Showing posts with label conventionalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conventionalism. Show all posts

Saturday, July 21, 2012

15-Year Old Wonderkid Dramatically Improves Pancreatic Cancer Tests

Talk about the magnificence of human capital.

From Make: (hat tip Professor Mark Perry) [bold mine]

Maryland young maker Jack Andraka isn’t old enough to drive yet, but he’s just pioneered a new, improved test for diagnosing pancreatic cancer that is 90% accurate, 400 times more sensitive, and 26,000 times less expensive than existing methods. Andraka had gotten interested in pancreatic cancer, and knew that early detection is a challenge. He gleaned information on the topic from his “good friend Google,” and began his research. Yes, he even got in trouble in his science class for reading articles on carbon nanotubes instead of doing his classwork. When Andraka had solidified ideas for his novel paper sensor, he wrote out his procedure, timeline, and budget, and emailed 200 professors at research institutes. He got 199 rejections and one acceptance from Johns Hopkins: “If you send out enough emails, someone’s going to say yes.” Andraka was recently awarded the grand prize at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his groundbreaking discoveries.

Additional thoughts:

Access to technology has vastly been improving people’s capability to acquire knowledge, learn and pursue innovation: All it takes are the WILLPOWER or the PASSION to attain a goal, and importantly, the courage or having a constructive perspective of failure.

Youthful Andraka seems like another Steve Jobs in the making: focusing on matters of personal (or career) interests or “what you love” than of the traditionalism and conventionalism.

Talk about extreme determination and persistence: 199 REJECTIONS!!!

Mr. Andraka’s experience demonstrates how conventionalism abhors the unorthodox—where what works has not been reckoned as the priority, but of the conventional mindset, methodology and standards.

Nevertheless it took only ONE acceptance to prove that his theory has been viable and aptly got recognized for it.

What an accomplishment for a 15 year old! Jack’s parents must be so proud of him.

May Jack Andraka’s tribe increase.

Saturday, September 03, 2011

Quote of the Day: Nassim Taleb on Bankers Ethics

Celebrated author of the Black Swan theory fame Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Mark Spitznagel questions the propriety of nearly $5 trillion paid to bankers, who continues to operate on the model of privatizing profits and socializing losses.

They write, (bold emphasis mine)

One may wonder: If investment managers and their clients don’t receive high returns on bank stocks, as they would if they were profiting from bankers’ externalization of risk onto taxpayers, why do they hold them at all? The answer is the so-called “beta”: banks represent a large share of the S&P 500, and managers need to be invested in them.

We don’t believe that regulation is a panacea for this state of affairs. The largest, most sophisticated banks have become expert at remaining one step ahead of regulators – constantly creating complex financial products and derivatives that skirt the letter of the rules. In these circumstances, more complicated regulations merely mean more billable hours for lawyers, more income for regulators switching sides, and more profits for derivatives traders.

Investment managers have a moral and professional responsibility to play their role in bringing some discipline into the banking system.

So ad hoc conventionalism or peer pressures have been one of the key influences for the financial industry to shore up bank equities, which apparently has resulted to the unethical banking practices brought about by the sense of entitlement and moral hazard from continued government support.

Obviously this has been part of the comprehensive framework to buttress the decadent welfare state-central banking-banking system architecture.

Read the rest of their excellent piece here

Sunday, September 05, 2010

Should Your Housemaid Invest In The Stock Market?

``Demanding immediate success invariable leads to playing the fads or fashions currently performing well rather than investing on a solid basis. A course of investment, once charted, should be given time to work. Patience is a crucial but rare investment commodity. The problem is not as simple as it may appear; studies have shown that businessmen and other investors abhor uncertainty. To most people in the market place, quick input-output matching is an expected condition of successful investing.” David Dreman, Contrarian Investment Strategies: The Next Generation

Should your housemaid invest in the stock market?

All Actions Are A Function Of Tradeoffs

Recently, I chance upon a message advocating housemaids to invest their money in the stock market. The supposed goal is to help the underprivileged financially by capitalizing on the rising markets.

While I would agree with the underlying motive, the basic problem with this idea is that purported intentions hardly square with reality.

In the real world, all actions have consequences. And actions are driven by the preferences (value scale) and incentives of individuals to seek relief from discomfort.

In short, people’s actions represent purposeful behaviour.

As the great Ludwig von Mises explains[1], (all bold highlights mine)

``Acting man is eager to substitute a more satisfactory state of affairs for a less satisfactory. His mind imagines conditions which suit him better, and his action aims at bringing about this desired state. The incentive that impels a man to act is always some uneasiness. A man perfectly content with the state of his affairs would have no incentive to change things. He would have neither wishes nor desires; he would be perfectly happy. He would not act; he would simply live free from care.”

``But to make a man act, uneasiness and the image of a more satisfactory state alone are not sufficient. A third condition is required: the expectation that purposeful behavior has the power to remove or at least to alleviate the felt uneasiness. In the absence of this condition no action is feasible. Man must yield to the inevitable. He must submit to destiny.”

This means that the consequences of everyone’s action for betterment can have short term or long term effects. Hence, in a world of scarcity, everyone’s action is a consequence of a tradeoff in personal values and preferences.

And one cannot isolate actions taken by individuals from these underlying influences, even from the perspective of impulses.

Again from von Mises[2],

``He who acts under an emotional impulse also acts. What distinguishes an emotional action from other actions is the valuation of input and output. Emotions disarrange valuations. Inflamed with passion, man sees the goal as more desirable and the price he has to pay for it as less burdensome than he would in cool deliberation. Men have never doubted that even in the state of emotion means and ends are pondered and that it is possible to influence the outcome of this deliberation by rendering more costly the yielding to the passionate impulse.”

Take for instance in the recent infamous hostage taking[3] (at the Luneta Grandstand in the Philippines), which has now become a political controversy.

Some have suggested that the actions of the criminal signified that of a fit of rage. True, but again it was choice made from a tradeoff of what the culprit sees as a better way to resolve a personal unease or predicament.

In other words, a choice had been made based on short term time horizon (immediate gratification) which alternatively meant the failure of the felon’s emotional intelligence which paved way for a severe miscalculation that proved to be fatal for him, the victims and politically strained the relations diplomatic between the nationalities involved in the unfortunate incident.

Also there is a suggestion that the perceived depravity of the due process which prompted for the criminal’s misdeeds should be detached. False. Again people are driven by purposeful behaviour where actions and motives are inseparable, interrelated or intertwined, again from the Professor Mises[4], “It is impossible for the human mind to conceive a mode of action whose categories would differ from the categories which determine our own actions”

The point of the above is to show you that people’s choices are ALWAYS based on tradeoffs, all of which comes with intertemporal (occurring across time) consequences, positive or negative, where good intentions can lead to the opposite of the desired goals.

Housemaids And The Bubble Cycle

And how does this apply to the wisdom of housemaids investing in the markets?

The fundamental reason for such advocacy is predicated on the broadening expectation of the linearity of the ongoing trend (see figure 1).

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Figure 1: Bloomberg: The ASEAN Bull Market

As earlier explained[5], the ASEAN bullmarket appears to be segueing into what billionaire George Soros calls as the “growing conviction” phase of the boom cycle.

This simply means that as the uptrend becomes more entrenched, people will intuitively flock to where the returns are. In behavioural finance this is called the herding effect or the Herd Behavior.

Indonesia (JCI, green) is the first among the contemporaries to surpass the 2007 highs. All the rest, particularly Philippines, (PCOMP yellow), Malaysia (KLSI, orange) and Thailand (SET, red) appear to be at the threshold of testing their 2007 highs.

The point of my showing the synchronous action of ASEAN markets is to demonstrate that this hasn’t been mainly because of national political-economic issues, but because of other variables UNSEEN by the public or by even most of the experts. Yet among the popular experts, who at the start of the year, predicted that the Phisix will likely break 3,800?

Here is what I wrote in May 2009[6],

``Nonetheless, if the Phisix does end the year above 2,500, we may expect a full recovery (Phisix 3,800) by the end of 2010 or even an attempt at the 5,000.”

5,000 may seem too optimistic but one can’t discount the acceleration of the speed and depth of the shaping bullmarket. Sri Lanka and Bangladesh for instance on a year to date basis is up astoundingly by 73% and 49% respectively, compared to the Phisix at 22%[7] which makes ASEAN bourses look dismal. At any rate, my predictions are mostly becoming a reality.

And where money is seen as being picked up on the streets, even housemaids will, by their volition, perhaps prodded or influenced by their peers or their household employers, will gravitate to “easy money”.

Remember the stock market is a social phenomenon driven by expectations, whether these expectations are valid or not[8].

And the rising tide compels people to make various attributions to market actions, such as economic growth or earnings or mergers and acquisitions, no matter how loosely correlated they are or how little relevance they are with the genuine market drivers. Most of this account for as popular dogmatic fables or widely held superstitions as evidences does not support the causality nexus from such premises.

What has been driving today’s stock markets has been the tsunami of liquidity, or what I have long called as the Machlup-Livermore[9] paradigm, from the coordinated monetary policies by global central banks in an attempt to forestall the “deflation” bogeyman.

And these policies have had relative effects on the marketplace, where areas largely unblemished from the recent bubble implosion appear to have been “positively” influenced. This seems quite evident in the markets of the periphery more than that of the developed economies, from which most of these policies have been directed.

I say positive, in the context, where rising markets are being misconstrued as signs of rising prosperity, which is illusory, when in fact what such dynamic account for is the tacit depreciation of the currency, but presently seen in the dynamic of “asset price inflation”. As we have long said, these are symptoms of the seductive sweet-spot phase of inflation. Heck, why has gold been rising against ALL currencies[10], if this hasn’t been so?

Eventually this illusion morphs into nasty bubbles (see figure2), or at worst, inflation spiralling out of control.

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Figure 2: World Bank: Paper Money and Banking Crisis

And it is NO coincidence that since the world went off the quasi gold standard of the Bretton Woods system in 1971 the account of banking crisis globally have exploded.

Why?

Because inflation, as a short term fix is like narcotics, is addicting.

Again Professor Mises[11],

``The popularity of inflation and credit expansion, the ultimate source of the repeated attempts to render people prosperous by credit expansion, and thus the cause of the cyclical fluctuations of business, manifests itself clearly in the customary terminology. The boom is called good business, prosperity, and upswing. Its unavoidable aftermath, the readjustment of conditions to the real data of the market, is called crisis, slump, bad business, depression. People rebel against the insight that the disturbing element is to be seen in the malinvestment and the overconsumption of the boom period and that such an artificially induced boom is doomed. They are looking for the philosophers' stone to make it last.

In short, the paper money-fractional reserve central banking system induces boom bust cycles only shifts around the world. And ASEAN economies, as well as other peripheral emerging economies, seem like candidates to a formative bubble.

And this is why we also have long been saying of a Phisix 10,000[12] or the potential of the Philippine Phisix to reach bubble proportions sometime in the future.

If experts hardly grasp the dynamic of bubble cycles, how the heck do you expect housemaids to understand?

The Housemaid Indicator

Housemaids investing in the stock markets have NOT been unusual. During the acme of the bubble cycle in China in 2008, the onrush of retail punters into stocks, which included housemaids, signified the peak of frenzied activities.

As Shujie Yao Dan Luo of The University of Nottingham wrote in their recent study[13], (emphasis added)

``Most of these investors, which included farmers, cleaners, taxi drivers and house maids, knew little about stock markets and how share prices were determined. Many of these people started investing in the stock markets when prices had already risen rapidly to peak levels, just before the market bubble burst. The participation of these ‘envious’ investors artificially prolonged the bullish market and created a much larger market bubble than would have occurred had they not become involved.”

In short, retail investors GOT SINGED and were left HOLDING THE EMPTY BAG. They accounted for as the FOOL in the Greater Fool Theory.

Former Morgan Stanley analyst Andy Xie describes the “Maid Indicator” as great way of looking at market tops, he says[14],

``Now housemaids are in the market. Who else? Never underestimate 1.3 billion people. In China, they say you should take the shoeshine boy’s advice. Many would listen to him. Welcome to China, the land of getting rich quick.”

In other words, retail money represents unintelligent money. Retail money is mostly drawn into the prospects of free lunches and who turn stock markets into casino-like gambling orgies. They signify as the culmination of irrational behaviour.

A most recent example has been in the US markets, where there has been a pronounced shift of retail investors OUT of stocks and INTO bonds.

And guess what? It would appear that the counterpart of the Maid Indicator or the RETAIL money indicator is accurate (figure 3).

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Figure 3: Retail Investors Hardly Gets Investing Right

As the New York Times highlighted on this monumental shift, markets immediately sprung to the opposite direction against the bets of retail money.

As I recently wrote[15], ``I’d suggest that, like always, they are wrong and betting against them (in stocks) would likely be a profitable exercise.”

By the way things are developing, I could be validated anew.

And like my son’s finance professor who initially required that he and his classmates to invest in the stock markets for the semester (four months), to which I argued against, and instead told my son that his professor speak to me, it must be understood that profiting from stock markets is NOT a function of three or four months exposure unless one is positioned as a PUNTER than an investor.

Stock Market investing, like all other successful endeavours requires diligence, perseverance, perceptiveness and patience. And importantly, unlike other professions, it also requires the ability to think independently and to resist social or peer pressures, which alternatively means going against the crowd or popular wisdom even to the risk of ostracism.

For instance the world’s most successful stock market investor Mr. Warren Buffett, at the height of the dot.com boom was labelled a “dinosaur” for avoiding investments in technology companies. In hindsight, he was vindicated. His advice[16], “If you’re applauded, worry. Great moves are usually greeted by yawns.”

The same holds true with the fallacious notion of learning from simulated stock market games. When one deals with “monopoly” play money, the tendency is to GET aggressive because there is no real cost. To lose is simply a game. Yet repeated exposure to simulated games could amplify risk tolerance and aggressiveness at the expense of profit opportunities.

In other words, simulated trading games impart the wrong traits or attitudes in dealing with the financial markets. Since the market is a function of social actions, the understanding of people’s behaviour and the direction of such actions is a MUST.

Yet one must be reminded that since everyone has different value scales and preferences, these can’t be quantified or seen in aggregates, which has been the major flaw of mainstream economics.

Investing Is NO Free Lunch

Let me be clear with my position, I am not opposed to ANYONE, including maids, from engaging the markets. What I am vehemently opposed with is the idea of free lunches as path to prosperity.

Anyone who engages in the markets must be capable to deal with the intertemporal tradeoffs between risks and rewards.

Because every action has a consequence, the inability to reckon with such tradeoffs could translate into future losses far greater than any interim gains.

Another thing which I am rabidly opposed with is the pretentious morality of uplifting the underprivileged by advocating unnecessary exposure on the stock markets when the participants are under qualified to comprehend or imbue on the attendant risks involved.

To expose people to future losses which could be far greater than the current gains defeats the goal of social advancement.

Just ask the horde of speculators of the US housing bubble who had been apparent “victims” of Federal Reserve and US government policies. They who profited at first have now been suffering from the losses out of excessive speculations. These gullible participants were lured and abetted by the immoral policies of turning stones into bread.

Yet failed policies do NOT exonerate the individual’s recklessness because many have seen the potential impact of bubble policies prior to the bust per se. Warnings were unheeded because of the enticements of social pressure and the seeming perpetuation of rising prices.

And such consequentialist notion where “the ends justify the means” or the consequences of actions serving as moral propriety also fails to account for the tradeoff between present and future ramifications from such actions. Teaching housemaids to engage in risky ventures without the necessary understanding of risks is tantamount to gambling.

Another way to say it is that the reorientation of people’s behaviour towards reckless undertakings which is likely to result to adverse consequences is not morally justifiable nor is gambling, in anyway, going to create financial upliftment.

If the retail under qualified entities (housemaids, drivers or low skilled workers) insists on investing in the financial markets, then the right approach would be to let experts handle their money via mutual funds or UITF (Unit Investment Trust Funds) or through pooled discretionary accounts with able and qualified fund managers.

Yet, even if the experts do manage their accounts, the communication of the tradeoffs between risks and rewards should be a prerequisite or a sine qua non for the simple reason of harmonizing the expectations of the client and managers.

Unmatched expectations are often the root of most conflicts. In the financial markets, expectations in time preferences could be a principal source friction for a principal-agent relationship.

Thus, we go back to the simple operating precept: investing is NO Free lunch, period. That has to be understood by both retail investors (housemaids) and fund managers. Anybody who says otherwise is either being untruthful or deceiving oneself or the other party.

Beware of false prophets.


[1] Mises, Ludwig von The Prerequisites of Human Action, Human Action Chapter 1 Section 2

[2] Ibid

[3] See The Bloodbath At Rizal Park Hostage Drama Demonstrates The Pathology of Government, August 24, 2010

[4] Mises, Ludwig von The Alter Ego Human Action Chapter 1 Section 6

[5] See How To Go About The Different Phases of The Bullmarket Cycle, August 23, 2010

[6] See Kentucky Derby And The Global Stock Market, May 10 2009

[7] See Global Stock Markets Update: Peripheral Markets Take Center Stage, September 4, 2009

[8] See A Primer On Stock Markets-Why It Isn’t Generally A Gambling Casino, January 9, 2009

[9] See Are Stock Market Prices Driven By Earnings or Inflation?, January 25, 2009

[10] Gold.org, Daily gold price in a range of currencies since January 2000

[11] Mises Ludwig von, The Market Economy as Affected by the Recurrence of the Trade Cycle, Chapter 20 Section 9

[12] See Phisix 10,000:Clues From Philippine Bond Offering, July 15, 2009.

This has been a long held prediction of mine even prior to the last bubble cycle. The 2007-2008 bearmarket I had interpreted as a countercyclical trend in a secular uptrend. The current underlying secular trend reverses once the bubble dynamic, cultivated domestically, implodes. This has NOT been the case in the 2007-2008, which was largely a function of global contagion. This also why fundamentals (economic performances, earnings, etc..) and market actions went on the opposite ways serves as proof of the disconnect between popular wisdom and reality.

[13] Yao, Shujie and Lou, Dan Chinese Stock Market Bubble: Inevitable Or Incidental? University of Nottingham

[14] Investmentmoats.com, Andy Xie: Housemaid indicator says Chinese Bubble near to burst, April 28, 2010

[15] See US Markets: What Small Investors Fleeing Stocks Means, August 23, 2010

[16] KPMG.com "If you're applauded, worry"

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Estonia’s Free Market Model And The US 1920-1921 Depression

First of all I’d like to thank Mr. Kristjan Lepik for his patronage and on adding his priceless thoughts on Estonia.

Mr. Lepik writes,

``Estonia has taken a rather different crisis-management approach than Western world (US, Western Europe et al) – no government stimulus, very low government debt (only around 10% of GDP) and no bailouts. Therefore the steep GDP drop in 2009 (around -15%), if US would have no stimulus or bailouts, the GDP would be surely negative as well.

``I think that Estonia has taken the quick and painful way, whereas a lot of countries have gone the route which may be more painful in the end – big budget deficits must be paid back at some point (probably higher taxes globally).

``I was really negative about Estonia’s outlook in 2006 (as you all know, that is not a popular thing to do), the economy overheated badly. But the normalizing process has been very effective after that, gross wages have dropped around -20%, asset prices around -60%. That surely is not a pleasant process but it is helping to restore Estonia’s competitive advantage.

``The recovery will probably not be not that quick in Estonia, the normalizing process is still ongoing and unemployment has reached 15%. But looking at the macro picture, Estonia looks pretty good (should I use the term “sane” here?) compared to most of the World.”

It may be true that the normalization in Estonia could take awhile as resolving high degree of overindebtedness could pose as significant drag to economic growth as shown by the charts below by the IMF.

From the IMF

Nevertheless, I’d be more optimistic than the IMF or of the mainstream, since they would naturally be more cynical or skeptical of the Estonia's unorthodox or unconventional approach, in a world where government intervention is seen essential or as a standard.

Although I usually refrain (and equally disdain) from making comparisons with past models, my guess is that a free market resolution would have more meaningful relevance than from an interventionist approach.

What truly distorts or impedes a market from delivering its inherent process of clearing the previously established malinvestments are further interventions. And since a free market approach would have less distortions, they are likely to elicit more “similarities” or parallelism.

And on that note, the US depression of 1920-1921 experience should pertinent.

Economist Bryan Caplan in a paper on the US 1920-1921 depression wrote of how events unfolded then,(bold emphasis mine)

``In one crucial respect, the depression of 1920-21 was actually more severe than the Great Depression itself: there was a rapid decline in the price level of between forty and fifty percent within the course of a single year. As Friedman and Schwartz (1963) explain, “From their peak in May [1920], wholesale prices declined moderately for a couple of months, and then collapsed. By June 1921, they had fallen to 56 per cent of their level in May 1920. More than three-quarters of the decline took place in the six months from August 1920 to February 1921. This is, by all odds, the sharpest price decline covered by our money series, either before or since that date and perhaps also in the whole history of the United States.” (1963, pp.232-233.) The wholesale price index during the Great Depression took about three years to fall by the same amount.

``Employment and output were however not as severely affected as in the Great Depression. Of course precise unemployment data are not available for this period, but one representative estimate (Lebergott, 1957) puts civilian unemployment at 2.3% in 1919, 11.9% in 1921, and back to 3.2% in 1923. Output figures tell a similar story: one aggregate index (Mills, 1932) indexes production at 125.3 in 1919, 99.7 in 1921, and rebounding to 145.3 in 1923. As these stylized facts indicate, the second unusual feature of the depression of 1920-21 was the rapid recovery in employment and output, in sync with a swift adjustment of the real wage to its new equilibrium position. …”

Some charts from EH.net

In other words, a market based adjustment that had been swift and drastic translated to equally a rapid and dramatic recovery in 1920-1921.

And why this should come about?

Austrian economist Robert Murphy provides as a possible answer,

``After the depression the United States proceeded to enjoy the “Roaring Twenties,” arguably the most prosperous decade in the country’s history. Some of this prosperity was illusory—itself the result of subsequent Fed inflation—but nonetheless the 1920–1921 depression “purged the rottenness out of the system” and provided a solid framework for sustainable growth."

When rottenness is purged out of the system, then the recovery is likely to be relatively more robust and sustainable since the economy should reflect on market dynamics than from artificial foundations.

We end with a quote from President Warren Harding’s inaugural speech in 1921 which dealt with the crisis, (all bold highlights mine)

``We must face the grim necessity, with full knowledge that the task is to be solved, and we must proceed with a full realization that no statute enacted by man can repeal the inexorable laws of nature. Our most dangerous tendency is to expect too much of government, and at the same time do for it too little. We contemplate the immediate task of putting our public household in order. We need a rigid and yet sane economy, combined with fiscal justice, and it must be attended by individual prudence and thrift, which are so essential to this trying hour and reassuring for the future.…

``The economic mechanism is intricate and its parts interdependent, and has suffered the shocks and jars incident to abnormal demands, credit inflations, and price upheavals. The normal balances have been impaired, the channels of distribution have been clogged, the relations of labor and management have been strained. We must seek the readjustment with care and courage.… All the penalties will not be light, nor evenly distributed. There is no way of making them so. There is no instant step from disorder to order. We must face a condition of grim reality, charge off our losses and start afresh. It is the oldest lesson of civilization. I would like government to do all it can to mitigate; then, in understanding, in mutuality of interest, in concern for the common good, our tasks will be solved. No altered system will work a miracle. Any wild experiment will only add to the confusion. Our best assurance lies in efficient administration of our proven system.”

We hope that the success of Estonia's model will lead the world the way.