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Economic Rockstar

Connecting Brilliant Minds in Economics and Finance

062: Stephen Terry on Real Business Cycles, Total Factor Productivity, Short-Termism and Doing a PhD

December 10, 2015 by Frank

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062: Stephen Terry on Real Business Cycles, Total Factor Productivity, Short-Termism and DoiStephen_Terryng a PhD

Stephen Terry is Assistant Professor of Economics at Boston University.

In 2013 he was a Dissertation Intern, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond and, from 2007 to 2009, Stephen was a Research Associate at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

Stephen  received a PhD in Economics from Stanford University in 2015 as well as an  MA in Economics in 2011.

Stephen also has an MA in Mathematics from the University of Oklahoma and a BA in Economics from University of Texas at Arlington.

Stephens research interests include short-termism, uncertainty and real business cycles.

One of the most important summary statistics in macroeconomics is a measure known as TFP or total factor productivity of the economy as a whole – Stephen Terry

Economics:

In this interview, Stephen mentions: labor markets, double coincidence of wants, selection markets, matching markets, algebraic topology, total factor productivity, real business cycles, economic shocks, volatility, variance, risk, uncertainty, aggregate output, employment, investment, allocation of inputs, uncertainty, earnings, profits, short-termism and the Principle-Agent Problem.

Economists:

In this interview, Stephen mentions: Christine Exley, Nick Bloom, John Van Reenen and John Maynard Keynes.

In this episode you will learn:

  • about Stephen’s experience with the two-body or joint location problem.
  • about Stephen’s PhD process and the experience he developed along the way.
  • of some suggestions if you’re considering undertaking a PhD.
  • the differences and similarities in the mathematics of economics and the mathematics of other disciplines such as physics and chemistry.
  • if there is a divergence or a convergence in the branches of macroeconomics and microeconomics.
  • what really happens during recessions.
  • how firms can learn and react to the data provided at a micro level.
  • what Total Factor Productivity is.
  • about Real Business Cycle theory.
  • whether changes in uncertainty causes or amplifies recessions.
  • whether managers should forego the long-term objectives of the firm due to the pressures of short-termism.
  • whether rating agencies are beneficial to investors or if they potentially hinder the growth prospects of the firm due to short-term pressures and expectations.

Preparation for Life as a Research Economists into 2 Stages:

1) Useful things that you can be doing before graduate school.

You have to study Math. Economics at graduate level is increasingly dominated by the technical and quantitative research methods.

Having some practical experience in the application of mathematics in economics is not not only valuable for later on in your career but is now becoming a pre-condition to gaining access to research-intensive PhD programmes.

If your undergrad or Masters degree lacks math rigour, then you should consider building on your current level of math by undertaking a math PhD programme.

3) The ways in which you can maximise the benefits you get in your PhD training.

You should consider becoming a Research Assistant prior to starting your PhD so that you gain the practical experience.

This will put you in a situation in which you can be mentored and instructed by other economists who are undertaking economics and statistical research projects.

Being exposed to this will offer you an insight into the research process as well as ‘train’ you to become quite efficient and structured in terms of time management and application.

On the Use of Math in Economics:

At its core, math and applied mathematical techniques, but also pure mathematical proof-based reasoning, are ways to go from some set of assumptions to a coherent set of conclusions that you know follow logically without inconsistency from those assumptions.

By harnessing that logical consistency, economics is something, in the last few decades, that has been able to harness a great deal of precision in the statements that it’s able to make. But still at its core, where the debate centres, you have to understand that the assumptions that we make are primarily assumptions about people. Economic actors sometimes go their own way and don’t always follow perfectly the rules or logical coherent types of assumptions that we start with as an economist.

There’s a great deal of power and precision that is gained by math but this underlying realisation that we’re dealing with individuals rather than physical particles that you would use in physics is something that an economist has to keep in mind when they do think about the real world.

Papers:

  • Terry, S. (2015). The Macro Impact of Short-Termism. Working Paper.
  • Bloom, N.,  Floetotto, M., Jaimovich, N., Saporta-Eksten, I., and Terry, S. (2014). Really Uncertain Business Cycles. Working Paper.

Sources:

  • US Census Bureau
  • Institute for Fiscal Studies
  • McKinsey and Company
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035: Stephen Young on Being Car-Free and the Behavioural Economics of Owning A Car

June 4, 2015 by Frank

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035: Stephen Young on Being Car-Free and the Behavioural Economics of Owning A Car

Stephen Young is a Senior Lecturer at Brighton Business School and is subject leader for behavioural economics.Stephen Young

He is also Visiting Lecturer at Brighton and Sussex Medical School, where he teaches Behavioural Economics to health professionals, including commissioners, public health practitioners and GPs.

As an independent consultant and trainer, Stephen also provides client workshops and presentations on behavioural economics and behaviour change.

Stephen is widely published and his research interests include behaviour change, climate change, health, sustainability, and Information and Communications Technology.

Stephen does not own a car and is so passionate about being car free that he writes regularly on his blog livingthecarfreelife.blogspot.com. 

Economists:

In this interview, Stephen mentions and discusses:

Paul Ormerod, Richard Thaler, Cass Sunstein, John Cochrane, Paul Dolan, Malcolm Gladwell, Phil Goodwin, Daniel Kahneman, Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Barry Schwartz, Richard Layard, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Paul Krugman and Friedrich Hayek.

Economic Themes:

In this interview, Stephen mentions and discusses:

Bank run, financial crisis, risk, behavioural economics, nudge, rationality, incentives, tax, choice architecture, obesity, climate change, externalities, loss aversion and the endowment effect.

On Economic Theory:

“None of the models are completely perfect. None of them work to everybody’s benefit” – Stephen Young

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Is behavioural economics storming the citadel or is it shoring up the ramparts? – Stephen Young

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Find Out:

  • why Stephen decided to become an academic.
  • about the Northern Rock bank run in the UK in 2007.
  • why universities need to adapt or die when it comes to addressing relevant content.
  • what Stephen is doing to reduce his carbon footprint in college and how he’s responding to the digital needs of his students.
  • why health professionals are interested in behavioral economics.
  • about the Irish government’s fight against obesity.
  • how Stephen is encouraging a town in the UK to become pedestrian friendly.
  • about framing car ownership – status and perception of rank.
  • how by ditching your car you can burn calories.
  • how the average person is working two days a week to pay for their car.
  • about the emotional attachment that a car represents.
  • what major cities across Europe are doing to make them more pedestrian and bike-friendly.
  • about peak car ownership.
  • some advice from Stephen on how to give up your car and become car free.
  • about the pluralist approach to embracing economics.

“The externalities don’t work for car ownership because it’s not priced in because of the pollution emitted” – Stephen Young

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You can live a better life without a car. You can be thinner. You  can be richer. You can be more sociable. You can be more flexible. You can get around just as easily – Stephen Young.

Reasons for Peak Car Ownership:

  1. The youth do not have the income to finance the ownership of a car due to the high unemployment rates.
  2. High cost of car insurance.
  3. The opportunity costs of owning the latest technology.
  4. You don’t need a car to participate in a lot of things today.

Behavior Economics in the Health Sector:

“We’re not just nudged by the other side, we’re being bombarded by the other side. There’s a lot of room to doubt the way public health policy is being transacted and implemented in a lot of economies” – Stephen Young.

Giving Up Your Car and Becoming Car Free:

  1. Try living without your car for a while before you give up.
  2. If you’re moving house, locate to an area where everything you need is close by.
  3. Don’t give up your car just because it’ll make the world a better place. Only do it to improve your own life.
  4. Take a ‘hike’ – go for a walk.
  5. Walking is a great way of forming your thoughts and ideas as it clears your head and frees your mind.
  6. Walking, rather than driving, improves your health and well-being. It connects you to where you live, to where you are.

“All truly great thoughts are conceived by walking” – Nietzcshe.

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Recommended Books:

  • The Death of Economics by Paul Ormerod
  • Why Most Things Fail: Evolution, Extinction and Economics by Paul Ormerod
  • Nudge by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein
  • The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell
  • Happiness by Design by Paul Dolan
  • Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
  • The Road to Serfdom by Friedrich Hayek
  • Capital: Volume 1 by Karl Marx
  • Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioural Economics by Richard Thaler
  • Poor Economics by Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo
  • Scarcity by Sendil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir
  • The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas Kuhn

Where to Find Stephen Young:

  • Website: stephenyoung.org.uk
  • Website: livingthecarfreelife.blogspot.com
  • LinkedIn: Stephen Young
  • Twitter: @stephenyounguk
  • BehaviourWorkshops Twitter: @BehaviourW
  • Behaviour Workshops Blog: http://www.behaviourworkshops.blogspot.co.uk/

Stephen Young’s Publications:

  • Young, S (2013). The Behavioural Economics of Owning A Car. eg magazine. Volume 18, Issue 5, March-April  2013. ISSN 2042-1990.
  • Other Publications.

Forthcoming

  • Young, S. and Caisey, V. Behavioral Economics and Social Marketing: Points of Contact?  Chapter in Volume II of Stewart, D. (Ed) Handbook of Persuasion and Social Marketing. NY: Praeger. 2015.
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024: Greg Davies on Behavioral Finance and Controlling Your Emotions When Making Trading Decisions

March 19, 2015 by Frank

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024: Greg Davies on Behavioral Finance and Controlling Your Emotions When Making Trading Decisions

Greg Davies is Managing Director and Head of Behavioral Finance at Barclays.  He joined the firm in December 2006 to develop and implement commercial applications drawing on behavioural portfolio theory, the psychology of judgment and decision making, and decision sciences.

Today Greg leads a global team of behavioural and quantitative finance specialists, and is responsible for the design and global implementation of Barclays’ Investment Philosophy.

Greg is an Associate Fellow at Oxford University’s Saïd Business School and his first (co-authored) book, ‘Behavioral Investment Management: An Efficient Alternative to Modern Portfolio Theory’, was published in January 2012.

He is co-curator and co-creator of Open Outcry – a reality opera based on the stock market trading floor.

Greg has authored papers in multiple academic disciplines, presents at academic and industry conferences, and is a frequent media commentator on Behavioural Finance.  He is an Editorial Board Member of the Journal of Behavioural and Experimental Finance.

Greg studied at the University of Cape Town and obtained a degree in Economics, Philosophy and Finance. He followed this with an MPhil in Economics and a PhD in Decision Theory and Behavioural Finance from the University of Cambridge.

Economic Themes:

In this interview, Greg mentions and discusses:

Behavioral economics, behavioral finance, rationality, irrational behavior, heuristics, cognitive biases, system 1, system 2, homo economicus, trade-off, home bias, familiarity bias, risk, return, portfolio, efficient frontier, stochastic model, trading floor, noise, herding, bubbles, booms, bust, returns, standard deviation, deterministic model, decision theory, expected utility theory, mean variance and portfolio theory.

Economists:

In this interview, Greg mentions:

Danial Kahneman, Amos Tversky, Terence Odean, Warren Buffet, Charlie Munger and Harry Markowitz.

Influencers:

Jon Elster and Amos Tversky.

Advice:

Be multi-disciplinary. Look for links between fields. Be continuously curious.

Keep learning. Stay curious. Say ‘yes’ to things that are outside your comfort zone.

Find out:

  • what is Behavioral Economics/Finance
  • the disconnection between economics and psychology.
  • how Kahneman and Tversky were ‘swimming up-stream’ to bring common sense to economics.
  • why viewing the world through biases is harmful to behavioral finance.
  • why the ever-increasing list of biases may not be good for the behavioral finance field.
  • about System 1 and System 2 as popularised by Daniel Kahneman.
  • why it’s good to allow emotions to part of the portfolio decision-making process.
  • how to acquire the emotional comfort you need for your long-term financial objectives.
  • how to buy emotional insurance for your long-term investment portfolio.
  • how to avoid costly short-term emotional mistakes.
  • how psychometric tests can extract measures of financial personality.
  • why a set of nudges are designed to help high net-worth individuals to make better decisions.
  • how to build a tailored portfolio to meet your clients needs.
  • why you should consider including expected anxiety into your portfolio building along with risk and return.
  • what an opera experiment has to do with replicating the open outcry system of a trading floor.
  • how music can control your emotions while trading markets.
  • how Barclays Capital are improving the understanding of their clients by turning the lens on themselves.

Behavioral economics is the combination of finance theory and behavioral psychology. It’s about trying to understand how people actually do go about making financial decisions and, as a result, how we might make them better financial decisions.

Problems with Biases in Behavioral Finance:

  • Biases are only often biases if you view them through the lens of what economic theory very narrowly and mathematically deems to be rational.
  • There’s nothing irrational about having the need for a  short-term immediate emotional comfort.
  • A lot of deviations from narrow economic thinking are not irrational at all. They are perfectly reasonable. It is just that other people are bringing other objectives to bear on the decision.
  • The other problem is the tendency to look at the world through a list of biases.

Classical Finance would typically remove irrational behavior from its theories and models. However, the position of Behavioral Finance is much more subtle. As humans, we need emotional comfort. We need to be comfortable with the decisions we make and with the portfolio we hold. There is nothing irrational about that.

You need to find a way of not switching off your emotions but utilising them effectively – Greg Davies

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Emotions are actually a very good source of information for us if we use them in a thoughtful way – Greg Davies

Resources:

Farnam Street by Shane Parish 

Recommended Books:

  • Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
  • Explaining Social Behavior: More Nuts and Bolts for the Social Sciences by Jon Elster
  • Behavioral Investment Management: An Efficient Alternative to Modern Portfolio Theory by Greg Davies

Where To Find Greg Davies:

  • Website: Investment Philosophy 
  • Twitter: @GregBDavies
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015: Niels Kaastrup-Larsen on Trend Following Strategies and Stock Market Turmoil Ahead

January 14, 2015 by Frank

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015: Niels Kaastrup-Larsen on Trend Following Strategies and Stock Market Turmoil Ahead

TopTraderPodcast NielsNiels Kaastrup-Larsen is Managing Director of Dunn Capital (Europe). Niels is a trend follower with more than 20 years experience in the hedge fund industry, working for some of the largest CTAs or Commodity Trading Advisors in the world, including Chesapeake Capital. Niels co-founded, built and managed three businesses within the alternative investment space, including Rho Asset Management.

Niels trades futures markets in a systematic and highly-automated way. He is the founder and host of the popular podcast ‘Top Traders Unplugged’, where he uses his experience and contacts in the industry to deliver insightful, engaging and passionate interviews with the most successful hedge fund managers and traders.

Economic and Finance Themes:

In this interview, Niels mentions and discusses: Trend following, futures markets, gold, anomalies, confirmation bias, efficient market hypothesis, fixed-income securities, treasuries, bonds, the Great Depression, stock market portfolio, diversification, equities, systematic trading, stop-losses, technical analysis.

Niels’ Influencers:

Jerry Parker of Chesapeake Capital, Michael Lewis and Jack Schwager

‘There’s no doubt that Jack Schwager’s book ‘Market Wizards’ was an inspiration’ – Niels Kaastrup-Larsson

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Niels’ Affirmations:

  • ‘The trend is your friend’.
  • ‘KISS – Keep it Simple’.
  • ‘Cut your losses, let your profits run’.
  • ‘Diversification is so important because markets are very different animals and you’re going to have periods of time where types of markets are trending and easy to trade.’
  • Strict Risk Control.
  • Discipline: 
    ‘Without discipline you’re not going to get very far’ Niels Kaastrup-Larsson

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Niels’ Personal Habits:

Niels loves playing football on a Friday evening with a group of friends who all come from diverse backgrounds. It allows him to clear his mind and to think about things other than trading.

In todays world we really need to focus on WHY we do what we do and not just what we do and how we do it – Niels citing Simon Sinek (see recommended books below).

Find out:

  • about trend following and how to spot a trend.
  • what is a trend following strategy.
  • two ways in which we can take on market risk – one good and the other not so good.
  • how emotions can lead to losses.
  • why trend followers use computers with built-in trend following rules to make trades.
  • why we are more likely to buy a bar of soap that is reduced by 50% in a retail store than buy a stock that has fallen 50%.
  • how you should diversify a portfolio.
  • how global markets are beginning to diverge which is key for a trend following strategy.
  • why Niels believes that global markets will be in turmoil within the next 5 years.
  • why Niels believes the economic cycle will turn by October 2015.
  • why events will unfold just like 1929.
  • if the Swiss and Germans should take back their gold reserves from the United States.
  • about whether there are job opportunities in the trading industry today.

  • why the industry has become more scientific.

  • how to navigate through the noise when markets undergo a process of price discovery.

  • why Niels created the Top Traders Unplugged podcast rather than write a book.
  • Niels recommendation for a great market data resource.

Niels didn’t know what he wanted to do after High-School, but one thing he did know was that he didn’t want to go to university and try to learn from books. He was much more interested in doing things and being practical is his approach to learning.

A job in a bank seemed a good compromise – Niels would learn by doing and get paid for it!

Niels’ Defining Moment:

Niels took a job in a large bank in Denmark straight out of High-School and, during his induction week, he passed by a room full of young people waving their arms and shouting. He found out that they were trading currencies, stocks and bonds. Immediately, Niels knew that after his 2 years of training, that’s what he was going to do. At the age of 19 or 20, Niels began trading Danish government bonds.

Niels began reading international magazines about traders and came across tables of rankings based upon trader performance. These traders were systematic trend followers or Commodity Trading Advisors.

Trend-Following:

It was intriguing to me to see that these people [trend-followers] could continue to produce extraordinary returns.

Niels searched for and read books on interviews with traders in general and some were rule-based or systematic traders.

Niels got a chance to work with Jerry Parker of Chesapeake Capital who was once part of the well-publicized Turtle Trader experiment, which was run by Richard Dennis and Bill Eckhardt.

“It is the most consistent way of investing your money when you look at it in the very long-run”  – Niels Kaastrop-Larsen.

I see people like Jerry Parker and Bill Dunn with thirty or forty years track record still making all-time highs and they’re still going strong, There are not that many discretionary traders doing that. I think that there is something to this methodology.

Trend following comes down to the way we as human beings take on risk. There are two ways that we can do that:

1) a convergent risk-taking style.

2) a divergent risk-taking style.

A convergent risk-taking world is one where you believe that you know where all the risks are and you see the environment as being stable. Therefore, you are willing to bet a large proportion of your assets on a single or few investment themes because you really fell sure that you have it right. When assets go up based on on your expectations, you take your profits quickly as the movement confirms your theory.

On the other hand, when equities fall you still believe that you will be right at the end of the day. So what happens is that you are going to increase your risk and double-up – ‘you double in trouble’. Unfortunately, many investors make their decisions when prices are going against them.

In a convergent world, the profile of a trader is one who makes very small gains because you take your profit quickly. But once in a while you have a devastating loss with huge amounts because you won’t accept you’re wrong.

The equity curve or the returns profile for this trader is quite flat and then spikes downwards where you will lose most, if not all, of your money.

In a divergent risk-taking world, people confess that they don’t know what is going to happen tomorrow. So, the way they play these situations is that they are always unsure what they are going to do and, therefore, their risk-taking is generally small. But since their risks are small, it allows them to take risks in many different opportunities at the same time.

If people here are wrong and, because they feel unsure about their investment from the beginning, they cut there losses quickly just to get out. They didn’t feel good from the beginning and if they continue to lose money then it will feel worse.

When these people are right and their trades are working out for them, then they believe that something is right and they take on a little bit more risk because the movement is going in their favor. They increase their position size.

The equity curve of this trader can be flat or slightly down for some time but then spikes upward where they get a good run and increase their risk at the right time. They make a lot of money with these few investment opportunities.

‘The universe that I came from, the trend-followers or rule-based strategies, use a divergent strategy. We’re not trying to forecast what is going to happen tomorrow, we let the financial media try to that. Instead, we analyse historic price data and when data goes in a certain direction, then we essentially react to that price action’ – Niels Kaastrop-Larsen.

Trend Following Strategies:

Trend following is about ‘buying highs and selling lows’, which is the opposite to what most people would think. They buy the lows because they think it’s cheap and sell the highs as it’s more expensive.

Trend followers think completely opposite to the traditional investor.

Trend following strategies are also known as using price breakout methodologies.

If a stock, like Microsoft, was reaching a high, a trend-follower would buy or go long this stock with the belief that it could go higher. If the stock was at the lower end of a price range or band, then you would want to go short the stock.

Moving averages could also be used with the same effect, but their are small differences.

Once you’ve got your entry signal, then you need an exit because if you are wrong, you need to cut your losses. You want to have small losses and big winners.

Many traders lose money because they don’t know when to get out and even if they do, they usually don’t have the discipline to get out. This is why trend followers use computers to do it for them because, emotionally, it is not very easy to take a loss. It’s not very easy to take a profit either, so using rules and putting them into a computer.

‘The rules do not have to be complicated. But it’s the discipline of doing this day-in-day-out, even with 10 losing days in a row, you still keep doing it as you believe in the rules you created’ – Niels Kaastrop-Larsen.

Based on cognitive reasoning, our brains actually work quite opposite to our day-to-day decisions that we make.

A lot of people don’t make money in the stock market despite all the news and advice that they get.

Trading a Diversified Portfolio:

If you want others to trade for you then you need:

1) Different managers: Each manager trades different markets,

2) Speed: both short-term, medium-term and long-term periods.

3) Strategies: Then you can go into detail about the strategies.

‘You should certainly allocate to smaller managers who are more nimble, who maybe more innovative because they have more flexibility in their strategy, which the bigger firms don’t have. They can trade markets that the bigger firms can’t do.‘

If you want to trade for yourself you need to:

1) Consider whether you want to trade all markets – commodities and financials or just a few.

2) Know how you’re going to make your investments, not when.

‘You must have a prudent approach to risk and that really boils down to diversification.’

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Market Turmoil Expected Soon:

‘The problem is going to start in the fixed-income market. It’s the bond market that I worry the most. The whole system has been pumped with liquidity and a lot of bad debt is sitting in places in the system that we probably don’t know about’ –Niels Kaastrop-Larsen.

‘The whole idea of creating a strong and more stable financial structure has back-fired because the banks have not become smaller, they’ve become bigger. So the systemic risk that the authorities wanted to combat back in 2009 has in fact increased’ – Niels Kaastrop-Larsen.

The economic cycle will turn by October 2015 and once they turn, that will have a major effect on the financial markets. Once this happens, the fixed-income markets around the world will burst, so the bubble in sovereign debt will burst.

This means the whole financial sector will get into much more serious problems than before because there is not any central bank in the world that can take interest rates from 5% to zero. The weapons in their armoury is much less. This will spill over to the equity markets, but you could see a steep increase in equity markets before this happens. This is what happened in 1929 before the Great Depression.

We could be in the first depressionary environment since 1929 when we get into 2016, 2017 and 2018. That’s a scary thought but it can create opportunity.

The losers in this will be retail investors who, by their bank and financial advisor, will be advised to buy more bonds or more stocks because that’s where we’ve seen the gains in the last 5 years.

If you don’t understand history, you’re likely to repeat your errors.

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Gold Reserves and The Swiss Referendum:

The people of Switzerland made the wrong choice by not demanding that the Swiss National Bank should hold at least 20% of their reserves in gold and by not demanding that gold be returned to Switzerland.

Gold will get its shine back. It will fall a little before going back up.

There are a number of theories about the amount of gold in Fort Knox, with one of them being that there is no longer the amount of gold in the vaults there that we may once believed.

‘Many believe that gold is a hedge against inflation. To me gold is a hedge against government’ – Niels Kaastrup-Larsen

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If you had an asset at a time of crisis, wouldn’t you want it at home? Countries should have their gold at home. The Americans told the Germans it would take them 8 years to deliver the gold. So maybe there is some truth about whether the gold is still there or not.

Are There Job Opportunities in Trading Today?

The approach to trading is more scientific now more than ever. Trading firms look for scientists who can work with large volumes of data in order to identify patterns.

‘There are less need for traders because machines have taken over’ – Niels Kaastrup-Larsen

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You are more likely to get a job in the trading industry if you come from a more academic or scientific approach.

If you trade your own account and have found a system, then it could be a good idea to approach a large firm and tell them of your system and trading history. You should be honest that you do not know of all the answers. That way you could get a position with a firm.

‘90% of assets are managed by 10% of managers, and 10% of assets have to be divided by 90% of managers’

How to Navigate Through the Noise When Markets Undergo a Process of Price Discovery:

If you are using moving averages, you have the element of time involved meaning that the moving averages have to turn and cross before you get a signal to either enter or exit a trade.

When it comes to exiting a trade, using moving averages can be dangerous in some ways because if you have a very steep and fast change in trend you could give back a lot of your profit.

A price breakout strategy would allow you to use stop-loss rules that can allow you to move up underneath the trend.

The only thing you should look at is the price. Price is objective. It is probably the only thing we can rely on that in this very second the price of a financial futures market is what it is. Anything you start doing after price is a derivative of price whether it is volatility or something else. I would caution against using too many fancy indicators – KISS – Keep It Simple’

Favorite Books:

  • Liars Poker by Michael Lewis
  • Market Wizards by Jack Schwager
  • It Starts With Why by Simon Sinek

Favorite Internet Resource:

  • Commodity Systems Inc. – Market Data and Trading Software “Provides great data in a timely manners and it’s quite inexpensive compared to other providers

Where To Find Niels Kaastrup-Larsson:

  • Niels Website: TopTradersUnplugged.com
  • On Twitter: @TopTradersLive
  • Niels’ Podcast: Top Traders Unplugged
  • Dunn Capital: https://dunncapital.com/about/
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010: Douglas Goldstein on How Chess Can Teach Us Lessons on Strategic Financial Planning

December 11, 2014 by Frank

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010: Douglas Goldstein on How Chess Can Teach Us Lessons on Strategic Financial Planning

Doug GoldsteinDoug Goldstein has over 20 years in the financial planning and services industry, beginning his career on Wall Street in 1992 at Dean Witter. Doug is a Certified Financial Planner, registered Investment  Advisor, Trust and Estate Practitioner, and a licensed investment professional. Doug is the founder and director of Profile Investment Services, Ltd and hosts two podcasts on iTunes called Goldstein on Gelt and Rich As A King. Doug has authored numerous books on financial planning and building wealth and is co-author of Rich As A King: How the Wisdom of Chess Can Make You The Grandmaster of Investing. Doug is quoted in many publications such as The Wall Street Journal and Forbes, as well as guest lecturing on investment in colleges.

Economic Themes:

In this interview, Doug mentions and discusses: investment planning, stock markets, over-confidence, behavioral finance, loss aversion, prospect theory, personal finance, strategic finance, interest rates, bonds, risk, liquidity risk, hedge funds,

Economists and Economic Schools:

In this interview, Doug mentions: Terence Odean, Daniel Kahneman and Kenneth Rogoff.

Doug’s Defining Moment:

  • A chance meeting with Boris and Anna, a Russian couple, led to Doug enrolling his daughter and son into Boris’ chess classes. While sitting in during these classes, Doug realised that the strategic thinking and analysis of a chess player is similar to that of a financial planner and investor.
  • You can use the strategies of chess to illuminate so many concepts in investment

Doug’s Affirmations/Mantra:

Accept upon yourself a teacher, acquire for yourself a friend and judge everyone favorably

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Doug’s Influencers:

Doug’s mother and grandmother who were both in the finance industry.

In this episode, you will learn:

  • about two women in Doug’s life who smashed the glass ceiling in their respective careers.
  • about the financial planning lessons Doug learned from his mother and grandmother.
  • if women make better financial planners or investors than men.
  • if trading markets more frequently leads to better returns.
  • how the patience of chess playing is similar to the patience needed when planning your stock market trades.
  • why the fear of losing results in investors making bad decisions.
  • what you should do if you have a question about your business.
  • how the concepts of improving your game in chess is the same as that of investment and financial planning.
  • about the difference between short-term and long-term financial planning.
  • how a game of chess is bounded unlike the uncertainties of a stock market and what you can do to manage these uncertainties.
  • ‘how the News causes you to Lose’.
  • how goal-setting can get you out of the bottom of the socio-economic ladder.
  • who Doug would be if he was a chess piece.
  • whether stocks or bonds are more dangerous today.
  • which investor performs better – those listening to the news for advice or those that do not.
  • if Doug has a crystal ball to help make predictions!
  • why building a community is better than building a network if you want to succeed.
  • what Doug’s path to success is.
  • if we should try to pay off our mortgage early.
  • how being a philanthropist can make you a better person.
  • Doug’s simple method of identifying if you are risk averse in terms of your investment.
  • the parallels that Ireland and Israel have in terms of their economy, innovations and foreign direct investment.

Advice:

  • When you’re an investment advisor, you don’t have any prophecy – Doug Goldstein

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  • There’s nothing that you’re actually going to know about what’s going to happen tomorrow in the markets. But what you do know is to educate your clients about how to responsibly take care of their own money.
  • Every move must have a purpose – Susan Polgar Chess Grandmaster

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  • Amateur investors  and amateur chess players move around because they can’t figure out their strategy. They make a move that doesn’t really have a purpose and that’s a huge mistake.
  • Go into meetings and discussions with people as a friend. Assume that they’re there to work with you and not against you. You’ll be much happier.
  • Plan ahead. ‘It wasn’t raining when Noah built the Ark’ – Howard Ruff

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  • Focus on developing a strategy.
  • ‘If interest rates move up, the value of your bond could tumble’ – Doug Goldstein

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  • Build your community – that’s how you will ultimately succeed. Build a group of people that you can constantly be in touch.
  • ‘Spend a lot more time focusing on what you can give to people, than what you can get from them. I believe that’s the path to success.’ Doug Goldstein

  • ‘Liquidity, having access to your money, is really really important’ – Doug Goldstein

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Career Advice

‘We are not the same as our parents and grandparents. You’re not going to work for some company for your whole life and then retire with a great pension at 60. it’s up to you to take care of yourself. The governments going broke, your parents are probably going broke, you’re going broke and you’re in debt. You’ve got to get your own act together. As soon as you understand how business works, you should try and set your own sails and find something that you really enjoy doing, that can add value and work really hard to do it.’

‘There’s nothing wrong with a little bit of hard work in order to succeed. Don’t assume someones going give it to you’

Personal Habits:

  • ‘I tend to be more conservative. I look for ways of trying to protect my business and my savings. I’m constantly looking for problems, coming up with solutions before the problems arise so that they don’t arise.’
  • Goal-setting. Check out Doug’s and Susan’s goal-setting paradigm STRATegic in Rich As A King.
  • Doug is an anti-debt person and is a philanthropist.
  • Doug organizes everything first thing in the morning – calender, email and builds a list of what needs to be done. He does the unpleasant but most important things first. Everything that’s crossed out are his accomplishments for the day.

Takeaway:

  • ‘Get yourself a teacher – a real mentor’ – Doug Goldstein

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  • Don’t be afraid to pick up the phone and calling someone if you have a question about your business.
  • Having a pretty good strategy today is much better than having no strategy until maybe one day you’ll develop one.
  • It’s okay to develop as a strategist. It’s what all investors do and it’s what all chess players do.
  • The news you’re getting from most sources is probably useless.

    ‘Give me a stock clerk with a goal and I’ll give you a man who will make history. Give me a man with no goals and I’ll give you  a stock clerk.’ J.C. Penney

  • ‘You might have a good piece but if it’s in the wrong place it’s going to be very dangerous’ – Doug Goldstein

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  • ‘If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will get you there’ – Lewis Carroll

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  • Doug uses this quote from Alice in Wonderland to explain the concept of having a specific budgeting roadmap or goal set within a certain time frame.

    When Planning for a year, plant corn. When planning for a decade, plant trees. When planning for a life, train and educate people’ – Chinese proverb.

  • For those who want long-term success, start with education – Doug Goldstein

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Recommended Books:

  • Rich As A King by Doug Goldstein and Susan PolgarAudible
  • Eat That Frog! by Brian Tracy
  • The Time Trap by Alec Mackenzie

Favorite Internet Resources:

  • Financial Snapshot – a tool that builds up your financial profile and identifies your financial situation so that you can work on it or improve it.

Where To Find Doug Godstein:

  • Website: Rich As A King

Gift for You:

How To Achieve Exponential Growth in Your Business: The 3 Game-Changing Tactics I Used to Double, Double Again and Then Triple The Size of My Business.

http://traffic.libsyn.com/economicrockstar/010_Doug_Goldstein.mp3

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