He blocked me on Twitter when I asked a simple question ![[Image: smile.gif]](https://rooshvforum.network/images/smilies/smile.gif)
Anyways...
I finished Antifragile and I am finishing Fooled by Randomness. [I've read Black Swan but it was when it came out. Have to read it again]
I'm grasping the concept of not "collecting coins in front of the steam roller". People tend to invest in small-margin biz, risking losing a considerable amount of their portfolio value. People underestimate risk.
Examples:
Buying "blue-chip" stocks. Even the ones who pay a healthy dividend. During a Black Swan event, the stock price can be hammered and plummet (go half in value, sometimes even less). Same can be said for real estate. It can go down in value.
A friend of mine is flipping houses in Florida. Uses $1mil to buy 3 houses to renew and sell. He makes 12% in a year. But what if another hard-to-predict event like 2007 happens? He'll blow up.
My previous investment advice was to buy 90% Dividend Aristocrats stocks, 5% in gold coins and another 5% in speculative stuff (i.e Bitcoin). You can even use Covered Calls to get extra cash/income from your stocks. It's all fine in theory but if a Black Swan appears, might get hammered and take many years to recover. Imagine your portfolio losing half its value?
Taleb's Barbell Strategy would be like 90% on the safest as possible (cash, T-notes, gold, etc). Robinhood brokerage is going to pay 3% for cash accounts, 3-month Treasuries pay 2.5%...
So in case shit hits the fan, you know you're going to have 90% of your portfolio intact.
Then you use 10% on highly speculative assets, hoping to get lucky. In his case, he uses options. He's hoping for the Black Swan to appear. A debt crisis is coming. We don't know when nor how the markets will react but it can go worse than 2007/08.
Taleb's options method is buying options on the cheap, expecting a meltdown and profiting. It might take years but it will eventually. But even if the markets don't get crushed, having liquidity is important for when a good opportunity arrives. Of course it has to be something "safe". Let's say you see a great piece of real estate? In 2001 you could buy luxury apartments in Puerto Madero (Buenos Aires) for $20k. In 2007 you could buy real estate cheaply in US. In 2014 when the Russian currency plummeted a friend of mine who was there bought Tag Heuer watches for half price in the stores and took it to UK to sell them. Recently the Turkish Lira plummeted and many UK residents went there to enjoy "cheap Hollidays" or who-knows what else...
I can go on and on but I bet you can remember a time (or many) in your life when you wish you had cash available to close a good deal. So every few years there's a chance for you to enter a nice position.
He blocked me on Twitter but I appreciate the perspective he showed me with his books. Do not underestimate risk. And be Antifragile (embrace uncertainty).
![[Image: smile.gif]](https://rooshvforum.network/images/smilies/smile.gif)
Anyways...
I finished Antifragile and I am finishing Fooled by Randomness. [I've read Black Swan but it was when it came out. Have to read it again]
I'm grasping the concept of not "collecting coins in front of the steam roller". People tend to invest in small-margin biz, risking losing a considerable amount of their portfolio value. People underestimate risk.
Examples:
Buying "blue-chip" stocks. Even the ones who pay a healthy dividend. During a Black Swan event, the stock price can be hammered and plummet (go half in value, sometimes even less). Same can be said for real estate. It can go down in value.
A friend of mine is flipping houses in Florida. Uses $1mil to buy 3 houses to renew and sell. He makes 12% in a year. But what if another hard-to-predict event like 2007 happens? He'll blow up.
My previous investment advice was to buy 90% Dividend Aristocrats stocks, 5% in gold coins and another 5% in speculative stuff (i.e Bitcoin). You can even use Covered Calls to get extra cash/income from your stocks. It's all fine in theory but if a Black Swan appears, might get hammered and take many years to recover. Imagine your portfolio losing half its value?
Taleb's Barbell Strategy would be like 90% on the safest as possible (cash, T-notes, gold, etc). Robinhood brokerage is going to pay 3% for cash accounts, 3-month Treasuries pay 2.5%...
So in case shit hits the fan, you know you're going to have 90% of your portfolio intact.
Then you use 10% on highly speculative assets, hoping to get lucky. In his case, he uses options. He's hoping for the Black Swan to appear. A debt crisis is coming. We don't know when nor how the markets will react but it can go worse than 2007/08.
Taleb's options method is buying options on the cheap, expecting a meltdown and profiting. It might take years but it will eventually. But even if the markets don't get crushed, having liquidity is important for when a good opportunity arrives. Of course it has to be something "safe". Let's say you see a great piece of real estate? In 2001 you could buy luxury apartments in Puerto Madero (Buenos Aires) for $20k. In 2007 you could buy real estate cheaply in US. In 2014 when the Russian currency plummeted a friend of mine who was there bought Tag Heuer watches for half price in the stores and took it to UK to sell them. Recently the Turkish Lira plummeted and many UK residents went there to enjoy "cheap Hollidays" or who-knows what else...
I can go on and on but I bet you can remember a time (or many) in your life when you wish you had cash available to close a good deal. So every few years there's a chance for you to enter a nice position.
He blocked me on Twitter but I appreciate the perspective he showed me with his books. Do not underestimate risk. And be Antifragile (embrace uncertainty).