Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • George Soros is one of the world's richest men. He is currently worth about $8.3B.

  • Primarily, he's been accumulating this fortune through investing, and more specifically, through his hedge funds Quantum Fund and Soros Fund Management

  • If you also consider that this man has donated about $32 billion to philanthropy, you can say that,

  • well, his investing career has been quite successful

  • George Soros investment strategy is much different from that of many of the other

  • legendary investors that I've covered on this channel before, in that, he doesn't really have a specific set of rules that he adheres to

  • There's something else ...

  • Something quite ingenious ...

  • Something that you will learn in just a little bit, which has made him this filthy rich

  • This is the Swedish investor, bringing you the best tips and tools for reaching your financial freedom goals

  • And this is a top 5 takeaway summary of The Alchemy of Finance, written by George Soros

  • The fifth most important takeaway from the book, in my opinion, is the ability to be able to distinguish between natural

  • science and social science

  • Imagine that you are a scientist who is supposed to predict how fast a certain balloon will rise to the sky

  • You know all the facts: the volume of the balloon, which gas it's filled with, its

  • aerodynamics, the exact wind of that day, etc

  • With these facts at your disposal, and well, if you have a master's degree in physics and a PhD in aerodynamics,

  • you will be able to predict exactly how fast this balloon will rise to the sky

  • This is natural science

  • Now imagine that you are a hedge fund manager who is supposed to predict how fast the S&P500 will rise in the coming year.

  • You know all the facts: the growth of GDP,

  • interest rates, the global trade situation,

  • unemployment rates etc.

  • Even with these facts at your disposal, and yes,

  • even if you have a master's degree in economics and a PhD in finance,

  • you won't have a chance of predict how fast the S&P500 will rise in the coming year

  • This is social science

  • What's the difference?

  • It's the existence of a thinking participant

  • In natural science, facts lead to new facts

  • The facts about the balloon and its surroundings can help us in predicting the fact about how fast the balloon will rise

  • In social science, however,

  • facts are perceived in a certain way by the thinking participants, which only then leads to new facts

  • It's like being a scientist who is given the task of predicting how fast a balloon will rise, with a slight twist:

  • The balloon doesn't really know if it wants to act like it's filled with helium or with oxygen!

  • Assuming that natural science and social science operate under the same premises is,

  • first, more common than you may think, and secondly, can lead to great

  • consequences, if your goal is to achieve high market returns, which we shall see next

  • Number 4: Using a faulty model is more dangerous than using no model at all

  • Economy and finance are the main subjects of social science that George Soros is concerned with in The Alchemy of Finance, and luckily,

  • they are the only fields which we care about at this channel as well

  • To cope with the problem that was presented before - that the participants in social science think, which in turn influences the events they participate in -

  • economists have introduced some assumptions to their models

  • Reality is not as straightforward as Force = Mass * Acceleration in the financial world,

  • but that doesn't stop the economists from simplifying to make it look so, nah-ah!

  • If a triangle doesn't add up to 180 degrees, the mathematician would complain, but the economists

  • probably wouldn't care too much

  • This is not just stupid, it is also very dangerous

  • Case in point: the financial crisis

  • Many credit institutes and insurance companies acted on the false assumption that mortgages were uncorrelated

  • They did not expect that a collapse in the housing market, caused by these thinking participants,

  • would have mortgages default in droves

  • Their models did not allow for it

  • This intensified the following market crash, as it had fooled many investors to accept too much risk

  • Okay, so what's the implications for us who are trying to steer the financial markets?

  • It's that we must satisfy ourselves with conclusions that are much less definite than economists have previously sought to provide

  • Using a faulty model is much more dangerous than using no model at all

  • And as we shall see in the final takeaway,

  • betting against those who rely too heavily on models can prove to be a very profitable strategy for an investor

  • Number three: Reflexivity

  • Actually, reflexivity should probably be on top of this list, because it's George Soros' most important contribution to the understanding of

  • economics and finance

  • But well, it wouldn't make much sense presenting the rest of the takeaways in this video without it, so here it goes

  • The worldview of the thinking participants will inevitably deviate from what is actually going on

  • Also, their imperfect understanding affects that same world

  • This causes feedback loops

  • "The participants' views influence the course of events, and the course of events influence the participants' views."

  • This is reflexivity - and it has no counterpart in natural science

  • The stock market is a perfect example

  • A favorable view of the market makes it easy for companies to attract capital, both from investors and from borrowers

  • When companies can more easily attract capital,

  • investors' view of the market improves

  • Another great example is the economy and regulators

  • If regulators, being the thinking participants, have a favorable view of the economy,

  • counter cyclical interventions such as increased taxes or reduce public expenditures could be expected

  • When this happens, companies act differently, which in turn affects how regulators view the current situation

  • And maybe you don't need a third example, but I like this one too much to skip it

  • What we are and what we think of ourselves is a reflexive process as well

  • If you view yourself as a person with confidence for example,

  • you act like you have more confidence, and people around you will notice and behave like you're an authority

  • This reinforces your belief that you are a confident person

  • If you are into maths you may think about this as two functions:

  • The cognitive function - which is how we try to understand the world we live in; and:

  • The participating function - which is how we try to manipulate that situation to our advantage

  • As both functions operate at the same time, they interfere with each other, and as stated earlier,

  • it typically creates feedback loops

  • These feedback loops can be self-reinforcing, which causes many of the most commonly used models in economics to fall short

  • Number 2: The boom-bust model

  • One of the most elementary models in economic theory is that of supply and demand

  • Those who produce or own something, are willing to produce or sell more of this as prices rise

  • Those who are interested in buying the same thing, are willing to buy less of this as prices rise

  • The intersection of these two curves is said to be the price where sellers (or supply) and buyers (or demand) meet

  • This is supposed to be at an equilibrium,

  • if fundamentals change to make buyers more interested, the equilibrium moves upwards and prices move higher, and vice-versa

  • You don't really need to know the details about this, but the important thing to remember here is that conventional wisdom

  • says that prices always move towards an equilibrium

  • George Soros does not believe in this

  • Instead, he suggests that prices move in a boom-bust fashion

  • The stock market will work as a great illustration of his "boom-bust model"

  • First, there's a self-reinforcing trend based on changes in fundamentals, or facts, if you will

  • Because of reflexivity, a positive feedback loop is created which set things in motion

  • Because the motion is self reinforcing, it doesn't stop at some "equilibrium". The trend could be upward or downward, it doesn't matter

  • Secondly, the investing community will realize that the market has moved too far away from what the fundamentals in the economy should allow for

  • Thirdly, this causes the opinion of investors to change, and the market will self-correct

  • Given some time, reflexivity will cause positive feedback loops that are self reinforcing, but this time, in the opposite direction

  • The force is too strong to stop at any equilibrium that fundamentals would suggest

  • The market has now gone through both a boom and a bust

  • So ..

  • Prices in the stock market do not move towards an equilibrium,

  • but rather, they move away from it, until it becomes obvious from fundamental factors that the boom or bust has gone too far

  • Then, the direction changes

  • In my summary of Howard Marks' book "Mastering the Market Cycle",

  • you can learn to identify when we are close to one of these booms or busts, to be able to profit from market swings

  • Check out that video after this one

  • Number 1: The stock market is a laboratory for testing hypotheses

  • George Soros views his investing approach as alchemy rather than science

  • In alchemy, one seeks to "bring about a desired state of affairs", while in science, one seeks to "find the greater truth"

  • Alchemy can be achieved without science, Soros is very clear on this point

  • He does not suggest that he can forecast any events, but he has proven that he can profit from them nonetheless

  • He is constantly posting new hypotheses to the market and sees it as a laboratory for testing these

  • In science, hypotheses are either proven or rejected, but in investing, they lead to operational success or failure

  • I think the most interesting thing about George Soros' investment philosophy is that he doesn't obey by a specific set of rules

  • He believes that the market is always changing, and therefore,

  • no set of rules can make an investor to outperform the market over any longer time periods

  • Instead, George Soros is profiting from when the underlying rules are changing

  • When other investors have come to believe in their carved in stone models a bit too much,

  • Soros is there to profit from their mistakes

  • George Soros is one of the greatest investors of all time,

  • but his advice in The Alchemy of Finance are a bit too abstract for my taste

  • If you want to learn more practical advice on how to profit from swings in the markets,

  • head over to my summary of Howard Marks' book "Mastering the Market Cycle"

  • Cheers guys!

George Soros is one of the world's richest men. He is currently worth about $8.3B.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it