Growth Equity Investment Committee, and Managing Director. Before joining General Atlantic in 2012, Martín was Co-Founder and CFO of Submarino.com, a leading Brazilian online retailer that went public on the Bovespa and was sold to Lojas Americanas in 2006. He was recently appointed to the Harvard Management Company Board.


Tax cuts account for 38% of the national debt today, while recession responses and spending increases each caused 29%


Source: @SteveRattner

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

~~~

To learn how these reads are assembled each day, please see this.

 

The post 10 Weekend Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

MiB: Martín Escobari, General Atlantic



 

 

This week, I speak with Martín Escobari, Co-President and Head of Global Growth Equity at General Atlantic. Prior to joining General Atlantic in 2012, Martín served as Managing Director at Advent International and Co-Founder and CFO of Submarino.com, a leading Brazilian online retailer. He also spent time with The Boston Consulting Group. In addition to his current role, Martín is also Chair of General Atlantic’s Global Growth Equity Investment Committee and he serves on the Executive and Portfolio Committees.

We discuss health care innovation and how expensive and ineffective it is in the United States: “95% of Americans die in hospitals, while only 3% of doctors die hospitals…”

A list of his favorite books is here; A transcript of our conversation is available here Monday.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, SpotifyYouTube, and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business next week with PGIM Jennison CEO Jeff Becker.

 

 

Favorite Books

 

 

 

 

 

The post MiB: Martín Escobari, General Atlantic appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Friday AM Reads

My end-of-week morning train WFH reads:

The world’s hot new trade is “sell America” For decades, the world has invested in America. Now, a global moment of clarity threatens to redirect trillions of dollars of capital inflows and diminish the U.S. in the international economic order. The U.S. receives nearly $2 trillion each year in foreign capital inflows, according to government data — things like investments in businesses and bank lending, but also foreign investors buying U.S. stocks and bonds. (Axios)

A Growing Share of New Yorkers Are Set to Receive — Not Buy — Their Homes: About a quarter of all Manhattan home sales in 2024 involved a trust, a preferred tool for passing on wealth. (Bloomberg) see also In 15 Years, 80,000 Homes in the New York Area May Be Lost to Flooding: The metro region’s housing shortage is acute. But by 2040, dozens of neighborhoods and suburbs are likely to have lost thousands of homes to floods, a new report found. (New York Times)

Trump Has Added Risk to the Surest Bet in Global Finance: Shocked by Trump’s trade war, foreign investors are selling U.S. government bonds, long the world’s safe haven. (New York Times)

Breaking Up is Hard to Do: It’ll Take More than Trump’s Trade War to Break the World’s Affection for Dollars. (Macroeconomic Policy Nexus)

America’s Heartland Is Coming Back. Can the Recovery Last? Tariffs will threaten the region’s newfound prosperity, but its economic gains may prove surprisingly durable. (Barron’s)

This Family Spent Years Chasing the Holy Grail of a 100% Roth Retirement Portfolio: Even those who aren’t all in are moving money into Roths because of volatile markets. Wall Street Journal)

Why China Won’t Give In to Trump: Xi Jinping, like his American counterpart, needs to be the top dog. (The Atlantic) see also It’s Xi Jinping’s World, and Trump Is Just Living in It: As Donald Trump blows up the rules-based order, China is pulling ahead in the global battle for ideas. (Bloomberg)

10 Questions You Should Always Ask at Doctors’ Appointments: When you go to the doctor, you’re probably the one answering most of the questions. Yet it’s essential to make sure you’re asking plenty of your own. “We need to get someone to fund a bazillion-dollar PSA to tell people to be bolder when they talk to their doctors,” says Risa Arin, founder and CEO of XpertPatient, a patient education platform. “I see this over and over again: People aren’t asking any questions, never mind the right ones.” (Time)

Scientists find ‘strongest evidence yet’ of life on distant planet. Scientists have found new but tentative evidence that a faraway world orbiting another star may be home to life. A Cambridge team studying the atmosphere of a planet called K2-18b has detected signs of molecules which on Earth are only produced by simple organisms. This is the second, and more promising, time chemicals associated with life have been detected in the planet’s atmosphere by Nasa’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). (BBC)

In its sublime fourth season, ‘Hacks’ hits its stride: Uproarious and surprisingly poignant, Max’s Emmy darling hasn’t lost a step. (Washington Post)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business next week with Martin Escobari of, General Atlantic, where he is Chairman, anbd head of the Global Growth Equity Investment Committee, and Managing Director. Before joining General Atlantic in 2012, Martín was Co-Founder and CFO of Submarino.com, a leading Brazilian online retailer that went public on the Bovespa and was sold to Lojas Americanas in 2006. He was recently appointed to the Harvard Management Company Board.

 

This is called “capital flight” It usually only happens to poor countries (it never ends well)

Source: Noahpinion

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

The post 10 Friday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

Avoid the Unforced Investment Errors Even Billionaires Make

 

 

Your Biggest, Most Avoidable, Unforced Investment Errors
Adapted from “How Not To Invest: The ideas, numbers, and behaviors that destroy wealth – and how to avoid them” (Harriman House, March 18, 2025)
By Barry Ritholtz

 

 

Tariffs, inflation, war, debt ceiling, profit warnings, geopolitics, market volatility – there’s always something happening to fuel your urge to make a decision – any decision! – right now. This is the perfect recipe for making an unforced error or easily avoidable mistake.

If only there were some ways to prevent investors from interfering with the market’s greatest strength – the incomparable and guaranteed ability to create wealth by compounding over time.

Decades as an investor and trader on Wall Street have taught me that panics come and go. Drawdowns, corrections, and crashes are not the problem – your behavior in response to market turmoil is what causes long-term financial harm.

In “How Not to Invest,” I showcase extreme examples of “unforced errors” to illustrate these behavioral mistakes. I filled the book with my favorite errors made by ordinary investors, billionaires, and everyone in between (including myself) – and how to avoid them.

It does not require a monumental blunder to screw up – even modest mistakes can lead to bad outcomes. Five favorite examples reveal some of the mistakes we all make.

Excess fees: You may have missed this when it slipped by last August: “Secretive Dynasty Missed Out on Billions While Advisers Got Rich.” Two managers of a single-family office siphoned off so much money that each became a billionaire. As Bloomberg News reported, had their advisors followed a simpler, less “audacious” strategy, the family would have ended up $13-17 billion richer.

The reporters did not suggest wrongdoing, but allow me to point out that any advisor, let alone two, who became billionaires while wildly underperforming their benchmarks are obviously not fiduciaries. The article suggests they were more interested in their own financial well-being than that of their clients. The Latin phrase “Res ipsa loquitur” comes to mind: “The thing speaks for itself.”

All costs impact your returns, but high or excessive fees have an enormous impact as they compound – or, more accurately, lessen your portfolios’ compounding – over time. Fees of 2% plus 20% of the profits are a huge drag on performance. Other than a handful of superstar managers (most of whose funds you cannot get into), the vast majority of these managers fail to justify their costs.

Underperforming Your Own Holdings: The ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK), managed by Cathie Woods, had one of the best runs of any mutual fund or ETF manager—ever. For the 2020 calendar year, the fund gained 153%; from the March 2020 COVID lows to its peak 11 months later, ARKK’s returns were an eye-popping 359%. Woods was lauded with recognition—and huge inflows.

Therein lay the behavior gap: Most investors bought ARKK after its huge run.

Despite – or perhaps because of – having one of the greatest peak-to-trough runs in ETF history, ARKK investors have been wildly underperforming. Chris Bloomstran, chief investment officer of Semper Augustus Investments Group, has tracked this. In 2023, he tweeted a list of overlooked facts. The most devastating: 98% of all ARKK investors were underwater.

Why? Most ARKK ETF holders got in near the 2020 top after its surge. This was just before an 81% collapse that bottomed in December 2023. This is classic performance-chasing behavior. You see this all the time: After a huge run of spectacular gains, the media fetes a manager, and buyers pour in late. The inevitable mean-reversion soon follows.

The average ARKK investor has seen results far worse than the fund itself, according to data from Morningstar. Since its 2014 inception, the fund has returned 9.7% on average per year. That’s far below the triple-digit returns investors dreamt of, but in line with long-term stock returns. For [ARKK] investors, it’s even bleaker: Their average annual return, calculated by Morningstar, is -17 %.

Buy high, sell low, repeat until broke.

Your Lizard Brain: One of my favorite behavioral hacks is for you stock junkies: Manage your lizard brain via a Cowboy Account.

Love chatting about stocks at cocktail parties? Excited about FOMC meetings and Non-Farm Payroll releases? Do you hang on every word whenever a famous fund manager shows up on TV?  Then you are probably (like me) a dopamine fiend.

It’s not your fault, it’s just how you are built. Our lizard brain – the primitive part of the brainstem responsible for emotions, fear, aggression, pleasure, and the fight-or-flight response – has done a great job keeping us alive as a species.

But your limbic system, as it is more accurately called, fares poorly in capital markets. You must take steps to protect yourself from, well, yourself. Set up a mad-money account with less than 5% of your liquid capital. This will allow you to indulge your inner hedge fund manager safely. If it works out – great! You are more likely to let those winners run because it’s for fun and not your real money. If it’s a debacle, appreciate the terrific lesson that should remind you that this is not your forte.

Nobel laureate Paul Samuelson once said, “Investing should be more like watching paint dry or watching grass grow. If you want excitement, take $800 and go to Las Vegas.” The cowboy account serves the same function.

Using 2% of my liquid net worth in my cowboy account, I play the dumbest game possible: market timing with out-of-the-money stock options. I have made some fortuitously timed buys, including Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) calls purchased during the October 2022 lows. I was up so much on that trade that my trading demons were emboldened. So I bought Silicon Valley Bank options (SVB) right after it got cut in half—but right before it went to zero. The SVB loss served me right; it was a reminder of how quickly I get cocky and arrogant after a score.

The value of my cowboy account is that it allows my inner dopamine fiend to leave my real capital unmolested by my big dumb lizard brain.

Manage a Windfall: What should you do when you are sitting on enormous, life-changing wealth? It doesn’t matter if it is Nvidia, Bitcoin, founder’s stock, or an employee stock option purchase plan (ESOP), sometimes the sheer size of a windfall is paralyzing.

An instructive war story: During the mid-1990s, a grad school buddy took a senior job at a tech startup that came with lots of stock. In late 1996, they were bought by Yahoo! Inc. The shares in the startup were replaced with Yahoo stock options that had a six-year vesting schedule, with 30% vesting after three years and the balance vesting in ~2% monthly increments in years four, five, and six.

I was on a trading desk then, and it was heady times. Tech stocks and dotcoms kept galloping higher, doubling and tripling. Every sale was a source of regret, as stocks kept going up, up, up.

Those YHOO options represented a great deal of wealth—not fun money, but life-altering amounts of capital. My buddy could pay off his mortgage and car loans, pre-pay the kids’ colleges, fully fund retirement accounts, and still have cash left over. He could take any job he wanted for the rest of his life—or none at all.

Torn about what to do, he asked my opinion.

My advice was not based on fear of a bubble or the (over)valuation of Yahoo; rather,

I suggested employing a regret minimization framework.2 All investments have a range of possible outcomes, but given how much money was at stake, I suggested focusing on two outlier tails at each end of the spectrum:

Scenario One: Hold, and Yahoo’s stock tumbles from $300 to $30.

Scenario Two: Sell, and the shares soar to $3,000.

How would you feel if either of these occurred?

If he sold his vested shares and the stock went higher, he would still own a lot of options. The probability of that outcome wasn’t the issue; what really mattered was the other tail, and a lifetime of regret if the stock collapsed but he didn’t sell.

It was an easy choice: He sold the 30%, and watched the stock rally for a few months, then collapse. He was thrilled, but not everyone at Yahoo was so fortunate. Stories abounded of paper decamillionaires (and billionaires!) who saw much of their paper wealth evaporate in the subsequent crash, never to recover.

If you are sitting on a massive windfall, recognize these facts: a) we have no idea where prices will be in the future, and b) selling some of the windfall can be a life-changing experience for you and your family.

It doesn’t have to be an all-or-nothing decision. The middle option is to sell enough —~25% to 50%— to become wealthy, and not just on paper. Doing this locks in sufficient wealth to eliminate a lot of life’s money-related worries. It still leaves you with plenty of upside if the best-case scenario turns out to come true. And third, it protects you from lifelong regret in case of a dotcom-like collapse (I know, impossible!).

Chasing Yield: In the low yield environment of the past quarter-century, there have been three common yield mistakes: 1) Buying longer-duration bonds; 2) Buying riskier, low-rated junk bonds; or 3) Using leverage to amplify your gains.

All of these strategies have been money-losers this century.

Duration and leverage issues are well known, but let’s discuss adding risk: In 2004, I walked into my office’s conference room to hear a rep from Lehman Brothers pitch a higher-yielding fixed income product: “AAA-rated, safe as Treasuries, but yielding 200-300 basis points more.” That was the pitch for securitized subprime mortgages (MBS).

This was impossible, and I said so: “Either you guys are either going to win the Nobel prize in economics or go to jail. There is nothing in between.” (I got called into our general counsel’s office for that one) Regardless, we know how that “Free lunch” worked out.

The key error was not understanding that risk and reward are two sides of the same coin. If you want more yield and you pursue riskier outcomes, you increase the chance that you not only won’t get the higher yield but may not get your principal back also.

Few mistakes have been more costly than “chasing yield.” Ask the folks who loaded up on MBS for the extra yield how they did.

~~~

There is an endless assortment of ways to make mistakes that hurt your portfolio. Most fall into four broad categories: you believe things that are not true; you attempt to operate outside of your narrow skill set; you allow your behavior to be driven by emotions; last, you fail to let time work for you.

Instead of trying to score more wins, consider instead making fewer errors.  If investors could get out of their own ways, make fewer decisions, and less mistakes, they would be so much better off…

 

 

 

Click here to learn more about How NOT to Invest.

 

 

 

__________

1. “Secretive Dynasty Missed Out on Billions While Advisers Got Rich” The family would have done better if they’d put their wealth in a low-cost index fund.
By Devon Pendleton, Dasha Afanasieva, and Benjamin Stupples (With assistance from Karolina Sekula, Tom Maloney, Pui Gwen Yeung, and Marton Eder)
Bloomberg August 13, 2024

2. These two possibilities — a 10-fold increase versus a 90% drop — are roughly symmetrical in terms of math (but probably not probabilities). Both were possible; neither was analyst consensus at the time. The latter turned out to be what occurred.

 

The post Avoid the Unforced Investment Errors Even Billionaires Make appeared first on The Big Picture.

Slate: Economics on a Whim…

 

 

I had a fun and wide-ranging conversation with Felix Salmon, Emily Peck, and Elizabeth Spiers to unpack all of the wildest tariff news. We discuss the “uniquely unpredictable situation” where markets are trading based on the whims of a single person. This mercurial unpredictability is having a huge effect on prices.

I try to help the hosts understand investing in this environment with lessons and ideas from How NOT to Invest.

For laughs, in Slate Plus, we discuss Hugh Grant, HOAs, whether leaf blowers are a necessary evil, and why adult males in suits should not wear their high school backpacks on subways…

 

 

 

Source:
The Economy’s ‘One Guy Problem’
Felix Salmon, Emily Peck, and Elizabeth Spiers
Slate, April 12, 2025

 

 



 

The post Slate: Economics on a Whim… appeared first on The Big Picture.

What Are the Best & Worst-Case Tariff Scenarios?

 

I discussed much of this in my Q2 2025 RWM client quarterly call on April 5. I am sharing this now because so many questions have poured in.

 

Best Worst Cases

Last Monday, I discussed the consequences of chaos. While the purposes of the new tariff policy were not well explained – some of the goals were muddled and unclear – it seems a large part of the problem was the roll-out. It was ham-fisted, opaque, and amateurish. That amplified the initial market reaction, with a lot of volatility and a significant drawdown.

Consider how the Federal Reserve preps markets in advance for any significant change in policy: They warn that a change is coming several meetings in advance; we see shifts in the dot plot; there are discussions about their favored metrics (PCE vs CPI?). Numerous Fed Presidents fan out to speak in formal, academic environments where they discuss the coming changes. After weeks and weeks, the policy change comes. There is a press conference with the Chairman, and after a month, the meeting minutes come out—a very smooth, well-oiled process.

Whatever the final tariff situation, the White House can clearly learn from the communication strategies the Federal Reserve has perfected.

~~~

We are not privy to the discussions inside the Oval Office. We are left looking at the many false starts and feints, the on-again, off-again nature. We can only observe that the players appear to be mercurial and unpredictable. Whatever comes next seems random and driven by individual whims—or the bond market vigilantes.

Rather than try to guess the impact, I prefer to wargame various scenarios to discern potential outcomes, each with a varying likelihood of occurrence. While there are many gradations, let’s work with three: Best-, Worst-, and Middle-case scenarios.

These map out not merely a variety of outcomes but the paths taken to get there—via the impact on consumer spending, corporate CapEx, hiring, etc. Think of this as the discounting function of the markets, assessing a range of corporate revenues and profits over the next four quarters.

The market volatility has been a real-time attempt to assess those probabilities. A sudden 10% drop in the price of U.S. equities implies a significantly lowered set of revenues and profits the following year.

Let’s consider those three potential outcomes:

Best Case Scenario

We have been told to “Take the president seriously, but not literally.”

Let’s do just that, starting with the unknowns: Is this temporary or permanent? Was this an opening salvo, a negotiating tactic, or an attempt at a complete realignment of global trade? Will there be lots and lots of one-on-one side deals with individual countries? Can we reach a “reasonable set of accommodations globally?” Are we halfway or two-thirds of the way through any adjustments, or is this merely the start?

I imagine a best-case scenario as some more downside to come, but all of this turns out to be a savvy negotiating tactic, and a wide range of deals get cut.

The old regime of Pax Americana remains (mostly) in place, and some of the worst offenses of China – protectionism, theft of intellectual property, hacking corporate America, and the unfair treatment of overseas investors – get modified.

The US remains the global economic, military, and political leader. Many countries are unhappy, but it’s in their (and our) best interest to work these things out.

Everybody saves face, the markets eventually find their footing, and we avoid a recession. Later in the year, encouraged by improving CPI data and minimal economic disruption, the FOMC resumes its rate-cutting regime.

Let’s put a 10-20% likelihood this occurs.

Middle Scenario

This gets worse before it gets better.

Numerous regional alliances form – we see that already in the Pacific Rim countries. Despite their long history of animosity and regional conflicts going back millennia, Japan, China, and South Korea band together. They recognize that this upending of prior relationships threatens all of them. They negotiate a trade alliance to protect themselves against the US. Similar things happen in Europe and elsewhere (South America + Mexico?). These regional alliances develop, giving them the heft to negotiate regional deals with the U.S.

Some damage gets done to the US economy and trade relations. We’ve already seen consumers begin to freeze travel and spending plans in place. The backlash includes boycotts of the US and its goods. Travel from Canada to the US has fallen off 75% already.

On the corporate side, companies hold off on big CapEx spending, building new plants, investments, and hiring. “Hey, we don’t have any clarity as to what the new rules are gonna look like, so we will just sit tight to avoid making any big mistakes.”

Before 2025 ends, a mild recession begins. New Treasury issuance does not go great, and the cost of financing the United States’ deficits soars. Lots of good will, accumulated over the 8 decades since World War Two, is dissipated.

It’s a painful self-own, not quite as bad as the 1930 Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act or even Brexit, but still an unforced error, recession, and loss of positive momentum caused by a risky undertaking with poorly defined goals amateurishly implemented.

It’s bad, but we have survived worse: The Great Depression, WW2, Watergate, the 1970s Oil Embargo, September 11, the Great Financial Crisis, and the Covid-19 pandemic.

Our middle case is painful, but not as disruptive as that laundry list of annus horribilis.

Perhaps Congress finally reclaims its tariff authority. Maybe the next president, POTUS 48, can repair some of the worst of this. A lot of global ass-kissing, rewinds, and generosity, and we restore our prior advantageous trade relations and standing.

The middle scenario is a 40-60% likelihood.

Worst Case Scenario

The end of Pax Americana and the global world order have been in place since the beginning of WW2.

The consumer and corporate freeze that led to a mild recession this year turns into a deeper Stagflationary recession. Parts and materials become hard to find. Key components are missing, in many ways, it becomes reminiscent of the pandemic supply chain woes.

As the Economist magazine observed, this is the biggest economic self-error in a century, it leads to an international realignment. Europe looks inwards and towards itself and decouples from the United States as best as it can. The dollar loses its status as the world’s reserve currency. Financing our deficits becomes absurdly expensive.

Inflation soars, standards of livings collapse. This leads to a global recession. Employment falling, unemployment rising spending, and wages fall. We have sticky, stubborn stagflation, a very unpleasant economic scenario. Global GDP drops, as do standards of living around the world fall.

We were the military, economic and political leader around the world, only we no longer are. Think United Kingdom after the fall of British Empire – still around, but poorer and much less respected/feared than before.

We’ve frittered away so much good will: We helped stop disease around the world. We’ve. raised literacy levels everywhere, reduced poverty in so many places. We fought HIV in Africa, and Malaria all around the world. That leadership is now gone, and ultimately so much good from it simply dissipates and goes off the rails.

Bad. Things. Happen.

This is the worst case scenario, and honestly, I personally have a hard time imagining its worst repercussions. Ben Hunt is better able to go dark like that, and his take last week – Crashing the Car of Pax Americana – fleshed out the worst-case scenario better than I can.

The worst scenario is a 10-20% likelihood.

To give you an idea of how reckless this is, that’s about a single spin of a six-shooter in Russian Roulette with the entire United States $28 trillion economy…

~~~

I hate ending on such a down note, so let me share one of my favorite charts, via Batnick. The first one up top shows all of the reasons to sell the

Go back a century to 1926: There is always something to feel awful about. The worst-case scenario I laid out sounds terrible, but look at the past a hundred years there, and there has always been something God-awful going around.

Hopefully, cooler heads prevail…

 

 

See Also:
Crashing the Car of Pax Americana (Epsilon Theory, April 7, 2025)

 

Previously:
The Consequences of Chaos (April 7, 2025)

7 Increasing Probabilities of Error (February 24, 2025)

Tune Out the Noise (February 20, 2025)

 

The post What Are the Best & Worst-Case Tariff Scenarios? appeared first on The Big Picture.

Transcript: Anthony Yoseloff, Davidson Kempner CIO

 

 

 

The transcript from this week’s, MiB: Anthony Yoseloff, Davidson Kempner CIO, is below.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, SpotifyYouTube, and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

 

 

~~~

 

XXXXX insert transcript here XXXXX

 

~~~

 

 

 

 

The post Transcript: Anthony Yoseloff, Davidson Kempner CIO appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Monday AM Reads

My back-to-work morning train WFH reads:

The 18 hours that changed Trump’s mind on trade: From Tuesday evening to Wednesday afternoon, Trump and his trade advisers spoke to several Republican lawmakers and top foreign leaders who raised concerns about the faltering global markets. (Washington Post)

When the Bond Market Panics Like This… Trump’s global tariff war has wiped out more than $5 trillion in equity-market value. But, as always, the most reliable clue about what’s heading our way is the bond market. Buckle up… (Puck) see also The Fed Isn’t Rushing to Save the Markets… This Time With stocks in a steep decline and tariffs inducing recession jitters, the patience of investors may be tested. (New York Times)

Misbehaving in a Volatile Market: Volatility is heightened right now. We have volatility in markets, government policy, trade and supply chains, which translates into emotional volatility. (Wealth of Common Sense)

Vertigo: Preparing for Equity Drawdowns. Drawdowns are inevitable. They will hurt. Five ruminations ahead of time to remove (a bit of) the sting. (Man Group)

Tim Cook’s ‘Long Arc of Time’ Prepared Apple for the Trade War: The CEO managed to help the iPhone avoid another U.S. battle with China. (Wall Street Journal)

• As new real estate listings rules take effect, will buyers and sellers benefit? It allows owners to offer their homes for sale in more limited, private ways than simply listing on the broad marketplaces known as multiple listing services. NAR says it was developed in response to seller demand for such an approach. But many industry professionals say very few sellers actually ask for such an option but are instead steered to it by brokers, who stand to benefit from keeping listings semi-private and shared among their own client networks. (USA Today)

Good Explainer: Trump’s Focus on Trade Deficit Bewilders Economists. Behind Trump’s new tariffs is a goal that is as ambitious as it is unrealistic: eliminating the bilateral trade deficit with every U.S. trading partner. (New York Times)

PR campaign may have fuelled food study backlash, leaked document shows: Eat-Lancet report recommended shift to more plant-based, climate-friendly diet but was extensively attacked online. (The Guardian)

The West is bored to death: Our nihilistic politics are a product of the crushing ennui and spiritual vacancy of modern life. (New Statesman)

‘The White Lotus’: Walton Goggins Knows It Had to End This Way: (Spoilers!) “I realized that there was really no other conclusion,” the actor said in an interview on Monday about the season finale. (New York Times) see also Why Wasn’t Anyone Traumatized in the ‘White Lotus’ Finale? After a violent climax to the third season of the hit HBO show, everyone seems A-OK. Was it a Hollywood ending, or a natural trauma response? Listen.(New York Times)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business this week with Tony Yoseloff, Managing Partner and Chief Investment Officer at the $35 billion Davidson Kempner. He is Chairman of the New York Public Library’s endowment, sits on the Board of Trustees of Princeton and the Board of Directors of its  endowment, and is Vice Chair of the investment committee at New York-Presbyterian.

 

Crisis Consensus: The Mandate-Overreach Cycle

Source: Bruce Mehlman

 

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

The post 10 Monday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

Cutting Through Financial Noise



 

 

In the latest edition of more or me, I chat with my friend Eric Golden:

I speak My guest today is Barry Ritholtz. As the founder & CIO of Ritholtz Wealth Management Barry manages assets of over $5B. He is also a famous author and commentator, fondly known as the ‘Prickly Prophet of Wall Street’ for his contrarian views. In this conversation, Barry shares the origin story and the ideas behind his latest book, “How Not to Invest.” We also talk about how he’s remained a force in the industry while calling out powerful people, advice for curating the right information diet, and some of his biggest misses.  Please enjoy this conversation with Barry Ritholtz.

This was a little different than the usual pod…

 

 

Source:
Cutting Through Financial Noise
Hosted by Eric Golden
Colossus, 04.11.2025

 

 

 

 

 

The post Cutting Through Financial Noise appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Sunday Reads

Avert your eyes! My Sunday morning look at incompetency, corruption and policy failures:

Crashing the Car of Pax Americana: Pax Americana is the Bretton Woods monetary system and the Plaza Accords and the SWIFT banking system and the unquestioned dominance of the USD as the world’s reserve currency. It is the NATO alliance and the Pacific Fleet and CENTCOM and the NSA and the unquestioned dominance of the US military as the world’s security arbiter.It’s American brands, American universities, American entrepreneurialism, and most of all the American stories that have dominated the hearts and minds of everyone on Earth for the past 50 years. The United States set the rules for every coordination game in the world: The rules of trade, the rules of intellectual property, the rules of money, the rules of culture, the rules of war … all of those rules were made by us. Only by us! And in return we gave the rest of the world two things: global peace (pretty much) enforced by a blue-water navy with force projection capabilities anywhere in the world, and unfettered access (pretty much) to the buying power of the American consumer. (Epsilon Theory)

Your Weed Habit May Be Messing With Your Sperm: A growing body of evidence now shows that cannabis is destructive to male fertility. (New York Times)

The world’s hot new trade is “sell America”. The U.S. dollar — which should strengthen in a tariff environment, all other things being equal — weakened steadily. “This suggests foreigners have been and are continuing to sell U.S. stocks and sending their money elsewhere,” write Howard Ward and John Belton, co-chief investment officers of value at Gabelli Funds. (Axios) see also The American Age Is Over: The United States commits imperial suicide. (The Bulwark) see also American Disruption: The proximate cause of all of this reflection is of course Trump’s disastrous “liberation day” tariffs. The secondary cause is what I wrote about Monday: the U.S. has a genuine problem on its hands thanks to its inability to make things pertinent to modern warfare and high tech. The root cause, however, is very much in Stratechery’s wheelhouse, and worthy of another Article: it’s disruption. (Stratechery)

‘I am not who you think I am’: how a deep-cover KGB spy recruited his own son: For the first time, the man the KGB codenamed ‘the Inheritor’ tells his story. (The Guardian)

How Investing Will Change if the Dollar No Longer Rules the World: Should the U.S. currency and stocks no longer rise together, Americans will need to broaden their portfolios. (Wall Street Journal) see also  America’s endangered ‘exorbitant privilege’ Et tu, Goldman? The stock market car crash is naturally dominating attention. After all, this is only the fourth two-day 10% decline since at least 1952. But the more alarming developments are happening in currency markets. (Financial Times)

What Are Microplastics Doing to Our Bodies? This Lab Is Racing to Find Out. Inside a New Mexico lab, researchers estimate there is five bottle caps worth of plastic in human brains. Now they are trying to find out its effects. (New York Times)

Washington Is Getting Economic Security Wrong: Competition with China is based on false premises. (Foreign Policy)

Inside the Law Firm That Decided to Fight Back Against Trump’s Attack: Perkins Coie’s biggest clients—including Amazon and Boeing—staying despite executive order targeting firm (Wall Street Journal) but see Cowardice and Capitulation Stain the Legacy of Once-Esteemed Mega Law Firm: Paul, Weiss joins the list of institutions and individuals with ample resources to defend themselves, who nevertheless have refused to stand up for justice in the face of MAGA intimidation (The Contrarian)

About 90% of Migrants Deported to El Salvador Had No US Criminal Record. Record (MSN)

A Secret Baby and a Nazi Hospital: The Untold Mystery Upending an Artist’s Legacy: Nobody ever noticed the little girl haunting the paintings of Egon Schiele. The story of her disappearance could change how we think about the modern master. (Wall Street Journal)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business this week with Tony Yoseloff, Managing Partner and Chief Investment Officer at the $35 billion Davidson Kempner. He is Chairman of the New York Public Library’s endowment, sits on the Board of Trustees of Princeton and the Board of Directors of its  endowment, and is Vice Chair of the investment committee at New York-Presbyterian.

 

Mapping the Vertical Integration of Insurers, PBMs, Specialty Pharmacies, and Providers: DCI’s 2025 Update and Competitive Outlook

Source: Drug Channels Institute

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

~~~

To learn how these reads are assembled each day, please see this.

The post 10 Sunday Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.