Avoiding Process Drift

We’re roughly seven months into the year and people are already starting to talk about how certain investment styles don’t work anymore. In the financial world, people act like seven months is considered statistically significant because everyone assumes that short-term trends trump all. The proliferation of a wide variety of new ETFs and mutual funds…

Should Social Security Be Considered a Bond?

A reader asks: Should Social Security income be considered as part of the bond portion of a retired person’s asset allocation, thus increasing the stock portion? I’ve seen a number of opinions, articles and blog posts over the years about this question. It seems people tend to take a hard line and either say yes it…

Mohnish Pabrai on How to be a Mentor

In The Education of a Value Investor, Guy Spier talks a lot about one of his biggest influences in the investment business — Mohnish Pabrai, who is a very well-known value investor. I’m a huge fan of Pabrai because of his simple, common sense way of looking at the world.

20 People You Don’t Want to Invest With

I always find that it’s easier to use the process of elimination to figure out what works by first figuring out what doesn’t work in the hopes that all that remains is the good stuff. As Charlie Munger famously says, “Invert, always invert.” I have an entire section of my book devoted to negative knowledge…

How to Teach Your Children About Money

Last month I opened things up to my email subscribers by asking for any suggestions for future writing topics that I’ve yet to cover here. By far the most popular and repeated question came from parents and grandparents who would like to know how to instill good financial habits into their children and grandchildren. It’s…

The Importance of Intellectual Honesty in the Markets

Some of my writing and ideas here and on other media outlets have been called into question lately by some well-known trend following investors. I’m all about casting a skeptical eye on your own ideas because I think it’s important to be willing to admit your limitations, so I’m all about having a healthy debate. Challenging…

Seeing Both Sides of the Market Debate

Stocks have been on an absolute tear since they bottomed out in 2009: But since the market peaked in early 2000, U.S. stocks haven’t really done much for investors as we’ve gone through a series of booms and busts: On the other hand, interest rates around the globe are at historically low levels: Nevertheless, it’s hard…

The Problem With Bond Indexing

The Barclays Aggregate Index is basically the S&P 500 of the bond markets. Formerly the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Index before 2008 (you can thank Dick Fuld for that), the Barclays Agg is the bond index that all total U.S. bond market index funds are benchmarked to for tracking purposes. The biggest bond fund in the…