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Beta Beats Alpha
The Daily Reckoning, May
16, 2008
By
Bill Bonner
Real investment gains come from
being in the right place at the right time.
The most reliable and entertaining
trait of humankind is vanity. Despite much evidence to the contrary,
men see themselves at the very centre of the universe…the alpha of
all creation. Without man, nothing happens…trees fall in the forest,
but who cares?
Primitive people imagine that they
are to blame for whatever goes wrong – floods…earthquakes…volcanic
eruptions; they appease the gods by tossing nubile virgins into
volcanoes and building huge monuments of granite in their honour.
Modern people imagine that they are
to thank for whatever goes right. Did they not write the Treaty of
Versailles…and invent both Long Range Ballistic Missiles as well as
Long Term Capital Management? Didn’t they build Las Vegas? And
hasn’t Ben Bernanke finally taken the crunch out of the credit
cycle?
What follows is basically a
lament…a wail…a whining reflection on how we flatter ourselves…and
why the most flattered are the best short sale candidates. The short
version is that “alpha” is a windy fraud. In broader terms, the
moral of the story is simply that whenever you feel proud enough to
offer advice to others, you should prepare to get it yourself. Good
and hard.
What brought this to mind is a news
item from the New York Times. America’s president seems to have an
insight. The reason food prices were going up, he guessed, was
because people in India had more money in their pockets and now they
wanted to eat more. This remark might have gone unnoticed, but for
the fact that it was true. The foreigners are getting richer…and
uppity. “Asian Age,” of New Delhi, whose name gives you an idea of
the way the Indians think things are going, said the US president
wouldn’t “get away…with passing the buck on to India.” Others threw
biofuels and agricultural subsidies in America’s face. Then,
striking low, they said Americans ate too much; if they just slimmed
down to the weight of middle-class Indians, said Pradeep S. Mehta,
“many hungry people in sub-Saharan Africa would find food on their
plates.”
What a revolting development! For
four generations, America has been the world’s alpha nation – the
country with the money, the power, and the answers. Generations of
Americans have offered advice to the rest of the planet, confident
that they knew best what was good for everyone. Wilson showed up in
Le Havre with his “14 Points” in 1918. Clemenceau remarked sourly
that “God only needed 10.” From then until six months ago, the
world’s unfortunates had to put up with American know-it-alls. “Tear
down this wall,” said Ronald Reagan and the neo-cons. “Dollarise”
said Jeffrey Sachs and the Chicago boys. US military “advisors”
showed foreign armies and terrorist groups how to kill more
efficiently. US businessmen explained how to set up factories and
operate them more profitably. (F. W. Taylor introduced ‘scientific
management’ …Stalin loved his ideas, which still are known as
‘Taylorism’ in much of the world.)
A long stream of professors handed
out trade secrets like chewing gum, confident that the ideas would
never stick; foreigners would never really get the hang of it. They
urged free-market policies, monetary reforms, and market
regulations. Agricultural engineers introduced peasants to
pesticides and DDT. And just as 17 th century priests showed the
heathen how to copulate correctly, our own world improvers
demonstrated to couples all over the world how to copulate without
begetting. There was no vanity too absurd…no pretension too
embarrassing. By the 1960s, Americans were even sending their
children – who hadn’t yet learned a trade or earned a living – in
the belief that their callow bodies, in the Peace Corps, might lift
the fuzzy wuzzies out of poverty like Pharaoh’s wife plucking Moses
up out of the bulrushes.
And then, wouldn’t you know it? The
little Moses all over the world took the advice, set up their own
shops…and now they’re back-sassing America’s president and stealing
its best customers.
And here, for further elaboration,
we return to the world of money. While Americans offered advice
gratuitously, Wall Street offered its own advice, for a price. The
financial industry hotshots said that they, too, had some special
magic. Yet, a colleague recently handed us a chart of the London
stock market over the last 107 years. What is remarkable about it is
that it shows a flattish line beginning over the far left and
running right along the bottom for ¾ of the page. Then, after lying
in the dirt for ¾ of a century, the chart suddenly springs to life
like a locust, in the early ‘80s. In the next 20 years, it shot up
more than 1000%.
This same phenomenon is visible in
almost any market you choose to look at. There are small gains…and
small losses…all the time. But the big gains come all at once. In
the gold market, for example, except for occasional war spikes, the
price barely budged from the defeat of the Spanish Armada until the
1970s. Then, an investor who bought the stuff in 1972 would have
seen his money multiplied 21 times in the next eight years.
Following this exertion, gold went back to sleep…and didn’t wake up
for another two decades.
The pretence of America is the
pretence of Wall Street. It is pretence of alpha itself and the
vanity of the species. While Wall Street promised investors elusive,
above-market gains - alpha - the real gains came from merely being
in the right place at the right time. Beta, in other words.
Likewise, it was no special genius that put Americans on top of the
world; it was simply being in the right place at the right time. Too
bad they can’t stay there.
This news item can also be viewed
at:
http://www.dailyreckoning.co.uk/
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