What caught my eye this week.

There’s something weird about 2023 – which is that nothing bonkers has happened. (Yet?)

I mean just compare the past nine months to last year’s UK mini-Budget mania or Russia invading Ukraine. The pandemic years before that of course. And before that, Donald Trump becoming the US president, or the witless, self-harming, and implausible Brexit.

I suppose we have had the AI frenzy. Which has very possibly put us on course for our ultimate extinction as a species. And even until then, a browser tab on your desktop can now write better than you on almost any subject you can think of, which is pretty crazy. Albeit the output is full of lies.

Then again, so were the Brexit and Trump episodes and that didn’t stop the craziness.

Come on Elon Musk! Cage fight Mark Zuckerberg!

You guys with your pussy-footing are making 2023 feel inadequate.

Four seasons in one day

Most of us don’t remember things being this perma-bonkers in the past.

On the other hand maybe we’re just more aware of the craziness – with newsfeeds and TikTok and viral memes and flashmobs endlessly pumping it all to the surface like an angsty volcano.

But renowned financial writer Felix Salmon argues this is the ‘new not normal’.

In one of five insights from his new book shared by the Next Big Idea Club this week, Salmon writes:

You might think that everything is weirder and more unexpected than it used to be, and you are right. It turns out that with hindsight, there was this very unusual period of calm for about 70 years, from roughly 1945 to 2015. Then 2016 happened, with the election of Trump and the Brexit vote in the UK, there was a rise of unpredictable politicians and movements around the world. After that, COVID hit in 2020. At this point, all of the big post-war structures that were keeping volatility down and making things more predictable had pretty much evaporated. We are now back to what you could think of as “normal” in the 19th century, the 18th century, or even the 17th century. Life was much less predictable in those days.

For most of the 20th century, we lived in a world where someone like Warren Buffett could come along with one big idea and say, “I’m going to make a big bet on America being great, and that one big bet will always be true, and it’s going to make me the richest man in the world.” That is not a world we live in anymore. The world we live in is much more unpredictable, it has much fatter tails, much higher upsides, and lower downsides. We need to be nimbler to navigate it. We can’t just believe one thing that is always going to be true. We’re going to have to update our beliefs, and we’re going to have to get used to a level of volatility, both in terms of climate change, in terms of infectious diseases, and in terms of the economy. That is going to be pretty disconcerting.

Too right it will Felix. For me and my portfolio.

The book is called The Phoenix Economy. Given the consistent excellence of Salmon’s output over the years, I might just pick up a copy.

Then again, maybe I’ll re-read Generation X instead. Douglas Coupland’s classic ‘tales for an accelerated culture’ will surely feel sleepy by comparison, and that feels somehow reassuring these days.

Have a great weekend.

From Monevator

Duration matching bond funds to your time horizon [Members]Monevator

Benjamin Graham on bear markets – Monevator

From the archive-ator: a primer on life insurance and protection – Monevator

News

Note: Some links are Google search results – in PC/desktop view click through to read the article. Try privacy/incognito mode to avoid cookies. Consider subscribing to sites you visit a lot.

UK mortgage arrears hit a seven-year high – Property Industry Eye

State pension triple-lock boost will see 650,000 more pay income tax – T.I.M.

Rich hit with wealth taxes around the world – Telegraph via Yahoo Finance

UK chip designer ARM up 25% on IPO to $65bn valuation – Reuters

FCA unveils enhanced screening checks for financial ads – Cover

Interesting potted bio of ousted BP chief Bernard Looney – Yahoo Finance

82% of students worry about making ends meet – Save The Student

Cash payments up for first time in a decade but debit cards dominate – BBC

Products and services

Investment transfer market needs a regulatory crackdown [Search result]FT

UK mortgage war ‘under way’; lender offers first sub-5% rate since June – Guardian

Monzo debuts investments feature using BlackRock multi-asset funds – ETF Stream

Open a SIPP with Interactive Investor and claim £100 to £3,000 in cashback. Terms apply – Interactive Investor

Care home fees soar amid cost of living crisis – Which

The best 0% balance transfer cards have been downgraded – This Is Money

Open an account with low-cost platform InvestEngine via our link and get £25 when you invest at least £100 (T&Cs apply. Capital at risk) – InvestEngine

Can pet insurance protect you from the rising cost of vet bills? – Which

Homes for sale in England for budding artists, in pictures – Guardian

Comment and opinion

The never-ending ‘then’ – Of Dollars and Data

Building any new homes reduces housing costs for all [Search result]FT

On second thoughts – Humble Dollar

It’s time to consider TIPS [US bonds, but nice deep dive]Morningstar

Portfolio diversification: see it in action – Interactive Investor

Is the state pension really ‘a Ponzi scheme’? [Search result]FT

The power of an investment journal – Rational Walk

Wealth creation ideas inspired by Blue Zone habits – Validea

Going for the gold – Humble Dollar

Will you need permission to spend in retirement? – Morningstar

Naughty corner: Active antics

Investors call ‘peak pessimism’ for beaten-up UK stocks – Reuters via MSN

An update on the stock-bond correlation – Verdad

Why this UK income investor sold out of Prudential – UK Dividend Stocks

Where is US inflation headed now? – Cullen Roche

Why network effects unravel – Flyover Stocks

The real Yale model [Podcast]Capital Allocators

PM jobs at hedge funds are too toxic for most – Efinancial Careers

Kindle book bargains

Quit: Knowing When To Walk Away by Annie Duke – £0.99 on Kindle

How to Read Numbers by Tom Chivers – £0.99 on Kindle

Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt – £1.99 on Kindle

Creativity Inc. by Ed Catmull – £0.99 on Kindle

Environmental factors

Why is raw sewage pumped into UK rivers and the sea? – BBC

Experts call for global moratorium on geo-engineering efforts – Guardian

The sea eagles that returned to Mull – Hakai

US sets new record for billion-dollar climate disasters in a single year – Guardian

America’s endangered amphibians are literally roadkill – The Atlantic

Robots trained to revive coral reefs via aquaculture – BBC

Robot overlord roundup

Even linguistics experts can’t tell ChatGPT text from human – SciTechDaily

M.B.A. students vs. ChatGPT: who comes up with more innovative ideas? – Mish Talk

Start-up Databricks now valued at $43bn as AI land grab continues – Axios

Off our beat

This will not always be a thing – Raptitude

American universities are running low on male undergraduates – New York Times

London is fighting for its future as a fashion capital [Search result]FT

You’re not supporting Ukraine hard enough until the nuclear blast hits your face – Newsweek

Why eating and traveling along is such a pleasure – Guardian

And finally…

“Adversity shaped me. My pain threshold became very high.”
– Elon Musk, Elon Musk

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The post Weekend reading: the ‘new not normal’ appeared first on Monevator.

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