Pick 666 and All Lucky 7’s!! The Battle Between Vice and Virtue!

Six

What should you do if you won the lottery? Try to woo a supermodel/actress?

First off, the odds are against you; the expected return for a lottery ticket is negative. The jackpots just aren’t big enough; people just perceive the jackpot to be large enough to satisfice any chance of winning. Although it’s irrational, good for you if you win one day. Just make sure you don’t blow it off or become depressed in a few years.

The lottery has expected return paradoxes; there’s a negative expected return almost all the time, but high jackpots which can lead to retirement, despite low odds. One buck (or a few) is a minimal cost, so the risk is essentially zero. So basically you are guaranteed to lose money, but since the loss is so minuscule and potential award is large (even post taxes and the lump-sum decrease), people go for it. For example, even under the most lenient conditions (low tax rate, conservative lump-sum multiplier), the required jackpot for the expected return to equal your USD$1 would be at least USD$311Mn. Under more realistic assumptions, such as a 35% tax rate, this increases to USD$361Mn.

Those lottery creators aren’t stupid; it’s the same game for the gambling casino owners. Do you think they would really be in the business, or be able to sustain their businesses if they didn’t/couldn’t make money? They are profiting from the irrationality of people just like many investors do. Expert statisticians, mathematicians, and financiers run the numbers to make sure it is worth their while. What’s this boil down to? TANSTAAFL. But that doesn’t mean there never will be or can be a pseudo-free lunch. It is possible, just unlikely in the long run. So even though you can make some money if the jackpot is over USD$361Mn, it’s not going to happen enough that the businesses need to worry about it. And when it starts becoming likely, they’ll change the odds in their favor. An extra gotcha is that when you actually win the lottery, you have to choose between the lump sum payment versus the annuity. Going along the lines of lottery makers not being stupid, they’ve calculated the present value of the annuity so that it is exactly the same as the lump sum payment. What to choose? It’s pretty simple; the annuity is paid off by bonds averaging around 5% interest a year, so if you think your opportunity cost of capital (what you can make over 26 years, in the case of the lottery annuity) is higher than their discount rate of 5%, then take the lump sum, else take the annuity. Chances are that with a time horizon of 26 years, you will be able to get and want something better than 5%.

Is this justification for sin stocks or funds like VICEX? No. Although they may be relatively stable (historically), we need to think about the future. Are people becoming “better” or “worse”? If we analyze what can happen to these securities in the future, we come across some bad possibilities. These companies are increasingly becoming regulated for health concerns, negative public sentiment is increasing towards them, they can potentially go out of business if everyone becomes “enlightened,” and last but not least, they may be publicized to the public sector to be part of the government since they need the guaranteed money.

There’s a conundrum in wealth management: the rich[er] are able to take more risk for more reward but don’t need to, while the poor[er] are unable to take more risk but want more reward. This catch-22 perpetuates wealth condensation (the rich getting richer, and vice versa) since those HNWI (high net worth individuals) will generally want more wealth conservation from their financial advisers. This concept applies to many aspects of distributions: the most ___(insert “downloaded/viewed/read/emailed”)___ get more downloads/views/reads/emails because of what I call the “condensation multiplier.” The big get bigger more easily, while the small naturally get smaller relative to the big getting bigger. This is not to say that the small can’t get big, it’s just harder or less likely. I mean, the list has to start somewhere and although the avalanche isn’t much right away, it picks up speed as it goes.

Shinra

What should you do if you were extremely wealthy? Do what you love, love what you do. Only keep as much as you, your family, and your friends need with a buffer for bad times. Donate and invest or vice versa. Recently, there’s been a lot of commotion about socially responsible investments (SRIs) like KLD or IDS. Although the KLD Select Social Index and Domini Social 400 Index provides a benchmark for SRIs, many people have many different moral philosophies. It’s because of this that SMAs have an advantage over the bucket that MFs put everyone in their fund into. Good ones should be able to customize each account according to each individual client’s perspective of what is socially responsible and what is not. There is one caveat though; by eliminating non-SRIs, you are decreasing your opportunity set for maximizing risk-adjusted returns. On the flip side, you may be doing exactly that because of the reasons mentioned before. So evaluate your opportunity costs of capital, your code own code of ethics, and your investments. Now there’s just a limit on what SRI PMs think are SRIs and are not SRIs, financials anyone?

When in doubt, plenty of internet “Buffetologists” would point you to what he is doing. I’m not so sure about the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; although they help the world a lot, I don’t think Buffett or the Gates are diversifying their investments. Essentially by donating their fortunes to the foundation, they are putting all their eggs in one basket. While it’s important to have a certain amount of scale to have fruitful operations, many things are overlooked. To help “save the world” you need to cheer for prevention to lead the way, not just treat the sick to slow it down; education plays a huge part, as in almost all aspects of life.

(Image CC-BY pinguino. Image Copyright Square Enix.)

First Principles of Finansophy

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Hello Multiverse! Welcome to my Finansophy blog! To learn more about me and my blog, please read the About page, since I technically wrote that first!

Now first things first, we need to establish first principles and definitions we can all agree on so that any arguments henceforth can be both constructive and robust.

We need to get rid of stereotypes and preconceived notions that Philosophy and Business/Finance don’t mix. It is unfounded and, in my humble opinion, ignorant.

As with all Philosophies of __(blank)__ there is the search for some logical fundamental groundwork (metaphysics), if we can know any of it (epistemology), and what we should do with it (ethics). Just with this, it shows that Philosophy is integral to all facets of the multiverse.

Now to philosophers. Some may think the business/corporate world is corrupt and filled with greed and material possessions, but just because some people represent something badly, doesn’t mean that it is in itself bad. It’s fine if you think that you are above money and material things, I respect that position along with many others, it’s your life. What I argue is that people should be pursuing things that they really like/love (even if it gets all gushy inside), and if they are good at it, that’s gravy. I ask that people respect other people’s beliefs and desires. Aside from people pursing passions, Finance is essentially very useful. Like Philosophy, Finance can almost be applied to anything as well; nearly everything has some sort of economic value to someone. In today’s world, distributions of wealth seem unbalanced to many, and yet many still do not pursue financial education. Hopefully, with this blog, I can shed some light on financial topics in a sit-down-for-lunch kind of fashion, so that people can make better investment decisions to be financially secure, without people with conflicts of interest, and inturn also reduce volatility in the markets.

So then we come down to some people being interested in Business, Finance, and investments. Don’t they need to find the foundations of what many people consider common knowledge? There needs to be justification for famous financial theories that have been improved over the years (CAPM, APT, risk-reward trade-offs, value investing, etc.) or the accuracy of the information that is analyzed (10-K’s, 10-Q’s, other regulatory filings, GAAP compliance, market efficiency, etc.).

I’ll be examining these topics in greater detail sooner or later, and I will try to stick to a logical order, but news doesn’t wait for anybody. I’m going to try to provide many links within my posts (as you can see!) so that if you are unfamiliar with certain topics, you can easily look them up via my links. Usually, I will try to link the best ones so that you have the ultimate depth and breadth of information. For starters, check out the links in this post and on the side to explore some general knowledge before I really get started.

So stay tuned, more is on the way! I’ve been thinking about Finansophy for a long time now and I actually have a large backlog of ideas, so no worries.

Thank you, come again!

(Image CC-BY-SA Digon3.)