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Weekend reading: Investing amnesia

Good articles from around the web.

My favourite read this week was a long memo (PDF download) [1] from Oaktree Capital’s Howard Marks to his clients.

Entitled How Quickly They Forget, it’s a recap of the past five years from the coal face of active investing and a snapshot of the present, framed within a reminder that the investor sentiment cycle [2] demands active amnesia from participants in the market.

Marks writes:

The human mind seems to be very good at suppressing unpleasant memories. This is unfortunate, because unpleasant experiences are the source of the most important lessons.

When I was in army basic training, I was sure the memories would remain vivid and provide material for a great book. Two months later they had disappeared. After the fact, we may remember intellectually but not emotionally: that is, the facts but not their impact.

The article is well worth a read for insights into how risk premiums priced into different markets can give a good heads-up on excessive euphoria or bearishness.

High-yield bonds are the big concern for the memo’s author. Equities look fair to fully priced, despite investors being ‘handcuffed volunteers’ forced to buy them by the artificially low yields on offer elsewhere.

From the investing blogs

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