79 Years of Investing Wisdom in 55 Minutes
Ecom Podcast

79 Years of Investing Wisdom in 55 Minutes

Summary

"Howard Marks emphasizes the importance of a contrarian investing approach, advising that when others are imprudent, you should be prudent, and when others are terrified, it's time to be aggressive—insightful for e-commerce sellers looking to strategically navigate market fluctuations."

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79 Years of Investing Wisdom in 55 Minutes Speaker 2: All right, here's what I said. I said, describe Howard Marks in 280 characters. Here's what he gave you. Howard Marks is a legendary investor and co-founder of Oaktree Capital, known for his sharp memos, contrarian thinking, and risk-focused approach. He made billions zigging when others zag, especially in crises. When he writes, Wall Street listens. Pretty flattering. Speaker 1: Pretty good, yeah. Unknown Speaker: I feel like I can rule the world. I know I can be what I want to. Speaker 2: Okay. Well, I think the best place to start is that kind of zig while others zag. So I want to ask about the S&P because you don't know much about us, but the short version of the guy you see across from you there, Sam, is Sam's an entrepreneur. Sam builds his company. He sold his company and he took the money that he made and he said, look, I worked hard for this money. Now I want this money to work hard for me, but I need it to be safe. And so Sam went into a mostly, you know, best practice, low cost index funds in the S&P 500. And anytime I ask Sam about his strategy or I tell him, dude, you got to buy Bitcoin, Ethereum, you got to buy this, you got to put some money over here. Because I'm like, you know, if Sam is vanilla, I don't even know what I am. I'm some flavor off in the side. That's strange. Speaker 1: Tutti Frutti. Speaker 2: Yeah, I'm Tutti Frutti over here. And I keep trying to pull him over here, but he says, no, no, no, I like vanilla. And so he basically just says the long-term average of the S&P 500 is 10%. If I just hold this for 50 years, I'm going to double, you know, this many times. I'm good. Speaker 3: Very, very boring. Very boring. Speaker 2: Yeah, he repeats that like on loop, like he's one of my kid's toys. You push the button, it just keeps saying the same line. But you know, I do get a little wary when anything seems too safe or too certain or I guess too taken for granted that this 10% number over the long term will be what it'll be. I guess, what would your message be to Sam? Is Sam just, you know, is he right? Is he wrong? Would you give him a caution of warning? If he was your nephew, he looks like he might be your nephew. If he was your nephew, what would you be telling him? Speaker 1: Well, on the one hand, Sam, you're right. Because if you have more money than you need to eat. The first purpose of your money should be to make you comfortable. It doesn't make any sense. Buffett says, don't risk what you have and need to get what you don't have and don't need. It makes no sense for somebody with a surplus of money to make their daily life less pleasant by going to investments that put them under pressure. Speaker 3: But there's going to be a but on your statement, it sounds like. Speaker 1: But on the other hand, the riskiest thing in the world is the belief that there's no risk. The risk in the markets does not come from the companies, the securities or the institutions like the exchanges. The risk in the markets comes from behavior of people. And it's for that reason that Buffett says, when others are imprudent, you should be prudent. When other people are carefree, you should be terrified because their behavior Unduly raises prices and makes them precarious. When other people are terrified, you should be aggressive because their behavior suppresses prices to the point where everything's a giveaway. So I don't, I mean, look, in the long run, you're right about the S&P. And over the, over the coming years, American companies on balance are going to produce prosperity. Speaker 3: What, what's that defined as longterm in this? Speaker 1: Well, I would say 20 or more is, is, is the, is the real longterm. And I'll tell you in a minute how I get there. But my favorite cartoon, I have a file of cartoons from over the years. My favorite one, there's a guy, there's a car pulled over to the side of the road. The guy's in a phone booth, so you know it's an old cartoon, because there are no more phone booths. And there's a factory going up in the background. And he's screaming into the telephone, I don't give a damn about prudent diversification, sell my Fenwick chemical. In other words, prudent diversification calls for certain investment positions and a variety of them in a certain composition. Reality says, I see Fenway Chemicals burning to the ground, get me out. And you can't ignore reality. Now, what's reality in this case for you? Reality is recognizing where things stand. And JP Morgan published a chart around the end of 24 and it was a scatter diagram showing over the years if you bought the relationship between the S&P 500 at purchase and the return of the annualized return over the next 10 years. And it looked like this. On this axis, we had return, and on this axis, we had P-E ratio. And it was a negative correlation, which means the higher the P-E ratio you pay, the lower the return you should expect. Makes perfect sense. And it showed there was a number here, 23, on the P-E ratio axis, which is what the P-E ratio on the S&P was at the time. And it showed that historically, if you bought the S&P when the P-E ratio was 23, In every case, there were no exceptions. In every case, your annualized return over the next 10 years was between two and minus two. That's all you have to know. Speaker 2: And what are we today? What is it today? Speaker 1: 24, 24, 25. Because why? Because prices have risen. Now, maybe the outlook has risen. So maybe it's still 23. But I think, let's say, I think 24. So you can say the S&P has returned 10% a year on average for 100 years. I'm happy with 10. I'm in. Or you can say, It doesn't always return 10. By the way, one of the most interesting things about the S&P, if you do the research, and I did it for a memo, on average, it has returned 10% a year for 100 years. But do you know that the annual return is almost never between 8 and 12? Think about that. Speaker 3: Yeah, like it kills it or it dies. Speaker 1: Think about what that means. The norm is not the average. Speaker 3: I'm not an investor. I don't know anything about public markets. When I hear you say that, I think I don't have an alternative. Speaker 1: Well, you do have an alternative. You could figure out an algorithm to rebalance your position based on relative price and you could put it on autopilot. I don't recommend, you know, making judgments about the future and the appropriateness of today's price for the future you perceive, but you can do that. And there are ways to do these things, even if you just use common sense. Speaker 2: What would you be rebalancing into? So let's say S&P PE is high. What would be the second best for the sort of non-full-time active investor? Speaker 1: Okay, so I've tried to suppress my tendency to talk my book until now. But I think an alternative is bonds. I joined Citibank in the investment research department in 1969 as an equity analyst. And the bank did so horribly that in 78, I was banished to the bond department and the bond department was the equivalent of Siberia. The good news is that at that time, American corporations pretty much gave lifetime employment. So I didn't get sacked. But I'm in the bond department and I get a phone call from the head of the bond department saying that there's some guy in California named something like Milken and he invests in something called high yield bonds. Can you figure out what that means? And I said, yes. And I became a high-yield bond investor. And you know what? When you buy a bond, there's a contract. That says the borrower will pay you interest every six months and give you your money back at the end and you can figure out the return that is implied by that contract. And if the borrower doesn't keep that contract, overgeneralizing, oversimplifying, the creditors get the company through the bankruptcy process. So the borrower has a lot of incentive to pay you and they almost always pay. I've been involved in high-yield bonds for 47 years, and I can tell you they've almost all paid. So today, you can buy high-yield bonds, whether it be the US or Europe or variations on that theme, what we call low-grade credit, and you can buy it to get yields of 7 to 8. Now, seven to eight is pretty close to 10. So that's a good thing. The bad thing is you have to pay tax every year on the income. That's a bad thing. But for those of us who are cautious like you and me, we might say, I'll take. You know, eight, which in the long run will give me four after tax, as opposed to 10, which after capital gains taxation will give me seven. Or maybe I'll mix them. Maybe I'll own a little less S&P and a little more debt because I'm... Speaker 3: That's what I do now. Speaker 1: Yeah, because I'm worried. It's not all or nothing. And that's why when I'm on TV shows and they say, well, is this a sell or buy? Is this risk on or risk off? I resist that formulation because it's never one or the other. It's a mix. And the only question that's relevant is what mix? I think the way when you manage your portfolio, the operative continuum to think about is the continuum that runs from aggressive to defensive. And I think about a speedometer in the car. So zero is no risk, 100 is max risk, 100% aggressive. You should have a sense for your appropriate normal posture. And it sounds to me like, Sam, you're a little conservative guy. You've made so much money, you can't believe it, but you don't want to give it back. So I would say that you're a 65. And especially given your youth, you may be a 55 for your cohort. I think every listener, every investor should figure out the right place for them and try to stay there most of the time. Speaker 3: We need to get a couch here. I'll call you Dr. Marks. Speaker 1: I once wrote a memo called On the Couch because I think that once in a while the market needs a trip to the shrink. Speaker 2: Hey, let's take a quick break. You know, Hubspot helped Tumblr solve a big problem. Tumblr needed to move fast. They were trying to produce trending content, but their marketing department was stuck waiting on engineers to code every single email campaign. But now they use Hubspot's customer platform to email real-time trending content to millions of users in just seconds. And the result was huge. Three times more engagement and double the content creation. If you want to move faster like Tumblr, visit Hubspot.com. All right, back to the show. I went back and I read a bunch of your old memos, and the one that stood out to me was the bubble.com one. So you wrote this back in 2000, and I actually have a few of these where I feel like there's been moments in time, maybe 2000, 2008, 2012, 2020, where it seemed like consensus was going one way, maybe it was max greed, and you went the other way, or it was max fear and panic, and then you were actually very aggressive. You did the thing where Buffett says, be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful. It's cool to say, but it's hard to actually do. And I thought it'd be fun if you could kind of walk us through a couple of those moments. And I don't know, like, yeah, not to go too far down memory lane, but just, you know, take us back to, you know, the one in 2000. What'd you see? What'd you do? How did it, you know, how did that play out? What'd you learn from that? Take us through a couple of those, because I think that's your superpower. Speaker 1: First of all, one of my sayings is we never know where we're going, but we sure as hell ought to know where we are. And at Oaktree, we loudly proclaim our inability to make macro forecasts and our non-reliance on macro forecasts. But if we want to do the right thing vis-a-vis the macro, We should be able to figure out what's going on at the present time and what that implies for the future. It may not happen, the thing you think it implies, but it probably has a higher chance of happening than not happening. If you're logical and understand history and patterns. And I wrote a book called Mastering the Market Cycle, which was published in 18. And I always say it's a cheesy title, but it wasn't my idea. The publisher wanted that title because they thought it would sell more books. But I like the subtitle. And the subtitle says Getting the Odds on Your Side. I believe that where we stand in the cycle determines what probably is going to happen and how likely it is. Understanding that can improve your odds. It can't make you a sure winner, but it can improve your odds. That's the best we can do in an uncertain world beset by randomness. I don't know if you know that I started writing the memos in 1990. Bubble.com on the first day of 2000 was the first one that ever garnered a response. I went 10 years. Not only did nobody say, hey, that was good, nobody even said I got it. And so one of the mysteries is why I kept... Speaker 3: Who were you sending them to? Speaker 1: To our clients. Speaker 3: How many? Speaker 2: Crickets. Speaker 1: Well, in 1990, a hundred. And by mail, of course. I wrote Bubble.com January the 2nd of 2000 and it had two virtues. It was right and it was right fast. If you're right slow, it doesn't look like you were right. One of the great sayings in our business is that being too far ahead of your time is indistinguishable from being wrong. So the answer is I was not too far ahead. In the fall of 99, I read a book called Devil Take the Hindmost. It's a history of financial speculation. Speaker 2: Were you looking for books about that because you had a hunch or you just randomly read this book? Speaker 1: No, I don't remember why I read it. The idea comes first. My books, my memos are not research-based. They're based on ideas that resonate with me. And so I'm reading this book. I am interested in financial speculation. I'm interested in cycles. I'm interested in the extremes of financial behavior. So that's probably why I read it. But I'm reading this book and it talks about all these crazy things that people did, especially in something called the South Sea Bubble. Britain had this big national debt and they concluded that they could pay it off by starting a company called the South Sea Company and they granted them a license to trade with the South Sea by which they meant not Samoa but Brazil and they would charge them a license fee and that would pay off the debt and it was one of the What are the great bubbles? I'm reading in the book about what people were doing in 1720. People were quitting their day jobs and hanging out in ale houses to trade the shares of the South Sea Company, etc., etc., etc. And I said, that's what's going on now in the tech bubble. You may recall that people were quitting their jobs, becoming day traders. People with no money could trade stocks as long as they didn't carry any balance overnight. And young people were quitting MBA programs because they had an idea. And if they waited until they graduated, somebody else would take it. So it just resonated. And one of the quotes I use the most now is from Mark Twain, who said, history does not repeat, but it does rhyme. There are certain themes that rhyme from generation to generation and cycle to cycle because they are embedded in human nature. And so they recur. And so, and when you, when you get older in our business, you know, obviously one of the things I hasten to point out is there is no such thing as knowing something about the future. And if you don't know about the future, And you want to figure out the future. There's no such thing as analyzing the future. It doesn't exist. And the only thing you can do to get a handle on the future is look at the past and look for the repetition of patterns, as Twain said, and I try to figure out if they apply today. So this was very easy. So I wrote this memo, bubble.com, and it said what they were doing, people are doing today. And I tried to point out the folly of what I saw going on. Companies with no profits and no revenues were being highly valued. Maybe no product, just an idea. And that is the epitome of a bubble. So I wrote the memo, as I say, January the 2nd. Sometime around mid-year, the tech bubble started to collapse. So as I said in the introduction to one of my books, after 10 years, I became an overnight success. Speaker 2: Did you actually bet against it or did you just preserve capital by not FOMOing into every tech company basically? What was the win of that for you? Speaker 1: First of all, we're not involved, we're basically not involved in the U.S. stock market. And we're not involved at all in technology. So we wouldn't have a chance to apply that. But I think what we did is we recognized, and by the way, things don't happen in isolation uniquely. So when you see something like I describe in the tech bubble, You should realize that maybe there are ramifications in other parts of the world. And we figured out that people were engaging in optimism, not pessimism, greed, not fear, credulousness, not skepticism, risk tolerance, not risk aversion. And when, as Buffett says about prudence, when nobody's afraid, unwise deals can get done easily. Simple as that. And the people who buy that stuff, it usually ends badly. Speaker 3: The way that you explain it, I think everything makes sense and I totally buy into it. But that's actually quite challenging to understand this like macro environment and to say, this is where we are. Speaker 1: Yeah. Well, you have to be clinical. You have to observe and without emotion understand what's going on and what the implications are. And of course, what I call emotion This is Part of What's Called Human Nature. If you succumb to human nature, it tends to get you to do the wrong thing at the wrong time. I came across a great quote within the last year from a guy who's a retired trader. When the time comes to buy, you won't want to. And that encapsulated, encapsulates so much wisdom because what is it that causes the great moments to buy? Speaker 2: It's probably the point of lowest consensus, when most people don't believe would be the time that the price is going to be the lowest, right? It's the time with either the most uncertainty or the most pessimism or the most fear, most conservatism. So you also want to be all those things. Speaker 1: What causes those things? You're talking about the manifestation. What's the cause? Bad news, I don't know, bad events, bad cycles, either exogenous or in the economy, faltering corporate fortunes, declining stock prices, widespread losses, And a proliferation of articles about how terrible the future looks. So the point, that's why you don't want to buy at the low. Who would want to buy under those circumstances? And so you talked before in your introduction about zigging when others zag. The only thing I'm sure of is if you zig when they zig, you're not going to outperform. Speaker 2: All right, this episode is brought to you by Mercury. They are the finance platform of choice for over 200,000 companies. Shouldn't be surprised because I use it myself for not one, not two, but I have eight different Mercury accounts. I have seven for different companies that I'm a part of and then I have my own personal account because now they have personal banking, which is a really cool feature. I highly, highly recommend it. Like I said, I use it myself. The reason why is because the way that Mercury works is beautiful. It's very intuitive and you could tell that it's actually made by a startup founder. It's an entrepreneur. You could tell it's made by somebody who used other banking products in the past. And didn't like all the different rough edges and annoyances and decided to, you know, actually fix it himself. And really, any type of entrepreneur you are, let's say you're an agency, well, one of the things every agency has to do is be able to send invoices, easily create them, send them to customers, and stay current on your balances with all your customers. Well, you can do that inside Mercury. And so, I think that Mercury's great. Highly recommend you check it out. And thank you for sponsoring the show. For more information, check out mercury.com. Mercury is a financial technology company, not a bank. Check show notes for details. Speaker 3: Do you still feel that fear, you know, of you, like, when you know you're supposed to buy, do you still feel fearful? Or do you feel like, nice? Hello, my old friend. I love this emotion. This is what I'm supposed to do. Speaker 1: Right. I mean, it's not easy. But you have to know you have to do it. You have to know what makes buying opportunities. And if you think about it, the fortunes of companies and the outlook for companies doesn't change much. And I'm writing a memo about this that'll come out one of these days. And what changes is how people think about what's going on and think about the future. So what changes is the relationship of price To what I'll call value. Sometimes they hate them, sometimes they love them. When they love them too much, you should expect them to probably go down. That sounds like a bull market or a bubble. And when they hate them too much, you should expect them to go up. That sounds like a bear market or a crash. And so you have to do the opposite. And the same developments in the environment that affect everybody else will affect you. You're subject to them. You feel them. You read about them. You hear about them. Everybody tells you how dire the outlook is. And, you know, it's hard to ignore them. But you have to do the right thing in the face of them. In 1998, we had the Russian ruble devaluation, the debt crisis in Southeast Asia, and the meltdown of long-term capital management. And one of our portfolio managers who was young came to me and he said, I think this is it. I think we're going to melt down. I think it's all over. I'm terribly pessimistic. I said, tell me why. He went through his reasoning. I said, okay, now go back to your desk and do your job. A battlefield hero, and I don't want to compare what we do to being a battlefield hero, but a battlefield hero is not somebody who's unafraid. It's somebody who does it anyway, and that's the way you have to be. Speaker 3: Let me ask you about that. It's funny. Interestingly enough, even though I'm the conservative one, I'm actually way more emotional. Shaan is a pretty stable guy emotionally. I go up and down, which I think is actually closer to the average for average folks. You said a bunch of stuff about emotion in the past. I think you said, to be a good investor, you better be able to invest without emotion or at least act as if you don't have a lot of emotion. Has there ever been anything like a mindset shift or a practice or something that you've had to use in order to learn to be less emotional when investing? Speaker 1: No, these things are not intentional on my part. Speaker 3: You think you were born like that? Speaker 1: I was born unemotional. By the way, and I want to point out here, because my wife's downstairs having lunch, that I wrote in my book that it's really important to be unemotional in investing. Not so good to be unemotional in life. in arenas like marriage. So there it's not an advantage. But no, for me it came naturally. I don't have to, I don't have to say, oh, there I go again. I'm getting emotional. I have to restrain that, blah, blah, blah. And my partner, Bruce Karsh, who's been my partner successfully for 37 years, he's pretty much the same. So that makes it easy. I don't have to restrain him. Speaker 2: We've gassed you up about some of your best moves. What's the worst mistake you made due to an emotional mistake where you didn't control your temperament properly and you made a mistake? Speaker 1: My worst mistake is not, and I know you're talking about a point in time. My worst mistake is that I have always been too conservative. My parents were traumatized by the depression. I always say the question is not whether your parents were alive during the depression, but whether they were adults. My parents were adults. They were born in the 19 aughts. And so in the depression, they were in their 30s. And they were, you know, and the depression was really traumatic. Nobody knows what it was like. And it ground on for over 10 years. And so when you grow up with parents of the depression, they say things like, don't put all your eggs in one basket, save for a rainy day, you know, that kind of stuff. And I ended up too conservative. And if it wasn't conservative, I'd be richer today. I'm not sure I'd be happier. What's an example? Speaker 2: What do you mean you were too conservative? What makes you say that? What would you have done differently had that wiring not been done in you? Speaker 1: Well, I mean, I don't know. I might've gone into a more aggressive asset class than credit, like equities. I might've become a venture capitalist or, you know, like my son, Andrew, or a private or a leveraged buyout investor. But, you know, the reason I was talking about the appropriateness of credit for Sam is because while the returns are a little lower, there's much less uncertainty and downside. So I would say that if I've been in this business 56 years, if I would have spent those 56 years in less conservative asset classes, I would have made more money. Having said that, it happens that I went into things like high-yield bonds in 78 and distressed debt in 88. And if I had not been a conservative person, I probably wouldn't have had any clients. Because they would have been scared off by the risk. So it served me well in pioneering in those businesses. But that was my, I mean, we never had a mistake like we were too defensive in a crisis or too aggressive in a bubble. I just was too conservative all my life. Speaker 3: And that kind of makes sense because I don't think you started Oaktree until your late 40s, right? Speaker 1: Just short of my 49th birthday. Speaker 3: Yeah. And so I guess leading up to it, were you already financially successful? Were you a success leading up to that? Speaker 1: Yeah. Speaker 3: And so was it a big risk to start Oaktree? Speaker 1: I was secure. I wasn't rich by today's standards and I may not have been rich by the standards at the time, but I had good money and I lived well. So I started running money in 78. I joined my Oaktree founder partners in 85, 86, 87, 88. We did a great job through a variety of environments and we weren't worried about the ability to do a good job and we had enough money to eat. So it wasn't, I mean, I had to overcome. My innate caution, my wife had to give me a kick in the ass, which she happily did. I may not have done it without her, probably wouldn't have. Speaker 2: You said you're too conservative, but there's been times when you've been very aggressive. Oh, yeah. You know, I think the sort of 07-08 financial crisis, I read something that As the crisis happens, you go raise $10 billion because you see the opportunity and you started deploying something like $600 million a week, which is It just sounds badass, to be honest. Maybe that's not as crazy in the financial world, but it sounds crazy to me. Speaker 1: Well, your fact set is inaccurate in one regard. We did not raise $10 billion after the crisis hit, because remember what I said about the guy who said, when time comes to invest, you won't want to? You can't raise money in a crisis. If you went to people and said, the world's melting down. We're going to buy all this stuff. It's going to be a bonanza. We're going to get rich. Nobody will give you money. Why? Because the same factors that influence the world influence the people you talk to and everybody will stick their hands in their pockets and say maybe later after the dust settles. And a lot of people say, you know, we're not going to try to catch a falling knife. And I believe that you make the big money catching falling knives carefully. So what happened is we, like I described about the tech bubble in 2000, we detected in 05-06 that the world was behaving in a carefree manner. And I would wear out the carpet between my office and Bruce's with the Wall Street Journal and I'd say, look at this piece of junk that got issued yesterday. There's something wrong. If a deal like this can get done, The world is exercising inadequate prudence. Speaker 2: Specifically on mortgages? Speaker 1: No, I didn't know about mortgages. I never heard of mortgages. I don't think I ever heard the word subprime. I don't think I ever knew what a mortgage-backed security was. It just seemed that the world was operating in a pro-risk fashion and when people are pro-risk, they permit bad deals and they pay prices higher than they should. So what happened was on the first day of 07, we went out to our clients and we said, we think there's an opportunity. I don't think we raised funds in 05 or 06 for his distressed debt area, but on the first day of 07, we went out and we said, we think there's a great opportunity coming and we'd like to have 3 billion. At that time, the biggest distressed debt fund in history was our 01 fund, which preceded the Enron meltdown and so forth, and it was 2.5 billion. Two and a half? Yeah, around there. So we went out to the clients, we said, we'd like to have three. That would be the biggest distressed fund in history. So within a month, we had eight. And we said, you know, we can't do anything with eight billion. It exceeds our ability to invest it wisely. So we're going to take three and a half billion, and we're going to close the fund. But we would like to have the remainder of your interest in a standby fund that will implement if the stuff hits the fan. So the first fund was seven and it was three and a half billion. And the next fund was 7B. And by the time we finished raising money for it a year later, it was 11 billion. And Fund 7 got fully invested, so we started investing, gradually investing 7B in June of 2008. It's sitting there on the shelf. And by September 18th, 15th, it was, no, 18th, it was, 12% invested, so just over a billion. And Lehman Brothers declares bankruptcy. And so the question which you implied was, do you invest it or not? You're sitting there with all that money, but it looks like the world's gonna melt down. Do you invest it? Very simple. And as you say, I think this was one of our best moments because I reached a very simple conclusion. If we invest it and the world melts down, it doesn't matter what we did. But if I don't invest it and the world doesn't melt down, then we didn't do our job. QED, you have to move forward. I also wrote that it's hard to predict the end of the world. It's hard to assign a high probability to it. It's hard to know what to do if the world is going to melt down. If you do those things and the world doesn't melt down, it's probably a disaster and most of the time the world doesn't melt down. That was the sum of our analysis because there was nothing to analyze. There had never been a global financial crisis before. The meltdown of the financial sector had not been anticipated since the Great Depression and there were no Past patterns to extrapolate. So you have to resort to logic. That was the logic. So as you say, we invested $450 million a week for the next 15 weeks in that fund, which was $7 billion. And Oaktree overall invested an average of $650 million a week for the next 15 weeks. Speaker 2: How did that turn out? So that's what you put in. What was the sort of result of that investing during that time? Speaker 1: Well, it was great. Except for, I mean, we got good buys and we made good money, but the Fed mobilized very astutely, cutting interest rates to zero for the first time in history at the beginning of 2009 and introducing QE. And those two things saved the economy. So we didn't get the meltdown that everybody was afraid of. And there were relatively few bankruptcies, especially outside the financial sector that resulted from the global financial crisis. So we've had some barn burner funds in crises. This was very good, but not a barn burner. Speaker 3: You've done something that I love which is you've quoted a ton of different people. You've quoted Mark Twain a bunch of times. You have all these quotes which clearly shows that you retain information that you read and I imagine you read a lot. Can I ask you about your reading habits? How do you pick what books you read? Speaker 1: Any books about how to be an investor, like, you know, multiply this by that and add this and subtract that. The books I've found most interesting have always been the ones about investor behavior. And I mentioned Devil Take the Hindmost, 99. One of the greatest books I ever read was, before that, John Kenneth Galbraith's book called The Short History of Financial Euphoria. That was really pivotal for me. And since I'm a slow reader, I liked the fact that it was only about 100 pages. And then, you know, back in, back in 74, I think, Charlie Ellis wrote an article, Winning the Loser's Game. Where he said that because you can't predict the future, active investing doesn't work. He was a believer in the efficient market. So rather than try to hit winners, like the tennis player, you should try to avoid hitting losers and keep the ball in play. And that has always defined my investing style. In fact, I wrote a memo in the summer of 24 and 23 called Fewer Winners, Fewer Losers or More Winners. And that's the basic choice of investing style. Speaker 2: There's a great, I think, sort of math paradox that you pointed out, which is that a fund, I don't know if it was your fund, but any fund, it could be never in the top 10%, but sort of never in the bottom 50%. And there's a strategy of just consistently being above average will place you in the top 5%, right? It'll place you in the top percent. Can you unpack that idea a little bit? I just sort of butchered it. Speaker 1: In 1990, I wrote a memo called The Route to Performance and I had dinner in Minneapolis with my client, Dave Van Benskoten, who ran the General Mills Pension Fund. And Dave explained to me that he had run the fund for 14 years. And in 14 years, the equities, General Mills equity portfolio was never above the 27th percentile or below the 47th percentile. So 14 years in a row, solidly in the second quartile. Now, if you said to the normal person, not in the investment business, so this thing fluctuated between the 27th and the 47th, where do you think it was for the whole period? They would say, well, let me think, probably around 37. The answer is fourth. So if you can do well for 14 years in a row and avoid the tendency to shoot yourself in the foot, In a bad year, you can pop up to the top. At the same time, another investment management firm had a terrible year because they were deep value investors and they were heavy in the banks and the banks suffered terribly, so they were at the bottom. So the president comes out and of course, people in the investment business are great rationalizers and communicators. And he says, the answer is simple. If you want to be in the top 5% of money managers, you have to be willing to be in the bottom. Well, that makes great sense, except that my clients don't care if I'm ever in the top five and they absolutely don't want to see me in the bottom five. So my reaction is the first guy's approach is the right one for me. So that's why at Oaktree, we go for fewer losers, not more winners. Speaker 2: Yeah, I love that because it's one of the unsexy ideas, like I think any idea you can't, you know, make a movie about or won't make you sound really cool are generally undervalued ideas when they actually logically math out the way that one does. And so I sort of that was one that stuck out to me. Nobody's going to nobody's going to give you a motivational video about being consistently above average and just never shooting yourself in the foot. Speaker 1: Right. Speaker 2: It's all about heroic greatness and huge risks you can take and, you know, being willing to do it. And so, you know, that's all you hear. Speaker 1: But but, you know, the Financial Times of London every Saturday, they they have an article called Lunch with the FT. And they take somebody to lunch and they write an article about the person, the restaurant and the food. And they did that with me in late 22. And I took the reporter to my favorite Italian restaurant near the office in New York, where I go 100 percent of the time if I have a lunch. And I said to her, eating in this restaurant is like investing at Oak Tree. Always good, sometimes great, never terrible. Now, to me, that sounds like a modest boast, but if you can do that for 40 or 50 years, I think it'll compound to great results if you never shoot yourself in the foot. I don't know if the SEC is listening, but I think it's descriptive of what we've accomplished. Speaker 3: There's like this class of investor that's like kind of become like folk hero, you know, like Warren Buffett's an obvious one, where like a folk hero, sort of their high integrity, they make greatness seem achievable and relatable, which is like a whole skill in itself. And you've become one of these like folk heroes, you know, and a lot of them they have in common where they like write a lot, they write well, they've got wonderful sayings, they make challenging things easy to understand. Did you purposely try to become like this public figure? Speaker 1: Well, first of all, you can't ask somebody who did whether they did because they'll say no. Nobody will admit that. Nobody will say my public persona is a facade. Speaker 2: Me and Sam were joking before this. We were saying it's cool how it's interesting how I think when you started as an investor, there was like no celebrity investors. There's no like famous person who was doing what you were doing. And then now you have, whether it's Buffett or Munger, there's like the investment guys are now like the philosophers. The tech CEO nerds are now like the power players of the world. Podcaster comedians are now like It's like this very strange shift on all fronts where, you know, influence has sort of shifted, but I find the like investment crossover life philosopher to be just like one of the really wholesome ones that I personally really like, you know? Speaker 1: Well, you know, I hesitate to put myself in the same category, but I think Warren As always, try to just educate people and share his knowledge. And people say, well, why do you give away your secrets? Aren't you afraid that other people will emulate you and catch up with you? But I don't think so because, you know, we can tell them all day long what you should do, but it's hard to do. Like we said at the beginning of the podcast, a friend of mine, Richard Oldfield in London, wrote a book once entitled Simple But Not Easy. I think the things we have to do are simple. They're just not easy to do. I think Buffett makes investing seem simple because he boils it down to the essential ingredients. By the way, you said there were no famous investors, but I think Buffett started around 53, if I'm not mistaken. He just wasn't famous. Speaker 2: Yeah. Speaker 1: And there were a few people who were famous in the investment business, but I don't think anybody was famous in the wider world. Speaker 3: Oh, it's interesting for like the normal guys like me and Shaan is like, we learn from you about how to live life. And that's kind of cool. And it's just like investing is just your way of like testing if your way of living is true. Speaker 1: Right. Well, investing is a lot like life. And by the way, I'm working on a book along those lines, Sam. Speaker 3: What's it called? Speaker 1: I don't know yet. If you wait a few years, I think it'll be out. Speaker 2: Well, we appreciate you coming. I do want to leave you with one, it's a question for you. So we've asked you a bunch of questions, but I actually think it'd be interesting. What question do you think people who listen to this should ask themselves? What's a useful question that you think people could ask themselves as a final note here? Speaker 1: Well, I would think in terms of the mistakes that investors made and I would ask yourself whether you make them. So what are the big mistakes investors make? I can think of three. Number one, do you think you understand what the future holds and do you reasonably think that's accurate? Number two, I think the biggest single mistake that investors make is that they think the world will remain the way it is. That the things that are working today will continue to work. The things that aren't working will continue not to work. That the trends or the emotion will continue and that there won't be any new trends. So are you part of that? And then number three is, do your emotions rise and fall and get you to do what they want as opposed to what you should do? I think you just have to have a checklist. In my first book, The Most Important Thing, I had a thing in there called The Poor Man's Guide to Market Assessment. It says on the left a bunch of things and on the right there's a bunch of things. It was half tongue-in-cheek or maybe more than half. But I mean, it says, you know, is the market rising or falling? Are the TV shows about investing popular or unpopular? If an investor goes to a cocktail party, is he mobbed or shunned? Do deals get done easily or hard? Are deals oversubscribed or left begging? You know, that kind of thing. And you can tell, you can figure out from that checklist Whether the market is overheated and too popular. Or frigid and too shunned. And this can tell you a lot of what to do if you're methodical and clinical. Speaker 3: Well, Shaan and I have read your stuff forever. We've listened to so many of your podcasts. It's been an honor. We really appreciate you doing this. I think the best part of our job is we have an excuse to hang out with amazing people who are way out of our leagues. And this is one of those occasions. So thank you so much. Speaker 1: Well, thank you, Sam. Thank you, Shaan. I've enjoyed your questions and let's do it again sometime. Unknown Speaker: All right, you're the best we appreciate you bye-bye I feel like I can rule the world I know I could be what I want to. Speaker 3: My friends, if you like MFM, then you're going to like the following podcast. It's called Billion Dollar Moves. And of course, it's brought to you by the HubSpot Podcast Network, the number one audio destination for business professionals. Billion Dollar Moves. It's hosted by Sarah Chen Spelling. Sarah is a venture capitalist and strategist. And with Billion Dollar Moves, she wants to look at unicorn founders and funders, and she looks for what she calls the unexpected leader. Many of them were underestimated long before they became huge and successful and iconic. She does it with unfiltered conversations about success, failure, fear, courage, and all that great stuff. So again, if you like My First Million, check out Billion Dollar Moves. It's brought to you by the HubSpot Podcast Network. Again, Billion Dollar Moves. All right, back to the episode.

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