The Big Picture

HNTI: Nobody Knows Anything, The Beatles edition

 

 

The paperback of “How NOT to Invest” drops this week; to celebrate, this whole week I am running various stories and excerpts about the book. 

This short, Beatles-related excerpt from the book was one of my favorite chapters to write… Enjoy!

 

Is there any greater gap between “Expert Opinion” and subsequent history than The Beatles?

AllMusic sums up the Fab Four as “The most popular and influential rock act of all time, a band that blazed several new trails for popular music.”1 That’s obvious today, but it was not the consensus early in their career.

Many amusing details were recounted by Bob Seawright is his “Better Letter.” Nobody skewers humanity’s cognitive failings with more amusing flair than Seawright. He giddily recounted the early reviews of the Beatles when they first came to America. At the time, they had five singles in Britain’s Top 20, three of which hit #1 – all in 1963. Their debut album, “Please Please Me,” held the top spot on Britain’s charts for 30 weeks, displaced only by the band’s next album, “With the Beatles.“

Despite the sensation they were causing in Great Britain, The Beatles’ record label (EMI) could not persuade its American counterpart (Capitol) to release any of the band’s singles in the States. Dave Dexter was the man in charge of international A&R for Capitol, and ostensibly an industry expert on the public’s musical tastes. He repeatedly rejected The Beatles’ singles, calling them “generally amateurish and unappealing.” One after another, Dexter vetoed those singles tearing up the charts in the UK, starting with “Please Please Me” and “She Loves You.”

Ed Sullivan had also turned down the Fab Four (twice) for his television show. He was by coincidence at London (now Heathrow) Airport when he witnessed “Beatlemania” firsthand. The band was returning home from a tour in Sweden, greeted by a raucous, screaming mob of teenage girls. That convinced Sullivan to book the lads.2

The Ed Sullivan Show was a huge platform for breaking new acts, and Capitol decided to release “I Want to Hold Your Hand” a few weeks before The Beatles’ appearance. This was not some insightful exec reversing Dexter’s misguided rejections or a change of musical heart but rather, simply good corporate opportunism. How could you not capitalize on the demand one of the country’s most popular TV shows might create?

And how did the Sullivan Show go? 3

The Beatles played five songs on two broadcast segments, ending with “I Want to Hold Your Hand.”  Ray Bloch, Ed Sullivan’s musical director, was unimpressed: “The only thing different is the hair, as far as I can see. I give them a year.” 4

He was not alone in panning the appearance. Seawright collected a string of headlines and reviews that have not aged particularly well:

The New York Herald Tribune: “BEATLES BOMB ON TV.”

The Boston Globe: “Don’t let the Beatles bother you. If you don’t think about them they will go away and in a few more years they will probably be bald.”

The New York Times: “The Beatles’ vocal quality can be described as hoarsely incoherent, with the minimal enunciation necessary to communicate the schematic texts.”

The Los Angeles Times: “Not even their mothers would claim that they sing well.”

The New York Herald Tribune: “75 percent publicity, 20 percent haircut and 5 percent lilting lament.”

Talk about “Nobody Knows Anything.

It wasn’t just that the reviews missed the mark. What is noteworthy is all of biases evident in those critiques. This is also evident in the prior section on Media (later on, we explore what causes this).

Consider Newsweek:

“Visually they are a nightmare, tight, dandified Edwardian-Beatnik suits and great pudding bowls of hair. Musically they are a near disaster, guitars and drums slamming out a merciless beat that does away with secondary rhythms, harmony and melody.” (emphasis added)

Whether you like their songs or not, The Beatles’ harmonies and melodies are simply not debatable. The musicality and beauty of their songs is simply beyond reproach.

And this was The Washington Post revealing their inside-the-beltway angle:

“They are, apparently, part of some kind of malicious, bi-lateral entertainment trade agreement. The British have to sit through dozens of dreadful American television programs. In return, we get The Beatles. As usual, we got gypped. Nothing we have exported in recent years quite justifies imported hillbillies who look like sheep dogs and sound like alley cats in agony.”

What was the 1960s equivalent of “Okay, Boomer”…? 5

You probably know what happened next: “I Want to Hold Your Hand” went to number one in the U.S., quickly selling a million copies.5 American tastes were not so different than Britain’s after all, and Beatlemania became a cultural phenomenon here too.6

***

Ironically, these music “experts” missed the biggest cultural shift in generations, and it was happening right before their eyes and ears. How did they blow it? In his book “Hit Makers,” 7 Derek Thompson explains Raymond Loewy’s concept of MAYA: New products that are “most advanced yet acceptable.”8

Loewy “believed that consumers are torn between two opposing forces: neophilia, a curiosity about new things; and neophobia, a fear of anything too new. As a result, they gravitate to products that are bold, but instantly comprehensible.” Any innovation too far ahead of the curve gets rejected by much of the public.

But with music, I suspect that MAYA line varies with age. The receptiveness to new music is different for a critic in their 40s or 50s than for teenagers. One group is still in its formative age, embracing new things (while rejecting most of what their parents liked); the others’ formative years were decades earlier. Once your musical taste hardens, you may be less receptive to the latest sounds.

This might explain the bad reviews from Beatles’ critics throughout their career. Many of their albums, including some of the best music ever recorded, were initially panned. Musicologist and Historian Ted Gioia observed that critics “literally were handed the greatest recordings of their era to review, and blew them off. Every classic song on these albums was not only attacked, but actually mocked.” 9

MAYA helps explain why.

Gioia notes that The Beatles were “punished for how quickly they were pushing rock music ahead . . . the critics misunderstood the lads from Liverpool for the worst possible reason – namely, that they were constantly learning, growing more ambitious, and willing to take risks.”

Or as UK rocker Elvis Costello said, “Every [Beatles] record was a shock.” 10

The Ed Sullivan appearance was merely a single episode in an explosive career. Throughout the 1960s, bad reviews of Beatles’ albums such as Sgt. PeppersThe White Album, and Abbey Road would come back to haunt the critics who penned them…

 

 

 

Previously:
HNTI: Never Take Candy from Strangers (May 7, 2026)

How NOT to Invest’s 10 Most Important Ideas (May 6, 2026)

Adventures in Recording an Audio Book (May 5, 2026)

How NOT to Invest Paperback Arrives! (May 4, 2026)

Nobody Knows Anything (Full archive)

 

 

The paperback of “How NOT to Invest” is out this week at AmazonBarnes & NobleBooks-A-MillionBookshopHudson, or wherever you buy your favorite books!

If you want to learn more about how the book was made, any related media appearances or background, get unique bonus material, or just ask a question, you can sign up here: HNTI at RitholtzWealth dot com.

 

 

The post HNTI: Nobody Knows Anything, The Beatles edition appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Friday AM Reads

My end-of-week morning train WFH reads:

The Great $110 Trillion Wealth Transfer Won’t Happen Any Time Soon: Financial advisory firms like to talk about a looming event called “the great wealth transfer,” where the huge and very wealthy baby-boomer generation dies off and their children inherit their money. But the process may be more of a slow drip than a sudden windfall. The two generations that hold the most wealth are baby boomers, who are between age 61 and 80, and Gen X, who are between 45 and 61. Americans 55 and up control most wealth, and many of them have decades of living left. (Wall Street Journal)

Will the anti-obesity wonder drugs work wonders for the US economy? Unlike artificial intelligence, the impact of GLP-1 medications may already be happening in a big way. (Faster, Please!)

Wall Street’s Wisest Man: The renowned investment wizard Charley Ellis (Chair Yale Endowment, BoD Vanguard Group)) from June 2001. It still rings true, because wisdom never goes out of style. Investing, like manufacturing cookies or toothpaste, is supposed to be boring: “If you find anything interesting, you’ve found something wrong.” (Jason Zweig)

The $11 Billion Casino-Style Economy Built on Players Who Can Never Cash Out. Apple and Google are raking in money from social casinos that replace real winnings with virtual coins and dopamine hits. Some players have spent more than $1 million to keep playing. (Bloomberg Free)

• ‘Life is existential uncertainty. What happens when you outlive a fatal diagnosis? Bruce Deachman in this National Post article talks with three people whose lives were upended by grim prognoses. Life threw them another curveball by extending their lives, in some cases indefinitely. Tadas Viskanta’s quiet meditation on living with not-knowing. The investing application is obvious; the human one matters more. (Abnormal Returns)

Brendan Carr Is Playing a Dangerous Game: If he can weaponize Jimmy Kimmel’s joke to punish ABC, other media companies with far less will be intimidated out of ever criticizing the president again. (Slate)

How Texas Republicans Turned on George W. Bush: The former president is now persona non grata in his own state party. The man who delivered Texas to the GOP is now one of its chief targets. What gives? (Texas Monthly)

Iran has hit far more U.S. military assets than reported, satellite images show: Imagery published by Iranian state-affiliated media and verified by The Post shows damage to at least 228 structures or pieces of equipment at U.S. military sites. Investigative satellite work re-counting the actual damage to U.S. bases. The official tally and the imagery don’t agree. (Washington Post)

How the Classic American Game of Twister Went From Risqué to Record-Breaking: Sixty years ago, Johnny Carson and Eva Gabor played Twister on the “Tonight Show,” and the public took it as permission to buy the controversial game. The improbable history of the most physically suggestive game ever sold to children — from puritan panic to Guinness records. (Smithsonian Magazine)

Billie Eilish says she does ‘everything I can’ to suppress Tourette syndrome tics: US singer-songwriter talks about huge effort of controlling her behaviour, in interview with Amy Poehler. Eilish on the daily work of masking a neurological condition in public. A useful counter to the ‘celebrities are fine’ assumption. (The Guardian)

Video of the dayWhy Boston Dynamics’ New Atlas is Years Ahead of Tesla

Be sure to check out our Master’s in Business interview this weekend with Howard Lindzon, known as “The Larry David of Finance.” He is General Partner at the seed fund, Social Leverage, he was one of the first seed investors in Robinhood, which IPOd at $30B in 2021, eToro, Manscaped, and Beehiiv. Previously, he founded Wallstrip, a daily online video show acquired by CBS (2007). He also co-founded Stocktwits, which pioneered the “cashtag.” Recognized by Institutional Investor as a “Super Angel;” his podcast is Panic with Friends.

 

Which US cities give new grads the best shot in 2026?

Source: Sherwood

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

The post 10 Friday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

HNTI: Never Take Candy from Strangers

 

 

 

The paperback of “How NOT to Invest” drops this week; to celebrate, I am running various stories and excerpts about the book, Today, I want to discuss why we ignore what ourt moms taught us. It’s as applicable on the playground as it is on Wall Street and markets. Enjoy!

 

I grew up in the generation of latchkey kids: Both parents worked; you came home from school, fixed yourself a quick bite, then ran off to the playground for some stick- or b-ball. We weren’t wildly overscheduled; we didn’t have 20 hours a week of school events, after-school activities, and projects.  We were (mostly) on our own.

This led to a generation of parents who recognized the risks all this unsupervised play created. The results were three simple rules that every kid who grew up in the 1960s, 70s, and even 80s had to learn:

1. Make sure your parents knew where you were going to be after school;

2. Be home for dinner (hands washed and at the table) by 6pm;

3. Never take candy from strangers.1

That was it!

Every other rule was a variation on this theme. Whether you had a sleepover at Brian’s house or were playing hoops with Marc, Chuck, and Ritchie, you had to leave a note or a message at home and/or your parents’ workplace as to what you were doing that day. Dinner was the same time every day, and if you were late, there was gonna be hell to pay for it.

Technology has rendered the rules 1 and 2 obsolete: Parents know exactly where their kids are to within a few feet, courtesy of the tracking apps on their phones. Texting lets them know precisely when they are coming home. But that third rule…

Today, I want to discuss why you should never take candy from strangers. It was true when I was 12 years old, developing a decent pull-up jump shot and studying for my bar mitzvah. It’s true today, perhaps more so. It’s true, even if you are an adult, married with two kids, a dog, and a mortgage.

It’s so obvious and ingrained – at least to my generation – that it’s easy to overlook the simplicity and brilliance of this concept.

Just as your mother used to tell you not to take candy from strangers, so goes it with taking investment advice from strangers on TV, in print, weblogs, and most especially social media.

When a stranger offers you something for free, it should immediately make you ask a few questions: Who are they? What do they want? Do they have your best interests at heart? What’s in it for them?

Always ask yourself: What are these people selling? Is it a newsletter? Some wacky trading scheme or crypto scam claiming it’s gonna make you rich? “Just make 1% per day to turn $100 into millions” type nonsense.

At the very least, they are asking for your time and attention, and that has tremendous value to you as an individual. Collectively, it’s worth billions of dollars to big tech and media.

I devote at least 10 chapters in “How Not to Invest” discussing these exact topics because its that important. See:

Who do you listen to?
Prediction, Inc.?
Forecasting Chaos
What are they selling?
24/7 Financial Advice
TikTokInvestors
Gell-Mann Amnesia
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
Lose the News
Use the News: Reengineer Your Media Diet

Before you accept the investing advice from a random stranger, ask yourself if they are concerned with your comfortable retirement, buying a new house, or paying for your kids’ college. If they don’t know your zip code or tax bracket, how on earth can their advice be geared to your specific circumstances?

Of course it is not. It’s selling something, be it advertisements, investment products, newsletters, or God knows what else.

Most of what you see, hear, and read was not written with you in mind. It was created to sell a product. This blog post, as an example, is exhorting you to buy my book. These sales pitches are not nefarious, but they have become so ubiquitous that we often overlook them.

It’s not realistic to suggest people tune everything out. However, I am making three suggestions for all consumers of financial content:

-Understand what media you are consuming;

-Make intelligent, well-informed choices;

-Prioritize quality over quantity.

I am not suggesting you become a curmudgeon who hates all they see, but rather, be a little less gullible and naïve. When I started out in the finance industry, I believed every line that came my way from every salesman, any fund manager, and each quarterly call (all filled with nonsense). I was an easy mark for any smooth-talking bullshit artist.

This is why my Mom was right to warn me not to take candy from strangers. Her advice applies equally to taking investment advice from people you don’t know and whose process, track record, and temperament you are unfamiliar with. Have they been more right than wrong? Do they have a calm, thoughtful temperament? Lived through a few cycles? Are they worthy of your time and attention?

It took some time and some expensive losses before I figured all that out.

Listen to what mom told you: Taking investment advice from people you do not know in the media in all of its forms is no different than taking candy from strangers…

 

 

 

Previously:
How NOT to Invest’s 10 Most Important Ideas (May 6, 2026)

Adventures in Recording an Audio Book (May 5, 2026)

How NOT to Invest Paperback Arrives! (May 4, 2026)

 

 

__________

1. There is a much longer story from 1874 about Charley Ross, the first missing child to make national headlines. It (of course) involved taking candy from strangers. A full century before my generation, and so was not exactly part of the Zeitgeist in 1974. If you want to learn more about it, see “The Kidnapping of Little Charley Ross,” Library of Congress, April 23, 2019.

~~~

 

The paperback of “How NOT to Invest” is out this week at AmazonBarnes & NobleBooks-A-MillionBookshopHudson, or wherever you buy your favorite books!

If you want to learn more about how the book was made, any related media appearances or background, get unique bonus material, or just ask a question, you can sign up here: HNTI at RitholtzWealth dot com.

 

The post HNTI: Never Take Candy from Strangers appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Thursday AM Reads

My morning train WFH reads:

I Asked ChatGPT to Manage a Stock Portfolio. Here’s How It Did. What followed was a monthslong back-and-forth on everything from tariffs to leveraged funds . Spoiler: it picked momentum and got beaten by a bad market. Useful as a reality check on the AI-as-PM pitch deck. I planned to test it for a few weeks. (Wall Street Journal)

Storied Toolmaker Closes Its Last Hometown Plant—and Blames Its Tape Measures: WHat a bullshit excuse — Stanley Black & Decker says fewer buyers want the Connecticut plant’s single-sided tape measures, preferring double-sided ones made abroad. (Wall Street Journal) but see what really happened Your Power Tools Got Worse on Purpose: The 2010 merger of Stanley Works and Black & Decker created a company that already owned DeWalt. From there they went on an acquisition spree that should have built an empire. Instead it built a bloated holding company drowning in debt and leadership turnover. (Worse on Purpose)

The Fastest V-Shaped Recovery Ever: First semis, then software; Peak Social Media; Your SaaSflation Is My Opportunity. (It’s time to build.)

Demand destruction vs fuel-superseding infrastructure: In starting this stupid, unforgivable war, Trump has vastly accelerated the process of demand destruction. Rather than buying American oil, the whole world has undertaken a simultaneous, rapid, irreversible shift to electrical substitutes for fossil fuel applications, from induction tops to balcony solar to ebikes and EVs: Doctorow on why building the alternative is more durable than punishing the incumbent. Energy-transition strategy as policy aikido. (Pluralistic)

Scientists Are Starting to Unlock the Nanoscale Secrets of the Immune System: Immunologist Daniel Davis detailed the ways in which new technologies are enabling a better understanding of the human immune system. On the molecular-scale reckoning happening in immunology and the therapeutic implications are years out, but the science is now. (Wired)

• ‘The Most Bipartisan Issue Since Beer’: Opposition to Data Centers: Liberals and conservatives, finally united — by NIMBYism over the AI build-out. The grid math, water draw, and tax breaks are uniting people who never agree. (New York Times)

The unflattering secrets revealed so far in Elon Musk’s latest legal feud: Shira Ovide digs through the court filings in Musk vs. Altman / OpenAI for what’s already embarrassing for Musk. Hundreds of court filings have revealed cringey texts, emails or private diary entries of Musk, Sam Altman, other OpenAI founders and other public figures. (Washington Post)

A Stanford Experiment to Pair 5,000 Singles Has Taken Over Campus: A student built a matchmaking algorithm that has consumed the school—and highlighted the challenges of finding love for high achievers. (Wall Street Journal)

F.D.A. Blocked Publication of Research Finding Covid and Shingles Vaccines Were Safe: The agency’s scientists and data contractors reviewed millions of patient records for studies that were pulled back before release. Suppressing favorable safety data because it conflicts with political messaging is its own kind of malpractice. The institutional rot continues to surface. The agency’s scientists and data contractors reviewed millions of patient records for studies that were pulled back before release. (New York Times)

Work Won’t Love You Back: Greta Rainbow on ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ For those who’ve seen every Met Gala fit yet crave another fashion fix, the writer reports from Times Square on the sequel’s view of labor, love, and, of course, looks. The smarter take on the sequel — what it accidentally says about the labor economics of the prestige magazine world. (Filmmaker) see also That’s All: A Guide to Every Easter Egg in The Devil Wears Prada 2: For those keeping score on the sequel. Pure entertainment, but a useful index of where pop-culture nostalgia currently sits. From celebrity cameos to that emotional ending, a spoiler-filled rundown of references to the original film and special guests joining the sequel. (Vanity Fair)

Be sure to check out our Master’s in Business interview this weekend with Howard Lindzon, known as “The Larry David of Finance.” He is General Partner at the seed fund, Social Leverage, he was one of the first seed investors in Robinhood, which IPOd at $30B in 2021, eToro, Manscaped, and Beehiiv. Previously, he founded Wallstrip, a daily online video show acquired by CBS (2007). He also co-founded Stocktwits, which pioneered the “cashtag.” Recognized by Institutional Investor as a “Super Angel;” his podcast is Panic with Friends.

 

The Iran war is accelerating the shift away from fossil fuels

Source: Paul Krugman

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

The post 10 Thursday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

ATM: Focusing on Growth (Not Market Cap)

 

 

 

At The Money: Focusing on Growth (Not Market Cap) with Rob Arnott, RAFI (May 7, 2026)

Indexes are weighted by their size, primarily market cap. Research Affiliates’ latest index focuses on Growth, rejiggering these indexes based on how fast companies are growing.

Full transcript below.

~~~

About this week’s guest:

Rob Arnott is known as the “godfather of smart beta” and founder of Research Affiliates, which oversees strategies for over $100 billion in assets.

For more info, see:

Professional Bio

Masters in Business

LinkedIn

~~~

 

Find all of the previous At the Money episodes here, and in the MiB feed on Apple PodcastsYouTubeSpotify, and Bloomberg. And find the entire musical playlist of all the songs I have used on At the Money on Spotify

 

 

 

TRANSCRIPT: Rob Arnott on the Research Affiliates Growth Index

 

Intro
Take a load off Fanny

And (and, and) you put the load right on me
(You put the load right on me)

 

Barry Ritholtz: Traditional market-cap-weighted indexes like the S&P 500 have really done a great job in dominating investor inflows. But today there are concerns that cap weighting is leading to increased market concentration into just a handful of stocks, especially the Mag Seven, higher valuations, and increased risks for investors. How should an index investor think about this? Well, to help us unpack all of it and what it means for your portfolio, let’s bring in Rob Arnott, founder of Research Affiliates. The firm recently put out the Research Affiliates Growth Index, which is different from both cap-weighted ETFs, but also different from equal-weight ETFs.

Barry Ritholtz: So I’m fascinated by this index, which you guys put out. You’re tracking it live today. It’s not yet investible, but I assume there’ll be an ETF out sooner rather than later. Define Raffi. Define the Research Affiliates Growth Index. What are the weights based on? How do you think about alternatives to cap-weighted growth?

Rob Arnott: Sure. Let’s back up just a little bit and challenge one of the basic principles of modern investing and modern finance—the principle that there’s this binary duality of growth and value. If it’s not value, it’s growth. If it’s not growth, it’s value. Pardon me? Those are not one-dimensional. Those are two dimensions. You can have cheap and expensive. You can have fast and slow growing—two completely different dimensions. Our industry has had a fixation on this simple duality, where if it’s cheap, it’s value, and if it’s expensive, it’s growth. No, if it’s expensive, it’s expensive—it’s much simpler. If it’s growth, it’s growth.

Rob Arnott: So to my astonishment, looking back, cap weighted indexing goes back to the fifties as investible portfolios, and growth indexes to the late seventies, and investible growth strategies to the 1980s. Nobody has posed the question, why don’t we look at this fundamentally? Instead of based on valuations, nobody has asked the question, why don’t we create an index that chooses growth stocks based on how fast they’re growing and weights growth stocks based on how big their dollar contribution to the growth of the macro economy is? If you do that—if you choose companies that are growing rapidly and you weight them on the dollar magnitude of that growth—you wind up with an index that over the last 30 years would’ve outperformed Russell Growth by four and a half percent per annum going back almost 30 years.

Barry Ritholtz: Russell Growth, not Russell Value.

Rob Arnott: Correct.

Barry Ritholtz: So if that’s the case, what are we selecting on? It’s not just cap weight, I’m assuming. And I’ve read some of the research—you’re looking at increasing sales, increasing profits, increasing R&D. Explain what goes into the Raffi Growth Index.

Rob Arnott: Sure. Well, there’s an article coming out in the next issue of the Financial Analyst Journal that takes a deep dive. So anyone who’s got access to the FAJ, take a look. For the moment, you can also find it on SSRN—just look up “Arnott Fundamental Growth” and it’ll take you right there. Anyway, if you wanted a growth index that didn’t anchor on expensive stocks but anchored on fast growing companies, how would you instinctively choose to measure that growth? Sales, profits—those are the obvious choices. Slightly less obvious: most growth companies have R&D, and it’s a big enough part of their business that they break it out as a separate item in their P&L. So what about growth in R&D? Because if they’re shrinking their R&D budget, that’s a bad sign. So if you have three different growth rates—growth in sales, growth in profits, and growth in R&D spending—if R&D is available, use all three; if not, use two of the three. You average those growth rates and you’ve got a very good gauge of how fast the company is growing. If it’s growing rapidly enough to be in the top 25%, let’s use it.

Rob Arnott: Here’s a fun factoid: two of the Magnificent Seven don’t make the cut for the Raffi Growth Index.

Barry Ritholtz: Huh? Really? Which two?

Rob Arnott: Take a guess.

Barry Ritholtz: So who’s cutting way back on their R&D and not seeing increases in revenue? Apple and Amazon. I’m just spitballing.

Rob Arnott: You got one out of two.

Barry Ritholtz: So Apple is the first one. Amazon?

Rob Arnott: Amazon. Amazon and Microsoft. Both were growing incredibly fast in the 2010s and have been growing nicely in the 2020s, but not fast enough to make the cut. So they’re left out of the Raffi Growth Index.

Rob Arnott: The index is on Bloomberg—it has been since last March—and it’s already 13 percentage points in less than a year ahead of Russell Growth. So the idea works and it’s exciting. I wish I was on your show to announce that it’s an investible ETF or mutual fund. Not yet.

Barry Ritholtz: When it comes out, when it becomes investible, we’ll have you back. I want to ask you a question about dollar magnitude as opposed to percentage magnitude of growth. Every metric I see is almost always a percentage. You are looking at absolute dollars of growth. Explain the thinking behind this. How does it manifest in performance? How does it work?

Rob Arnott: We select based on percentage growth. You could have a huge company that has sales grow by a hundred billion in a year, and it’s only 10% growth—right? Or 5% growth. And if that’s the case, it’s not a particularly fast-growing company. So percentage growth is used to choose the companies. Now, the two biggest stocks in Raffi Growth are Nvidia and Apple. One has had stupendous growth from a low base. One has had good growth from a high base. Both have had percentage growth fast enough to make the cut. They are both a little over 10% of our index. Now, think what that means. If it’s a 10% weight, that means Nvidia has singularly, all by itself, been 10% of the sales or profit growth in the aggregate US economy.

Barry Ritholtz: Wow.

Rob Arnott: Huge. Apple has been 10% of the aggregate growth in sales or profits of the US economy. So by weighting companies in proportion to the dollar magnitude, you’re not going to introduce a bias toward frothy tiny companies that have had just a big percentage surge. You could have a tiny company that’s grown tenfold, and if you weight it by that tenfold growth, it’s going to get a huge weight—and it’s a tiny company. It might be a flash in the pan.

Barry Ritholtz: So in other words, the percentage gains matter, but so too do the real dollar gains.

Rob Arnott: Exactly right.

Barry Ritholtz: I understand that. So I’m curious about the volatility of this versus traditional cap weighting indexes. How does this compare? Are you getting better performance, but you have to live with a little more volatility?

Rob Arnott: The short answer is you have to live with a little bit more volatility, and you have to live with occasional periods when it will underperform. On average over the last 28 years, it adds four and a half percent a year, plus or minus 7%. So in just a normal disappointing year, it’s going to underperform by about two. In a normal, excellent year, it’s going to outperform by about 12. So since we launched last March, the 13% outperformance means this is a very typical, very normal good year. You have to be willing to take a little bit of volatility, but if you go back, you find that it wins about seven out of 10 years.

Barry Ritholtz: Wow. That’s pretty cool, to say the very least. So, since we’re talking about a lot of, not just large-cap companies, but companies with a substantial economic footprint, my assumption is there aren’t a whole lot of capacity or liquidity constraints. I’m assuming this can ramp up just like an S&P index or what have you.

Rob Arnott: Short answer to your question is, current AUM is zero, so there’s loads of capacity. Longer answer: An educated guess would be that it has about four times the turnover of the S&P, maybe five. So just on that alone, its capacity would be a fourth or a fifth of the S&P. It’s also tilted toward a particular category, not the whole broad market—so that would suggest another haircut. I think its capacity would be 10 to 20% of the S&P. Given that there’s about 15 trillion indexed to the S&P, that would give us something on the order of one and a half to 3 trillion as a capacity.

Barry Ritholtz: So plenty of capacity. Last question. I’ve been watching various narratives come into favor and then fade. We went through a whole blockchain crypto set of narratives. AI seems to be in the midst of its various narratives. When you think about the Research Affiliates Growth Index—the fundamental growth index—does the dominant narrative matter, or is it just redefining its constituents based on what is best working today, what is seeing the highest increases in revenue, profits, and research and development spending?

Rob Arnott: Well, between Raffi—the fundamental index, which has a stark value tilt—and Raffi Growth, which has a stark growth tilt, I like to think that we’re launching a revolution in indexing. I mean, the runway for this is huge. One other observation: we’re quantitative investors. We love testing things. Quantitative investors are addicted to data mining—go back historically and ask, what can I construct that’s worked? We don’t do that. The scientific method means you start with a hypothesis and you only use the data to test the hypothesis. Our hypothesis was: if you select companies on how fast they’re growing and weight them on the magnitude of their contribution to economic growth, this is an idea that might work pretty darn well. And lo and behold, it does. The back tests of Raffi when we launched it 20 years ago showed about 2% value add relative to the cap-weighted value. It’s added two to two and a half percent live for 20 years. So you don’t fall into the trap of creating a strategy that looks great in a back test and falls apart instantly.

Barry Ritholtz: I’m so glad you said that, because when do you ever see a bad back test? All back tests are great, that you—

Rob Arnott: I see lots of bad back tests.

Barry Ritholtz: Oh, no. I mean the ones that get—

Rob Arnott: And I would never promote it.

Barry Ritholtz: The back tests that get shared are the ones that—of course they are. Totally. And inherent in every back test is the concept that the future is going to look like the past. And very often we see the future does not look like the past. So the back tests fail. Many back tests that look great fail to perform in real life.

Rob Arnott: That’s exactly right. Because the world changes. And if you’re doing a back test to create a better back test—

Barry Ritholtz: Right. That’s right.

Rob Arnott: That’s the epitome of data mining, and it’s endemic in our business.

Barry Ritholtz: Absolutely. So Rob, when this comes out as an investible product—be it an ETF or an SMA or a mutual fund—come back, tell us about it.

Rob Arnott: I’m not sure it will, because I’m trying to keep it secret. It’s so good.

Barry Ritholtz: Well, you and Jim Simons—like, kick out all the outside investors and just keep your own money so it works well. So to wrap up: if you’re concerned about cap weight, if you’re concerned about market concentration or valuation, take a look at the Research Affiliates Growth Index. It’s not market cap weighted, it’s not yet investible, but I know Research Affiliates and I’m pretty confident there will be an ETF for you to put money into at some point in the future. I’m Barry Ritholtz. You’ve been listening to Bloomberg’s At the Money.

~~~

Find our entire music playlist for At the Money on Spotify.

 

The post ATM: Focusing on Growth (Not Market Cap) appeared first on The Big Picture.

How NOT to Invest’s 10 Most Important Ideas

 

 

The paperback of “How NOT to Invest” drops this week; to celebrate, this whole week I am running various stories and excerpts about the book…

The TL:dr summary of the key points might whet your appetite for all of the fun stories and anecedotes in the book. Enjoy!

 

The challenge in writing “How NOT to Invest” was organizing a large number of ideas, many of which were only loosely connected, into something coherent, understandable, and, most importantly, readable.

It took a while of playing around with the concepts, but eventually, I hit on a structure that I found enormously useful: I organized our biggest impediments to investing success into three broad categories: “Bad Ideas,” “Bad Numbers,” and “Bad Behavior.”

That insight greatly simplified my task of making the book both fun to read and helpful for anyone interested in investing.

Here is a broad overview of each of the 10 main sections, which can help you quickly grasp the key ideas in the book.

Bad Ideas:

1. Poor Advice: Why is there so much bad advice? The short answer is that we give too much credit to gurus who self-confidently predict the future despite overwhelming evidence that they can’t. We believe successful people in one sphere can easily transfer their skills to another – most of the time, they can’t. This is as true for professionals as it is for amateurs; it’s also true in music, film, sports, television, and economic and market forecasting.

2. Media Madness: Do we really need 24/7 financial advice for our investments we won’t draw on for decades? Why are we constantly prodded to take action now! when the best course for our long-term financial health is to do nothing? What does the endless stream of news, social media, TikToks, Tweets, magazines, and television do to our ability to make good decisions? How can we re-engineer our media consumption to make it more useful to our needs?

3. Sophistry: The Study of Bad Ideas: Investing is really the study of human decision-making. It is about the art of using imperfect information to make probabilistic assessments about an inherently unknowable future. This practice requires humility and the admission of how little we know about today and essentially nothing about tomorrow. Investing is simple but hard, and therein lies our challenge.

Bad Numbers:

4. Economic Innumeracy: Some individuals experience math anxiety, but it only takes a bit of insight to navigate the many ways numbers can mislead us. It boils down to context. We are too often swayed by recent events. We overlook what is invisible yet significant. We struggle to grasp compounding – it’s not instinctive. We evolved in an arithmetic world, so we are unprepared for the exponential math of finance.

5. Market Mayhem: As investors, we often rely on rules of thumb that fail us. We don’t fully understand the importance of long-term societal trends. We view valuation as a snapshot in time instead of recognizing how it evolves over a cycle, driven primarily by changes in investor psychology. Markets possess a duality of rationality and emotion, which can be perplexing; however, once we understand this, volatility and drawdowns become easier to accept.

6. Stock Shocks: Academic research and data overwhelmingly reveal that stock selection and market timing do not work. The vast majority of market gains come from ~1% of all stocks. It’s extremely difficult to identify these stocks in advance and even harder to avoid the other 99% of stocks. Our best strategy is to invest in all of them through a broad index. Some terrible trades are illustrative of this truth.

Bad Behavior:

7. Avoidable Mistakes: Everyone makes investing mistakes, and the wealthy and ultra-wealthy make even bigger ones. We don’t understand the relationship between risk and reward; we fail to see the benefits of diversification. Our unforced errors haunt our returns.

8. Emotional Decision-Making: We make spontaneous decisions for reasons unrelated to our portfolios. We mix politics with investing. We behave emotionally. We focus on outliers while ignoring the mundane. We exist in a happy little bubble of self-delusion, which is only popped in times of panic.

9. Cognitive Deficits: You’re human – unfortunately, that hurts your portfolio. Our brains evolved to keep us alive on the savannah, not to make risk/reward decisions in the capital markets. We are not particularly good at metacognition—the self-evaluation of our own skills. We can be misled by individuals whose skills in one area do not transfer to another. We prefer narratives over data. When facts contradict our beliefs, we tend to ignore those facts and reinforce our ideology. Our brains simply weren’t designed for this.

Good Advice:

10. This is the best advice I can offer:
A. Avoid mistakes (fewer unforced errors, be less stupid).
B. Recognize your advantages (and take advantage of them).
C. Create a financial plan (then stick to it). If you need help, find someone who is a fiduciary to work with.
D. Index (mostly). Own a broad set of low-cost equity indices for the best long-term results.
E Own bonds for income and to offset stock volatility. Primarily
Treasuries, investment-grade corporates, munis, and TIPs.
F. Be tax-aware. Consider direct indexing to reduce capital gains and
reduce concentrated positions.
G. Use a regret minimization strategy when sitting on outsized single position gains.
H. Be skeptical of all but the best alts (VC/PE/HF/PC). If you have access to the top decile, take advantage of it. Otherwise, exercise caution.
I. Spend your money intelligently: Buy time, experiences, and joy. Ignore the scolds.
J. Fail better. Understand what is and is NOT in your control.
K. Get rich: Here are the classic strategies to get rich in the markets, including how difficult each is and their likelihood of success.

 

 

 

Previously:
Adventures in Recording an Audio Book (May 5, 2026)

How NOT to Invest Paperback Arrives! (May 4, 2026)

 

~~~

 

The paperback of “How NOT to Investis out this week at AmazonBarnes & NobleBooks-A-MillionBookshopHudson, or wherever you buy your favorite books!

If you want to learn more about how the book was made, any related media appearances or background, get unique bonus material, or just ask a question, you can sign up here: HNTI at RitholtzWealth dot com.

 

The post <i>How NOT to Invest’s</i> 10 Most Important Ideas appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Wednesday AM Reads

My mid-week morning train WFH reads:

Microsoft’s new research finds an AI ‘paradox’ holding companies back. A new study of 20,000 artificial intelligence users in workplaces around the world concludes that the biggest barrier to getting real value from AI isn’t the technology or the workers themselves — it’s the ingrained culture of the organizations where they work. That “Transformation Paradox” is one of the central findings from Microsoft’s annual Work Trend Index, released Tuesday morning, which paints a picture of employees eager to reshape their jobs and organizations that aren’t really in a position to make it happen. (Geekwire)

One Calf Shows Why Record Beef Prices Still Aren’t Coming Down: Pressures at every stage of the 18-month supply chain are expected to keep prices high at least through year end. (Bloomberg Free) see also It’ll be years before Americans get used to higher prices — and politicians can’t just wait it out: Consumers will eventually adjust, but in the meantime, they’ll keep punishing leaders who don’t act. The reference-point reset on the price level is permanent damage to political incumbents — left or right. Voters anchor on what they remember. (G. Elliott Morris)

International Diversification Is Finally Paying Off: The dollar’s weakness has contributed to a long-awaited foreign-stock rally and reduced correlations with US equities—at least for now. After fifteen years of underperformance, ex-US is finally earning its keep. A useful reminder that ‘home country bias’ eventually gets a bill. (Morningstar)

An AltView on Private Real Estate: Valuations seem high, but never mind. LFG!!!!! Still, confoundingly, private RE remains a default option for many institutions—until you pause and reflect. Higher fees reduce returns—and pay for seriously good propaganda A skeptical, well-sourced look at private real estate marks versus reality. Read it before your next non-traded REIT pitch. (AltView)

‘Microshifting’ puts a new spin on 9-to-5 schedules: The remote-era cousin to flex time. Whether it’s productivity gain or attention spread thin depends entirely on whose calendar you read. (AP News)

China’s Big Bet on Wind Power Is Paying Off: An industrial policy of subsidies and import restrictions laid the foundations for China to become almost as dominant in wind turbines as in solar panels. While we argue about windmills causing cancer, Beijing is shipping turbines and printing electricity. The energy-transition gap keeps widening. (New York Times)

Why Your Best Ideas Aren’t Original: Derek Thompson on the recombinant nature of creativity. Originality is mostly cross-pollination wearing a top hat. (Derek Thompson) see also Better Than Human: Why Robots Will—And Must—Take Our Jobs (2012): Kevin Kelly’s 2012 Wired classic on automation is more relevant than ever. The argument that robots replacing human labor is not just inevitable but desirable hasn’t aged a day. The rote tasks of any information-intensive job can be automated. It doesn’t matter if you are a doctor, lawyer, architect, reporter, or even programmer: The robot takeover will be epic. (Wired)

Cannabis may make you remember things that never happened: Newer THC research on false-memory formation. Studies show THC can influence multiple stages of memory formation, shaping not just what we remember—but how accurately we remember it. As legalization expands, the basic neuroscience is finally catching up. (National Geographic)

Brain scans reveal 3 ADHD subtypes, including a more extreme form: Researchers identified a more severe presentation of the condition marked by emotional dysregulation. New imaging research argues ADHD isn’t one thing but at least three — with treatment implications. Useful science journalism, low on hype. (Washington Post)

Netflix’s ‘Lord of the Flies’ Adaptation Is a Harrowing Watch With a Stellar Young Cast: TV Review. Originally aired by the BBC before coming to Netflix in the U.S., the four-episode series doesn’t make any major changes to Golding’s potent allegory for the thin line separating civilization from savagery. A grimly faithful update of Golding. The young cast is the reason to watch — and the reason it’s hard to. (Variety)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business this past weekend with Lawrence Calcano, CEO and Chairman of iCapital, The firm is a fintech platform built to be the OS for alternative investments and complex products for financial advisors, wealth managers, and banks. The firm has over $1.2 trillion in active global assets on platform across 2,455 funds used by 123,ooo financial professionals.

 

Name changes as a bubble symptom

Source: Acadian

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

The post 10 Wednesday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

Adventures in Recording an Audio Book

 

 

I wanted to share a quick update as to what’s been keeping me occupied during the run up to the release of the new book.

The past few weeks have been pretty busy and full of surprises. We have been designing a dedicated website for the How Not to Invest book, and working with the team at Off Menu has been much more fun than I expected.

But the biggest surprise has been the book’s Audible version.

Harriman House asked me to record the audio version of the book. Like an idiot, I said, “Sure, why not? How hard can it be?”

Really, really hard.

Previously, I labored under the false impression that I knew how to both read and speak. As it turns out, I was wrong. The combination of the two is its own skill set. I drop the letter “S” at the end of words, I slur syllables, I put emphasis on the wrong words in a sentence, and I transpose adjacent words on an all too regular basis.

Then there is the modulation. I am not aware of my gain or volume. I speak too loudly, projecting to the back of the room (Wrong approach). To say nothing of my speed, which as a New Yawker is too fast (S L O W  D O W N).

Another surprise? They LIKE my awful NY accent (“it’s authentic”)

You sit in a 6 X 6 glass booth in front of a hypersensitive mic that picks up everything. Shifting your weight in the chair ruins a sentence. Moving your feet, touching your clothes, rolling up a sleeve, touching the glass tablet a smidge too hard — all killers.

This is before we get to the myriad of sounds the body produces beyond your control. I had no idea about the lip smacks, tongue clicks, the throat gurgles and burps that phlegms with noise that affect the quality of sound. The milk in your coffee makes your mouth too sticky. And the stomach! Even if you eat, it makes a panoply of noises, growls, whines, and complaints of which I was wholly unaware.

To say nothing about pronunciation: Proper names and cities are one issue, but even worse are the words that I read or write all the time but don’t necessarily speak aloud. I imagined I knew how to pronounce them: capitalization, iterative, capricious, conscientious, and so on. It’s really quite embarrassing to realize that I cannot properly pronounce half of my vocabulary.

Surprisingly, you cannot just grind away at this. Even with regular breaks, lots of hot tea, and water, you have at most 5 hours before your voice gives out, and your brain can no longer identify words on the page. It is immensely harder than I expected.

I am about 80% through the recording, which took four separate sessions, and I finally feel like I am getting the hang of it. I’d like to go back and rerecord all the prior chapters, but the director at MacMillan said it was great. (Never believe anything anyone with the title of “director” says.)

It’s been 15 years since I last wrote a book. I forgot all the work that happens when the writing process is over.

Hopefully, the website will be live this week. I am beginning to schedule all of the podcasts and Q&As to promote it. Reach out to Tina (tina.joell at harriman-house dot com) or Lucy (lucy.vincent at harriman-house dot com)  at Harriman House if you want to learn more.

~~~

The paperback is out today at AmazonBarnes & NobleBooks-A-MillionBookshopHudson, or wherever you buy your favorite books!

 

Previously:
How NOT to Invest Paperback Arrives! (May 4, 2026)

 

 

 

If you want to learn more about how the book was made, any related media appearances or background, get unique bonus material, or just ask a question, you can sign up here: HNTI -at-RitholtzWealth.com.

 

 

The post Adventures in Recording an Audio Book appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Tuesday AM Reads

My Two-for-Tuesday morning train reads:

Speak, Yuppie: Yuppies were called into being by the forces that were remaking the economy in the 1980s.Resurrecting the Y-word as the lens for our current meritocratic discontents — and asking what the urban professional class actually owes the rest of the country. (New York Times)

The Last Days of Butter Ridge: The Watsons were dairy farmers for generations, the rhythms of their lives defined by their cows. Until this spring. An elegy for one Pennsylvania dairy farm, told as a microcosm of the consolidation that’s quietly remaking American agriculture. (New York Times) see also Farm bankruptcies jumped 46% in 2025 as debt loads and costs rise: Chapter 12 filings climbed in the US. That’s a third straight increase annually as higher production costs and expanding borrowing put new pressure on farmers in 2026. A 46% jump in Chapter 12 filings is not a vibes story — it’s farmland deflation, input inflation, and the trade war all hitting at once. (Investigate Midwest / Farm Bureau)

Inside L.A.’s Fake Courtroom Show Machine: Byron Allen’s syndicated TV-court empire keeps churning out reality-judgment programming. The economics are weirder than the verdicts. Entertainment Studios might be one of the busiest production facilities in Los Angeles right now. I got the scoop on the courtroom shows it churns out — and a lead role in an episode. (LA Material)

Iran used Chinese spy satellite to target US bases: Leaked documents show IRGC secretly acquired system and used it to guide strikes during war in March. Iran secretly acquired a Chinese spy satellite to target US military bases across the Middle East. The China-Iran axis just became a lot more concrete — and a lot more dangerous. (Financial Times)

How YouTube Took Over the American Classroom: The Chromebook generation now learns from the algorithm by default. Teachers, administrators, and Google all benefit; the question is whether the kids do. Parents find their kids captive to the video streaming site on their school-issued devices; for one, it was 13,000 YouTube videos in three months. (Wall Street Journal)

Ukraine’s rapid rise as an anti-drone powerhouse: Necessity makes the best R&D lab. Kyiv’s counter-drone industry now exports back to NATO. In only four years after the Russian invasion, Ukraine went from being a country knocked back on its heels and scrambling for military aid to emerging as a leading provider of battlefield-tested counter-drone expertise and exporter of anti-drone weapons systems. How did this happen? Let’s find out. (New Atlas)

How science is finally making real progress in treating allergies—and what it means for you: After decades of limited options, allergy care is may no longer a one-size-fits-all treatment approach. (Nat Geo) see also About pain and other ailments: “What wound did ever heal but by degrees?” – Othello, William Shakespeare. (Andrea Petkovic)

Inside the Secret Group Chats Fueling MAGA’s Messaging Machine: Ashley St. Clair revealed the coordinated system shaping pro-Trump narratives online. (Slate)

Why Does Music in Science Fiction Sound Like That? Imagining the sound of other worlds has a long past—and persistent creative limits. On theremins, synths, and why we still hear ‘the future’ as eerie tones. A fun cultural-history detour (JSTOR Daily)

How did Banksy put up a statue in central London? The statue appeared on a plinth in Waterloo Place on Wednesday. A low-loader, some traffic cones and “the sort of dudes who can set up a Metallica concert in 24 hours” – this was all Banksy needed to install his latest artwork in central London. Under the cover of darkness, the street artist erected a statue on a plinth showing a besuited man walking forward, blinded by a flag covering his face. How did he do it? And what will happen next? The logistics of pulling off a Banksy stunt are arguably more impressive than the art itself. A short, fun read on guerrilla installation craft. (BBC)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business this past weekend with Lawrence Calcano, CEO and Chairman of iCapital, The firm is a fintech platform built to be the OS for alternative investments and complex products for financial advisors, wealth managers, and banks. The firm has over $1.2 trillion in active global assets on platform, across 2,455 funds used by 123,ooo financial professionals.

 

Globalization weakened when major powers started treating trade as a tool for coercion, deterrence, and social change

Source: Bruce Mehlman’s Age of Disruption

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

 

The post 10 Tuesday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

How NOT to Invest Paperback Arrives!

 

 

It’s here! The paperback of “How NOT to Invest” arrives (tomorrow). I am looking forward to being out and discussing the book in all of the usual places. I will share some excerpts this week, along with a few stories about how it came about.

The world of publishing has changed since “Bailout Nation” was published in 2009. I learned A LOT about how the publishing business pricing and sales now work.

Here are a few weird factoids:

-Hardcover books are a mostly United States phenomenon. The rest of the world gets the paperback on the same date (March 18, 2025) as the U.S. hardcover;

-Just 4% of books account for 60% of the profits. (Jennings); Only 2% sell more than 5,000. (Countercraft)

-The hardcover “release” price of $32.99 is an anchor number; almost all new books sell at modest discounts almost immediately;

-Paperback list price is $24.99; and it’s mostly at list price — $23.51 is the cheapest I have seen it so far;

-New hardcover books can be found at $20.54, or 38% off.

-99% of titles printed will never sell enough copies to recover all the costs associated with creating and publishing them. (Forbes)

-It is not a great business for authors as its all on spec; you have no idea what your sales might be; most finance/business books sell less than 5,000 copies.

-Authors make $5-10 per hour of writing, editing, etc. for a book with meh sales; okay sales puished that to $10-20/hour; decent numbers moves that to $25-50/hour. Good sales (50k-100k units) sends you to $100-200 per hour.

-Books become lucrative when they cross 100,000 total unit sales — and those books have  chance at selling for years into the future.

Here is the breakdown of sales by category (Hardback, International Paperback, Ebook, Audio) from the original publishing date through April 30, 2026 (pre-paperback):

 

 

~~~

 

Order the paperback today: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million, Bookshop, Hudson, or wherever you buy your favorite books!

 

 

The post <i>How NOT to Invest</i> Paperback Arrives! appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Monday AM Reads

My back-to-work morning train reads:

Sell in May and Go Away? Not This Year. The S&P 500 Just Had Its Best Month Since 2020. Don’t let sell in May’ spook you. Stocks have been on a tear. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA -0.31% has risen 0.9% this past week through midday Friday, while the S&P 500 index SPX +0.29% has gained 1.3% and the Nasdaq Composite COMP +0.89% is up 1.4%. The latter two, with gains of 10% and 15%, respectively, in April, posted their best months since 2020. (Barron’s)

• More Americans Are Millionaires, But They Don’t Feel Rich: About 1 in 6 households nationwide has a net worth above $1 million, and, because the occasional billionaire tilts the scale, the average American family has passed that seven-figure benchmark. The disconnect between wealth on paper and felt affluence keeps widening. Says a lot about asset-price inflation, lifestyle creep, and sentiment. (Washington Post) see also The Mathematical Reason Most People Never “Make It”: The uncomfortable truth about effort, outcome, and the math that connects them all. (The Write Path)

So, About That AI Bubble: The capex math behind the AI buildout is starting to wobble even at the leaders. Thanks to the rise of Claude Code and other AI agents, revenues are finally catching up to the hype. (The Atlantic)

Bizarre moment at Berkshire’s annual meeting spotlights cyber risk:  Kicking off the Q&A on Saturday morning, the spotlight went to a video where “Warren from Omaha” asked the first question. Hi. My name is Warren from Omaha. I’ve recently undergone, let’s call it, a significant change in role. And I have, well, let’s just say, a not insignificant portion of my net worth tied up in Berkshire stock… (TKer)

You Have No Idea How Much You Still Use BlackBerry: Once left for dead, the company is making money again with hidden software in 275 million cars. You use it every day without knowing it. (Wall Street Journal)

Surging HOA Fees Are Pushing Homeowners to the Brink: The hidden second mortgage no one underwrites for: HOA fees climbing faster than wages and faster than insurance premiums. Affordability has many tentacles. Monthly costs of homeowners associations have jumped 26% since 2019; owners can also be hit with special fees for large repairs (Wall Street Journal)

We Made Technology Easy to Use: That was a mistake: The problem isn’t usability itself; it’s what it has become—a design approach that replaced any need whatsoever to understand complex systems with the ability to thoughtlessly interact with them. (Slate)

The particles in the early Universe painted a different picture: Cosmology done patiently. Ethan Siegel walks through what the cosmic baby pictures actually reveal about matter, antimatter, and why we ended up here at all. Today, we have the Standard Model of particles with four fundamental forces governing them. But things weren’t always the way they are now. (Starts With A Bang)

Stephen Colbert Gets Ready to Hang It Up: The Late Show host walks toward the exit. Late-night TV’s slow-motion collapse continues, one host at a time. (New York Times) see also How a Deep State Bureaucrat Became Trump’s ‘Fake News’ Enforcer: Brendan Carr is pointing his MAGA flamethrower at Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert and the American news media (Businessweek)

Inside the Enhanced Games, Where Athletes Compete on Steroids. And Growth Hormones. And Adderall: Vanity Fair goes inside the doping-by-design Olympics. The future of sports may be more pharmacology than physiology — and the spectators don’t seem to mind. Most drugs are banned in the world of elite sports, but not here. In this competition—backed by Peter Thiel, Donald Trump Jr., and Saudi royalty—the athletes are guinea pigs. And if those backers have their way, you’re next. (Vanity Fair)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business this weekend with Lawrence Calcano, CEO and Chairman of iCapital, The firm is a fintech platform built to be the OS for alternative investments and complex products for financial advisors, wealth managers, and banks. The firm has over $1.2 trillion in active global assets on platform,  across 2,455 funds used by 123,ooo financial professionals.

 

More than half of all Polymarket “long shot” bets on military action pay off

Source: Ars Technica

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

The post 10 Monday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

Transcript: Lawrence Calcano, iCapital CEO



 

 

The transcript from this week’s, MiB: Lawrence Calcano, iCapital CEO, is below.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube (video), YouTube (audio), and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

~~~

Masters in Business — Lawrence Calcano of iCapital

Barry Ritholtz [00:00:16] This week on the podcast — wow, another great conversation. Lawrence Calcano has built iCapital since 2013 into what has become the dominant financial technology platform for alternative investments — for wealth managers, for advisors, for banks. I found this informative and quite interesting, and I think you will too. With no further ado, my discussion with iCapital’s CEO, Lawrence Calcano.

Lawrence Calcano [00:00:47] Thanks, Barry. It’s great to be here.

Barry Ritholtz [00:00:49] It’s great to have you. I’ve been looking forward to this for a while. Before we get into your time with iCapital, I want to work back through your career. You got a bachelor’s from Holy Cross and an MBA from Dartmouth. What was the original career plan?

Lawrence Calcano [00:01:09] I don’t know that I had one coming out of the gate. My dad was raised in an orphanage. His father died when he was two, so he was in an orphanage until he was 18. He went into the army, and then he came out and had to put himself through school. He didn’t have a regular path that would lead him to say to me as a teenager, “Here’s the way to do it.” So he was learning, and I was learning a little bit. I was a hockey player, and I got recruited to Holy Cross to play hockey. When I was there, I was an economics major and a theater minor — spent a lot of time doing theater. Then I went off to Morgan Stanley, and that was an interesting decision because I was in a professional play and had been asked to be in a second play. I had a bit of a career crisis early on in terms of what to do.

Barry Ritholtz [00:02:04] What was the first play?

Lawrence Calcano [00:02:05] It was called The Murder Room — a James Sherkey slapstick play. I played a young Texas millionaire who was engaged to a wealthy British woman. The play takes place at her father’s manor in the U.K. It was full of sight gags and jokes.

Barry Ritholtz [00:02:23] On Broadway or off?

Lawrence Calcano [00:02:25] Off Broadway. It was a lot of fun. I was offered a role as the father in The Diary of Anne Frank as a follow-up. At that point, I had also gotten an offer to go to Morgan Stanley, and I was in early trade-off mode. Ultimately, I figured I needed to eat — I had a lot of student loans — so I decided to go off into the world of finance.

Barry Ritholtz [00:02:47] You spent a few years at Morgan Stanley. What were you focused on while you were there?

Lawrence Calcano [00:02:51] I was in mortgage finance. We were helping S&Ls raise capital and do M&A, and also structuring some of the new products — Ginnie Mae securities, Fannie Mae securities, REMIC CMOs, things like that. A lot of structured-type investments.

Barry Ritholtz [00:03:07] This was late eighties, early nineties.

Lawrence Calcano [00:03:10] Late eighties — ’85 to ’88. Then I put in one application to business school. A good friend of mine who had been an analyst before me left and went off to Tuck. I visited him. I had an offer to stay on at Morgan as an associate, but decided that after my weekend at Tuck, that would be a good thing for me — to stop, reassess, figure out what I wanted to do. So I went off to Tuck.

Barry Ritholtz [00:03:38] I have to ask the obvious question. There’s a whole industry helping students figure out which is the right school for them — their first school, their safety schools, their reach. It’s a whole side industry. You applied to one MBA school.

Lawrence Calcano [00:03:53] I applied to one MBA school, and part of the reason is that I had accepted the job to become an associate. I went up on the visit, as I mentioned, and I just had this feeling that I was making the wrong decision. I loved Morgan — it was a fantastic firm — but I had this sense that maybe staying wasn’t the right thing to do, and going off to business school for two years would be the right decision. I loved it. It was an incredible two years. I’m on the board of Tuck.

Barry Ritholtz [00:04:25] But why apply to just one school if you’re deciding, “Hey, this path isn’t exactly how I want to get an MBA”? If you’re applying to Dartmouth, you could apply to Stern, to Columbia, to wherever. Why only one school?

Lawrence Calcano [00:04:42] I was just wrapped with it. I went up there — it’s a small school. When I was there, there were 160 or so in the class. It’s very focused on team — study groups, teamwork, and so forth. I just felt like it was the right place for me. I wasn’t too worried about it. If I didn’t get in, I was going to become an associate at Morgan Stanley, so it wasn’t like I was putting all my eggs in one basket.

Barry Ritholtz [00:05:12] Really interesting. How did you end up at Goldman Sachs? Was that while you were in business school or afterwards?

Lawrence Calcano [00:05:19] When I went to business school, I said to myself, “I’m going to think about all the different things I can do.” After about two months, I said, “I really did like finance a lot, and I want to go back there.” So I applied for summer internships and had a few offers.

Barry Ritholtz [00:05:36] More than one?

Lawrence Calcano [00:05:37] I did. I applied to all the summer internships, and obviously coming out of Morgan Stanley was helpful to my candidacy. I ended up getting an offer to be a summer associate at Goldman, which I took, and I was fortunate to have an offer to come back post-graduation, which I did. I spent a long time there and had a very good experience.

Barry Ritholtz [00:06:00] I’m curious — they’re such large and yet such different firms. What were the culture differences? What did you learn from each?

Lawrence Calcano [00:06:10] They are different — and there are a lot of different ways to skin the cat. Goldman had a very team-oriented culture, and I think Morgan Stanley does too, but at Goldman it’s right there in front of you. They’ve got 14 business principles, the first of which is “Our clients come first.” When you think about the things you learn early on in your career, there were several from that experience that really stuck with me — starting with business principle number one: your client’s interests always come first. And secondly, the importance of working as a team. My wife used to make fun of me because I would be in the office early, and if there were a party or some social event, I was always the last to leave. She would say to me, “Dude, you don’t have to actually be there till the end.” I just loved it so much. That camaraderie was powerful — smart from a business perspective, but mostly as a person, it was just fun being in that group.

Barry Ritholtz [00:07:18] You ended up co-leading Goldman’s global technology banking group. Was your focus on tech and financial technology deliberate, or did it evolve organically over time?

Lawrence Calcano [00:07:30] It just evolved. I was a generalist in corporate finance — it was then called Global Finance. My Morgan Stanley friends used to make fun of me and call it Intergalactic Finance, but it was Global Finance. I did that as a generalist for a couple of years, and then I was asked to start the East Coast tech group, which I did.

Barry Ritholtz [00:07:50] This was mid- to late nineties.

Lawrence Calcano [00:07:52] Early nineties. I was a third-year associate. It was late ’92, early ’93. We started to win some business, and as you recall, the internet started to really kick in with the Netscape IPO in ’95. We went from having a really good business to being on fire and drinking from a fire hose, given all that was going on with the internet.

Barry Ritholtz [00:08:21] Really fascinating. So you’re there right through the dot-com boom and bust — probably the most transformative technology of the last 30 years, at least before AI. What did that teach you about how capital markets operate, the way investors behave? That had to be a wildly instructive era.

Lawrence Calcano [00:08:42] It was wildly instructive, and it was all happening so quickly. As you recall, people were trying to figure out how to even value these companies. We had a great team — research, salespeople, bankers — we all worked really well together. We would make presentations to potential clients, and we’d talk about where we saw the market going apart from valuation. What did we think the adoption was going to look like? We had what then was viewed as wild assumptions about internet adoption. At the time, people were afraid to put their card numbers in a computer to buy anything. What happened was, for a while, the valuations kept pace and at times exceeded the hysteria. But even though the valuations came back at the end — mid ’01, the internet valuations came down; mid ’02, the comm-tech valuations came down — the reality of what was happening was even wilder than what our projections suggested. The adoption rate of the internet, and how it would fundamentally change people’s lives — the way they bought things, reviewed things, communicated — was so powerful. We saw that wave; we saw the communications-equipment wave. Now we’re obviously looking at a different wave. For me, there are several massive lessons. One is: you’re never safe. When I started, the big technology companies were called DEC and Wang. You remember those companies?

Barry Ritholtz [00:10:31] Oh, sure. Wang Computers — not Wang who owned Computer Associates. Wang Computers.

Lawrence Calcano [00:10:36] Wang Computers, not Charles Wang. That’s right. Those companies all got replaced — first by client-server, then a lot of the client-server companies got displaced by the internet, and now you’re seeing another interesting potential risk of displacement. One of the big things is: you cannot be afraid of new changes in technology waves. You’ve got to adopt. If you remember, when Amazon was growing, many of the bookstores and music stores — hope is not a strategy. You can’t hope it’s going to go away. You’ve got to adopt, even if it means changing your business, even if it means your business model has to change and maybe your margins aren’t going to be the same. You’ve got to adapt. The one thing I would say is this always takes a little longer than people think. The hype is always ahead of the reality. I think there’s a little of that right now. But AI is a massively important trend. We’re spending a lot of money on it, as are lots of companies — and you’ve got to be willing to adopt or run the risk of dying.

Barry Ritholtz [00:11:57] If there’s any lesson to be drawn from Elon Musk and Tesla, it’s that — or maybe the lesson comes from Amazon and Jeff Bezos: your margin is my opportunity. If you don’t pivot hard, they’re going to come along and eat your lunch. It happens so regularly.

Lawrence Calcano [00:12:19] Yeah.

Barry Ritholtz [00:12:19] The cycle never stops turning. So at what point did you decide, “Hey, I could do a lot with this technology and these various platforms”? What led you to move from Goldman to helping build and lead iCapital?

Lawrence Calcano [00:12:38] The real story is that I left in ’07. With one of my former partners, we were going to start a technology buyout fund. You may remember there were some events in ’07 and ’08 that were not too pleasant.

Barry Ritholtz [00:12:54] Don’t really recall. Everything’s kind of blurry.

Lawrence Calcano [00:12:55] It reminds me of the Leslie Nielsen joke in Airplane: “I picked a bad week to stop sniffing glue.” There was a little of that. We went off to start a private equity fund in the middle of the GFC.

Barry Ritholtz [00:13:06] You should have started a distressed asset fund. Probably perfect.

Lawrence Calcano [00:13:09] We weren’t smart enough to figure that out. So we put it on pause. It was a little bit of an unplanned cleansing in a sense — I coached my kids’ football and lacrosse teams. I worked from home, and it was actually very exciting. Did a few entrepreneurial things. Then with a great group of folks, we looked at what was happening in the independent space — a space you obviously know well. We saw a lot of firms, a lot of advisors, going off and starting their own firms. That trend was significant. There were hundreds of billions, or early trillions, of dollars now being managed by these independent RIAs. One of the things we looked at: almost by definition, the firms leaving were the firms with the largest asset bases and, generally speaking, the largest clients. Those clients typically invested in alts.

Barry Ritholtz [00:14:15] Meaning family offices, ultra-high-net-worth?

Lawrence Calcano [00:14:18] Think about some of your clients and the types of products they’re interested in buying. The wirehouses do — and still do — a phenomenal job providing outstanding products, support, and services. So when somebody leaves to be independent, they don’t have a platform. We felt we could create a platform to help advisors have access to alts in the right way. It’s different because at that moment in time, there was no technology. Investing in alts was a highly manual process.

Barry Ritholtz [00:14:53] To a large degree, for a lot of firms, it still is. The various funds don’t all play well together.

Lawrence Calcano [00:15:02] We’ll come back to this experience point, but we felt that firms that were independent really needed a technology chassis. They needed access to product, education, diligence — and a technology platform. We felt we could build that end-to-end — not just the diligence, not just fund sales, but the whole end-to-end solution. We started to build that out and realized it was something clients really needed. The other interesting thing we found out along the way — and I would say this was not a pivot as much as an expansion — we had assumed the wirehouses had absolutely everything they needed because they knew every manager in the world and had close relationships. What they didn’t really have at the time was much technology. They had a lot of people doing a great job serving advisors, but they didn’t have technology. We felt we could offer them a full technology platform. We rethought our role in the ecosystem to be one where we were going to serve advisors wherever and however they choose to practice. That’s allowed us to serve advisors at the wirehouses, advisors at RIAs and IBDs — and really help create a great experience for them and for their clients.

Barry Ritholtz [00:16:31] Coming up, we continue our conversation with Lawrence Calcano, CEO and Chairman of iCapital, discussing how he built the firm out to a trillion-dollar platform. I’m Barry Ritholtz, you’re listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

Barry Ritholtz [00:17:05] I’m Barry Ritholtz, you’re listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest this week is Lawrence Calcano. He is the chairman and chief executive officer of iCapital, where he has been helping to build the firm since 2013. They now service over a trillion dollars in client assets on behalf of advisors and other professionals. So how should a traditional 60/40 investor — thinking about some allocation to private equity or private credit — access your platform? Is it directly through their advisor? Tell us what the process is like.

Lawrence Calcano [00:17:41] It’s very much an advisor business. We are very focused on helping financial advisors serve their clients. It’s not a B2C model — it’s a B2B2C model. All the clients at iCapital are advisors and, obviously, the GPs trying to reach those advisors. For financial advisors who are large, we can build a whole white-label capability for them, so they can have an operating system to run their alts, structured investments, or annuities business — as well as the data aggregation they have to do for clients with information that’s everywhere. For advisors that are a little smaller and don’t have a persistent need, they can come to our marketplace and see a menu of hundreds of funds where they can avail themselves of those funds for their clients.

Barry Ritholtz [00:18:33] Really interesting. I like the description of iCapital as the world’s alternative investment marketplace for advisors and wealth managers. When you joined in 2013, what problem were you trying to solve?

Lawrence Calcano [00:18:51] We were trying to help the advisors who, as I mentioned, had left their homes to start their new businesses. We felt we could create for them an investment platform to allow them to service their clients consistent with how they had previously served them.

Barry Ritholtz [00:19:11] Part of the problem we’ve seen with alternatives over the years is they all seem to be a slightly different widget. They don’t all fit on a platform easily. You have to onboard the assets, align the capital, go through subscription documents and capital calls and custodian and performance reporting, and then all the analytics. They’re all a little different, and it’s a big lift. How have you addressed this issue at iCapital?

Lawrence Calcano [00:19:45] We think technology is essential to creating an experience that lets you deal with all of those things effectively, in a way that will encourage you to do the business with your clients where it makes sense. Everything from what happens before you make any decisions — education for you as an advisor on the asset class, education for your client, the tools to help build a portfolio, research to help you learn about funds — and once you’ve worked with a client and developed a portfolio perspective, tools to help you subscribe. Then automation to help you manage all the things that happen post-investment: capital calls, distributions, redemptions, transfers, reporting. We help create an experience that, as an advisor, will give you time back to serve and spend time with the client. We feel strongly about going through advisors because there’s so much about a client that an advisor will know that a platform will never really be able to know — what is their real feeling toward illiquidity? One of the issues the industry is dealing with today is illiquidity and people’s expectations about it. Advisors have a deeper perspective on how a client really feels. We want to be partnered with advisors in bringing the solution to market.

Barry Ritholtz [00:21:11] I’m glad you brought that up, because every time there’s some issue with illiquidity, it seems people don’t really understand what a lockup means. It should be fairly self-explanatory. We saw this a couple of years ago with BREIT — which part of “seven-year lockup” was confusing to you? I know what happened in 2022: the Fed raised rates, and people thought, “Hey, let’s get out of illiquid real estate before the marks reflect the reality of pricing relative to rates.” But that’s not how private investments work. How do you educate investors and their advisors as to what illiquidity means?

Lawrence Calcano [00:21:56] It is a journey. There’s no one answer. We spend a ton of time and energy on education, as do most of the GPs in our system. When you look at the documents around some of these funds, the liquidity rules are not on page 98 in small print — they’re on the front page. The reality is, people want to hear what they want to hear. These are illiquid investments, whether wrapped as a 3(c)(7) private fund — clearly illiquid — or in an evergreen wrapper, a registered fund. The underlying investments are still illiquid. Some are shorter duration than others. Private credit is shorter duration than private equity or real estate. But a private credit investment is still an illiquid investment. The problem is, when they get wrapped in a wrapper that says “you can sell up to or redeem up to 5%,” it confuses people. When the industry uses terms like “semi-liquid” — I don’t even know what that means.

Barry Ritholtz [00:23:25] I always think of that 5% gate as a widows-and-orphans clause. If somebody is suddenly no longer a suitable investor for this — say the person who made the investment passed away — now the wife and kids can get out of it. It shouldn’t be, “Oh, I could sell 5% a quarter for as long as I want.”

Lawrence Calcano [00:23:45] People should make these investments because they think they’re going to provide medium- to long-term positive impact in their portfolio. If you’re buying it to get a return this quarter or next quarter, it’s probably not the right investment. I’m not a financial advisor, but you need to buy these things with the right duration in mind — and that’s not a short one. The products do provide what I think of as liquidity features — opportunities, if things change in your life, to potentially redeem all of it if there’s not a big queue, or redeem up to 5% if you need to. That’s a flexibility and liquidity feature in the wrapper. But it doesn’t mean the product is liquid. People should invest thinking these products solve an investment need that’s medium to long term, not short term.

Barry Ritholtz [00:24:43] Let’s talk a little bit about demand for this product. We’ve seen, at least on the institutional side, flows into alts now exceeding a trillion dollars a year. As that scales, what are some of the challenges and bottlenecks for advisors to allocate more to privates?

Lawrence Calcano [00:25:02] Education is still a very important issue for advisors. A lot of the advisors in the mix have been doing it for a while, but there are still a lot who haven’t really gotten into these products yet. They’re going to need more education — that’s point one. Point two: how they invest is probably going to be different. A lot of advisors use models with respect to their liquid portfolios. We believe models will be a very important way people invest in alternatives — either models of just alternatives that get married to an otherwise liquid portfolio, or models that include both liquid and illiquid investments together. We have brought both types of products to market in partnerships with managers, as well as partnerships with the infrastructure players. Models will represent an important way advisors allocate client assets to alternatives.

Barry Ritholtz [00:26:06] I’ve been hearing more and more about interest overseas in a global alternatives platform. What do you think is driving the demand internationally versus what’s driving the demand here? Is it the same thing, or a different approach?

Lawrence Calcano [00:26:22] I think it’s the same thing. Adoption is a little bit behind U.S. adoption on our platform. In the alts space, we have over $65 billion of alternatives allocated from investors who live outside the United States. Half of our 20 offices are outside the U.S. We think it’s a really important growth area for the market and our business. A lot of the same things that drive advisors to introduce these products to clients — potential for incremental return, portfolio diversification — are the same things that drive international interest as well.

Barry Ritholtz [00:27:00] Let’s talk about end-to-end technology. I know this is more than just a menu of alternative funds. Tell us about your whole tech stack and what it provides for your clients.

Lawrence Calcano [00:27:16] A lot of what people want help with out of the gate is just how to build these portfolios. We talked about education, but how do you build the portfolio? How do you construct portfolios that match a client’s goals and objectives? We’ve built technology to do that, which includes alts, structured investments, and annuities, along with the liquid products they might need. One thing we’ve tried to do as an organization is not only build an end-to-end solution for alts, but do the same thing for structured investments — those are important products for advisors and clients — as well as annuities and insurance. What’s happening in the market today, which is a really interesting and ongoing trend, is that people are looking at the different types of wrappers — ETF wrappers, insurance wrappers — wrapped around things like hedge funds, private equity funds, credit funds. Being able to help advisors think about how the products should be structured, and how they could address client needs, is a really important part of what we’re doing. As I mentioned earlier, being able to automate the whole workflow is critical. I’ll make one other point as it relates to tech: one of the issues for the industry is around data management. We live in an ecosystem. When we first started the company, people used to say, “Oh, you guys are so disruptive.” I would politely correct them and say, “We’re not trying to be disruptive — we’re trying to be enabling.” There are a lot of infrastructure players we’re trying to help achieve their goals. We’re not trying to, like Amazon did to Borders, push them out of business. We’re trying to enable them to participate. One of the things that has to happen now in the industry is that all the different big constituents — administrators, transfer agents, custodians, firms like iCapital, advisors, GPs — have to work together to support clients. If we can get all of our systems to be better connected, things like tokenization and blockchain will help. It will end up paying huge dividends for the advisor and for the end client.

Barry Ritholtz [00:29:40] It’s funny — you mentioned “disruptive.” In 2013 there was nothing to disrupt. It was just a series of private offerings — no umbrella, no platform that pulled everything together.

Lawrence Calcano [00:29:55] That’s right. It was really a greenfield, which is why I say we’re enabling, not disruptive. The truth is, we’re still scratching the surface. BCG does a report every year on global wealth. Late in December they put out a report saying there’s $153 trillion in wealth owned by individuals. That’s a huge number. It rivals the size of the institutional market. In the U.S., the estimates are something like 2 to 2.5% allocated to alts. Outside the U.S., it’s even less. There’s a significant amount of wealth that’s going to be looking to build more sophisticated portfolios. Tools, technology, AI, tokenization — all of these have to evolve to create a great experience for advisors and clients to make the best decisions they can in the asset-allocation world.

Barry Ritholtz [00:30:58] Really interesting. Let’s stay with technology and innovation. You’ve built a number of fairly innovative technologies. You’ve bought, you’ve partnered. What’s the calculus? How do you decide whether you’re going to buy something, build something, or partner with a provider in the space to build out the platform?

Lawrence Calcano [00:31:19] It’s a combination of things. It’s time to market, it’s culture. Everything we’ve purchased — we’ve made 24 acquisitions — we’ve integrated. To me, that’s really important. If the goal is to provide an integrated solution for advisors and GPs, and you don’t integrate the things you buy, you’re not really doing that. Point one. Point two: if the people who join aren’t integrated, then it doesn’t work either. It’s not just about technology — it’s actually more about the people. So spending a lot of time on culture and trying to figure out how to bring things together — how do you create what I often refer to as “one iCapital” — is critical. As time has evolved — I was always very focused on culture from the start, when we were just a couple of people — it’s even more important than ever. It probably continues to occupy a very significant percentage of my time: getting people working together, putting people in the right seats to be successful, creating simple ideas they can rally around. Clients come first. What is it we need to do to help our clients succeed? And everything we do, we have to do together. Those two things are really unifying to our culture.

Barry Ritholtz [00:32:48] You did a big capital raise in 2025 that valued you at a substantial multibillion-dollar level. What are you looking at for further raises? How are you deploying that capital? Is it just build, build, build, until eventually you become the biggest player in the space?

Lawrence Calcano [00:33:09] We’ve announced a couple of acquisitions since then. We’re about to close our acquisition of Hector. Hector provides an EAP for annuities — that helps us complete our annuities vertical. M&A will continue to be an important use of cash, and we continue to actively look at what’s out there. We continue to grow organically, but the model is self-financing, so we don’t need outside capital to run our business. I’m a believer, though — given the duration of these assets, when we talk to financial advisors, they have to know we’re financed to be around for a long time. So we’ve tried to finance ourselves in a way that our partners can look at us and say, “They’re going to be here to support me.” A lot of it is just making sure we have a strong balance sheet to support our clients.

Barry Ritholtz [00:34:04] It’s always interesting when we see these big private entities go public in the alternative and private space. How do you think about that? How do you think about the Blackstones, Carlyles, and Apollos of the world?

Lawrence Calcano [00:34:24] Going public allows firms to have access to capital, leverage their growth, and provide secondary markets for employees and other investors. For us, we spend very little time actually thinking about that, other than wanting to make sure we run the company with the discipline of a public company. We get our quarterly reports turned around, our monthly reports by the second day of every month, quarterly reports by the third day of the new quarter. We turn the year-end results in a fair period of time as well. The process of being public creates some disciplines that we want to make sure we have. But it’s not something we’re focused on. There are two sides to every coin. When you go public and the stock is going up, everyone’s really excited and happy. When you have massive corrections, which we live through pretty regularly, and the stock goes down — now you’ve got to deal with the opposite of motivation. There’s concern. You’ve got to make sure your employees aren’t staring at the — I was going to say Tron, but only you and I would know what that means.

Barry Ritholtz [00:35:51] It’s so funny — I had a buddy whose firm got bought by Yahoo in ’96. He was telling me in ’99, people were just refreshing the screen constantly. That’s all they did.

Lawrence Calcano [00:36:02] There’s an element to it that’s super unproductive. That’s why we’re in no rush to do that. As I said, we want to make sure we have a strong balance sheet, strong capital structure. Equity is an important part of our compensation for everybody. A hundred percent of the employees have stock at iCapital. To me, that’s a big cultural point in terms of bringing people together. But if you’re going to provide that as part of someone’s compensation, there needs to be some opportunity for people to get some liquidity. Over our history, we’ve provided four such opportunities, and as long as we stay private, we’ll continue to find a way. It’s limited, of course, but we try to find a way for people to get some liquidity from their equity holdings.

Barry Ritholtz [00:36:50] Really interesting. Coming up, we continue our conversation with Lawrence Calcano, CEO and Chairman of iCapital, discussing how he built the firm out to a trillion-dollar platform. I’m Barry Ritholtz, you’re listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

Barry Ritholtz [00:37:25] I am Barry Ritholtz. You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest this week is Lawrence Calcano. He is the chairman and chief executive officer of iCapital, where he has been helping to build the firm since 2013. They now service over a trillion dollars in client assets on behalf of advisors and other professionals. Let’s talk about what’s going on today. Obviously, alts have been very hot for the past 10 years or so, increasingly so. They’ve been in the news for other reasons the past few months. But let’s talk about the underlying structural shift before we get to any of the noisy stuff. How are advisors and individuals changing the way they access alternative structured investments, annuities — any of the products on your platform?

Lawrence Calcano [00:38:17] If I can make some divisions by wealth: the wealthier clients have tended to buy the private funds. Perhaps they’ll invest directly if they can make a $20 million investment, or if not — if they’re a $1 million or $5 million investor — they usually come through a vehicle that we’ll set up for them to access. We aggregate that capital and we look like one large investor to the institution, to the GP. So the wealthier clients tend to invest through those private vehicles across the board. From a platform perspective, the way you’ve got to build these portfolios — if you have a credit and equity portfolio, debt and equity, and you want to build them or rebalance them, you can do that with a few mouse clicks. With alts, if you target an allocation of 10, 15, or 20%, you’ve got to build that.

Barry Ritholtz [00:39:16] It takes time, in other words.

Lawrence Calcano [00:39:17] To allocate, it takes time. You need to make sure you have persistent access to quality product across all the strategies — equity, credit, real estate, infrastructure, hedge funds. Our platform tries to provide that. The wealthy individual will probably use private funds to build it. The accredited investor will probably use registered funds. They’ll either buy individual registered funds, or they might buy registered funds wrapped together. That’s something we’re seeing a lot of the market do today — wrapping three, four, or five different funds together to give people exposure to maybe a growth-oriented product, where there’s a buyout, growth, and venture component, or maybe an income-oriented product, where you’ve got credit and real estate, or maybe multi-asset, where you’ve got all of that wrapped together. Every individual has a different set of needs and objectives. It’s important that there’s a lot of flexibility in the system so people can allocate precisely what’s important to a given client.

Barry Ritholtz [00:40:29] What you’re describing sounds fundamentally different from how portfolios used to be constructed. How significant are these changes compared to — I won’t even mention the nineties — but the 2010s?

Lawrence Calcano [00:40:44] What’s happened, which is a good thing, is clients have access to more products to potentially meet their needs. That doesn’t mean these products are right for everybody — they’re probably not right for a lot of people. But for those that have the ability to make these investments and the willingness to tolerate the illiquidity we talked about before, these products provide more opportunities to build the right portfolio. If you think about the public markets — you’ve spent a lot of time thinking about them — there are probably 150,000 private companies with EBITDA or revenues greater than $100 million. There are 4,000 to 5,000 public companies. The private markets are so much larger than the public markets. And as you know, the public markets are increasingly dominated by a small number of stocks. Accessing the private markets gives you access to a much broader set of possible investments. Not right for everybody, but for those looking to build more involved portfolios, there’s an opportunity that the private markets enable you to pursue that you just don’t get by buying just stocks and bonds.

Barry Ritholtz [00:42:04] That’s one compelling reason — you can access companies you wouldn’t get otherwise. What are some of the other reasons? Why else should an investor or advisor who is alt-curious explore this space?

Lawrence Calcano [00:42:20] I am decidedly not trying to sell anybody on anything, just to be clear. But it’s like anything else in life — we’re all better off when we have more choices. Those choices can be bucketed to make it easier to go through the decision-making process. If you have more choices to build a portfolio where you’re seeking longer-dated returns and more portfolio diversification, these products provide more flexibility to create a diverse portfolio and potentially have a higher-returning portfolio. Ultimately, every person has to make a decision they can live with on the products.

Barry Ritholtz [00:43:06] During the 2010s, we had 0% interest rates and QE and all that fun Fed stuff. I think that’s where private credit really caught the attention of a lot of investors and advisors. “What do you mean my bond portfolio is yielding 3%?” All right — you’re trading off a little liquidity and you get 5, 6, 7, 8%. That’s pretty attractive relative to the alternatives. You’ve got to deal with a K-1, which nobody likes, but your accountant will deal with it for double the yield you’re getting in traditional treasuries or corporates. How has that moved from straight-up credit to private infrastructure, private equity, private real estate? It seems like that whole world has opened up dramatically.

Lawrence Calcano [00:44:02] It has. A lot of the private credit investments you can look at are floating rate, so they still can provide opportunities for excess return — real alpha — because of the way they float. It was interesting in the early part of this century coming out of COVID. You had people very actively buying private credit. When interest rates went up to 5%, some people were earning 10 to 12% on their private credit investments. They were then looking not at private credit versus public credit, but at private credit at 10 to 12% versus private equity, which is shorter duration — was that the right mix for them? Right now, we’re seeing a lot more people focusing on equity as well. But you definitely had a period of time where private credit was very, very attractive. Where we sit today, a lot of people are anxious to understand what the underlying credit quality is in these products. There are certainly disruptive forces from AI that we’ve talked about — the industry talks about every single day. It’s not clear to me that the existing portfolios are in bad shape. I actually think the portfolios are likely in better shape than people think. I’ve spent a lot of time talking to various managers — both equity and credit — about what they’re seeing in terms of adoption. While everybody is working on how to implement AI, it’s not like existing software vendors are seeing their businesses dry up. That’s not happening. A lot of those are the borrowers of these private credit assets. We’ll need to get more information over the next several quarters on where we are with private credit. But my guess is the portfolios are in a lot better shape than people think.

Barry Ritholtz [00:46:07] We could talk about navigating some of the headlines, but you mentioned AI, and now I’m legally obligated to ask you a question. What are the most meaningful near-term applications of artificial intelligence within the alternative space? Is it administration and workflow? Identifying better or less great funds? All of the back office? How is iCapital using AI in your business?

Lawrence Calcano [00:46:39] We have pilots going on across what we do. If you take our tech stack, there are really two ways to think about it. One is the tech we use to empower clients and the technology that clients engage with. The second is the technology we use to run our business. There are big applications in both. To give a couple of examples: when a manager comes to iCapital to raise a fund, we build a sub-doc. AI can build that sub-doc for us very quickly. When a client comes to our marketplace and wants to describe what they’re interested in — they hit toggles and go through a few steps to inform us — AI can do that really quickly. There are also a number of ways we collect data. One of the services we provide to clients is helping advisors aggregate client data, because a client might have held-away data in lots of different places that you want to aggregate so you can present a holistic picture. How we get that data, how we retrieve it, how we extract data from documents, and how we reassemble it — AI can drive a lot of that. The applications of AI are significant across our entire platform.

Barry Ritholtz [00:48:06] Really interesting. We’ve been dancing around some of the negative headlines. How are you helping advisors navigate that these days? For the most part, it’s a relatively small handful of companies. Everybody knows their names. But the cockroach theory has people waiting for the next GFC to unroll. We haven’t really seen much like that.

Lawrence Calcano [00:48:30] This is such a smaller magnitude than the GFC. I don’t think we’re anywhere near those types of concerns. We are big believers in communications. I made a point earlier about how the ecosystem needs to work together — it really needs to work together now in terms of helping people understand what’s happening. Generally speaking, the asset management industry has to be even more transparent today than ever before. That’s a good thing going forward. Alternative asset managers probably need to be more transparent to clients over time. Being out in front of clients, helping them understand the landscape and what’s going on, has been a big part of how we’ve spent a lot of time. One of the things we’re doing now is trying to bring the industry together — getting people on the GP side working together. Transparency, information, educational material — not promotional material, but educational material — to try to help create a better and deeper level of understanding about these products.

Barry Ritholtz [00:49:48] I’ve been hearing a little bit about convergence lately between public and private markets. You are known as dealing with the private side. Do you ever see a day where private and public both end up on your platform — completely full wallet share?

Lawrence Calcano [00:50:06] For us, we’re really focused on helping people have very successful journeys with their private investments, structured notes, annuities, etc. The way in which we will interact with the public markets will be more around the model portfolios I talked about — collaborating and partnering with the GPs and the public-company people who either provide models or have public investments, and helping to create model packages for investors to invest holistically in a portfolio. That’s probably how we’ll play the public space — in partnership and in concert with people who are experts in that area.

Barry Ritholtz [00:50:52] Makes a lot of sense. Last question before our speed round: given all these major technological shifts, what do you think is going to redefine asset management going forward? You mentioned tokenization. We hear about blockchain, AI, data analytics. What’s the next big thing?

Lawrence Calcano [00:51:11] The next biggest thing is the deep implementation of those technologies. We’re still scratching the surface. Tokenization hasn’t even hit private markets in any meaningful way yet. AI — same. There’s significant application of those technologies that will be meaningful. For financial advisors, this reminds me of 10 years ago when all the robos were coming out. There was this big debate: robo-advisors versus human advisors. I always thought that was a false choice. The best answer for clients was a great financial advisor who leveraged technology to create an incredible experience for their clients. The same is true today. The best financial advisors are not going to be afraid of technology. They’re going to adopt it and embrace it to create an incredible client experience. That’s how I think the market will evolve in a constructive and positive way.

Barry Ritholtz [00:52:15] All right, let’s jump into our speed round. These are quick answers so people get a flavor of who you are. Starting with: who were your mentors? Who helped shape your career?

Lawrence Calcano [00:52:26] I had a lot of mentors growing up. I always tried to watch people and see what they did. There were several senior people at Goldman Sachs that I learned things from. I remember the head of investment banking once told me, when I was a young associate, “The loneliest job on the planet is the CEO’s job. So if you want to be a successful investment banker, make a friend of the CEO and be a sounding board, and you’ll have a good career.” That was pretty good advice. The other piece of advice I got from another senior partner in banking was: you always have to be intellectually honest. A lot of people are afraid to be intellectually honest because they’re calculating what’s happening in the room versus being true to what they think and saying it — not being afraid to do that. I’ve tried to really do that in all the things I’ve done as I’ve grown in my career.

Barry Ritholtz [00:53:26] Really interesting. What are you reading these days? What are some of your favorite books?

Lawrence Calcano [00:53:31] I’m overwhelmed with work reading right now between what we’re doing in our business and client stuff. I’m reading a lot on AI. The honest thing is, I keep reading new AI books — about AI and technology, AI in general. There are a lot of incredibly positive things about AI. There are a lot of risks with AI, and a couple of the books I’ve read recently were really focusing on the risks — around unemployment, around control and governance. When you get to natural intelligence, when AI reaches sort of human intelligence, what happens then? There’s a really exciting and bright side, and there’s a dark side that’s going to need a lot of governance to protect all of us.

Barry Ritholtz [00:54:21] Lots of guardrails. If you don’t have time to read, do you have time to listen to podcasts or watch anything? What are you streaming?

Lawrence Calcano [00:54:29] I’m married 33 years. Honestly, my wife and I are just binge-watching a series of shows. We’ve gone through the whole Yellowstone saga, the prequels and —

Barry Ritholtz [00:54:41] Did you get to Landman yet?

Lawrence Calcano [00:54:43] We finished Landman. Love Landman. Looking forward to watching the Peaky Blinders movie, which we haven’t seen. When I get home, when I put the work down, my wife and I tend to watch shows together.

Barry Ritholtz [00:54:56] That sounds fun. Our final two questions. What sort of advice would you give to a recent college grad interested in a career in alternatives or investing?

Lawrence Calcano [00:55:07] I would say: the world owes you nothing. This is what I’ve said to my kids — I have several who have graduated college — and what I’d say to anyone at iCapital generally: the world owes you nothing. What you get in this life is a function of what you work for. People need to be flexible. They need to have an open attitude. At a given level of intelligence, attitude makes the difference. It’s funny — we all went through this work-from-home during COVID, and now some people want to continue to work remotely. When you asked about mentors, a lot of the mentorship I got — that a lot of people got — was just being in the office, watching people, listening to people. How do they act? How do they treat other people? How do they behave in meetings? That stuff is super valuable.

Barry Ritholtz [00:56:09] Osmosis learning. You don’t get that when you’re sitting in your apartment on a Zoom screen.

Lawrence Calcano [00:56:17] A Zoom screen is one-dimensional. Life is multidimensional. So I’m a huge — some people in the company love this, some don’t — but I’m a huge work-from-the-office person, because I believe that multidimensional experience is much more powerful, and it’s better for every individual from a learning perspective.

Barry Ritholtz [00:56:34] I couldn’t agree more, although I do love those Fridays from home.

Lawrence Calcano [00:56:48] No doubt.

Barry Ritholtz [00:56:52] And final question — what do you know about the world of alternatives and investing in technology today that might have been useful back in the mid-1980s when you were first getting started?

Lawrence Calcano [00:56:52] I’ll generalize that a little bit: patience. I was young and just hard-charging, as a lot of us are. But you have to be patient. It’s funny — we sponsor golfers, and I watch golf. I love golf. You see people bogey holes. Jon Rahm won the Masters a few years ago. He double-bogeyed the first hole. I remember I was standing there watching it and I was like, “It’s over.” It wasn’t over. It was one hole. It reminds me — my youngest daughter graduated Dartmouth a few years ago, and Roger Federer was the speaker.

Barry Ritholtz [00:57:35] I recall that speech. It was really amazing coming from him.

Lawrence Calcano [00:57:40] It was an amazing speech. One of the things he said is that in his career he’s won — I may get the numbers slightly off — 80% of his matches and 54% of his points. His point was: it’s just a point. I think that’s a huge lesson. It’s just a point. It happened. You lost it, you won it, you lost it. You move on. I think that’s great advice — and advice I wish I had had when I was younger.

Barry Ritholtz [00:58:09] Lawrence, this has been absolutely fabulous. Thank you for being so generous with your time. We have been speaking with Lawrence Calcano, CEO and Chairman of iCapital. If you enjoyed this conversation, check out any of the 650 we’ve done over the past 12 years. You can find those at iTunes, Apple, Spotify, Bloomberg — wherever you get your favorite podcast. I would be remiss if I didn’t thank the crack team that helps put these conversations together each week. Alexis Noriega is my video producer. Sean Russo is my researcher. Anna Luke is my podcast producer. I’m Barry Ritholtz. You’ve been watching Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

~~~

 

 

The post Transcript: Lawrence Calcano, iCapital CEO appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Sunday Reads

Avert your eyes! My Sunday morning look at incompetency, corruption and policy failures:

An oligarch’s dystopian scheme to discredit journalism with AI: Judd Legum on a coordinated, AI-powered campaign to flood the zone with fake reporting and erode trust in the real thing. Disinformation industrialized. Peter Thiel goes full super villain, funding a startup launched this month will use an “AI jury” to “subject the media’s claims to systematic investigation and judgment.” That same system of AI adjudication assigns a numerical value — the so-called “Honor Index” score — grading the trustworthiness of individual reporters. And for a starting price of $2,000, anyone can pay for the company to review and adjudicate complaints they may have about a news outlet or reporter.  (Popular Information)

• Your Power Tools Got Worse on Purpose: How a Hong Kong conglomerate bought Milwaukee, DeWalt, and Craftsman — and what happened to quality after the acquisitions. (Worse on Purpose) see also Your Glasses Got Worse on Purpose: The consolidation playbook comes for eyewear too. (Worse on Purpose)

Has De-Dollarization Begun?: US President Donald Trump’s military adventures, attacks on long-standing allies, and dismantling of institutions like USAID are eroding the trust on which the dollar’s global primacy ultimately rests. The world’s reserve currency may have already begun its long, slow decline. Kaushik Basu argues the dollar’s reserve status is more vulnerable than the consensus assumes — and Washington is doing its best to test the thesis. A worthwhile contrarian read. (Project Syndicate)

• A Vital System of Atlantic Ocean Currents Is Weakening and Closer to Collapse Than Thought: New research moves up the timeline on AMOC’s potential breakdown. (CNN)

New Lawsuit: Do We Have a Right to Know We’re Being Surveilled? Scarsdale, New York didn’t want to share its plans for Flock surveillance cameras. A new lawsuit brought by NYCLU goes after Flock’s license-plate camera dragnet. The basic civil-liberties question — can a public agency hide where it’s watching from? — is overdue for a court answer. (Drop Site News) see also Your ISP Is Watching You. Here’s How a VPN Can Help: A practical primer on what your internet provider sees and what a VPN actually fixes (and doesn’t). Useful if your privacy hygiene is overdue. (PC Magazine)

New disclosures reveal how DOGE actually worked: Depositions offer insight into what Elon Musk’s group was up to, including its heavy use of ChatGPT. Members describe a club-like atmosphere in which they pushed for grant and contract cancellations across the government with little oversight. (Washington Post)

Bad Connection: Uncovering Global Telecom Exploitation by Covert Surveillance Actors. Two sophisticated telecom surveillance campaigns for the first time, links real-world attack traffic to mobile operator signalling infrastructure. The findings expose how suspected commercial surveillance vendors (CSVs) exploit the global telecom interconnect ecosystem, leverage private operator networks, and conduct covert location tracking operations that can persist undetected for years. (Citizen Lab) see also They Built a Legendary Privacy Tool. Now They’re Sworn Enemies: There’s a lot of love all over the world for GrapheneOS, the gold standard of mobile security. There’s very little love between the two guys at the center of its history. (Wired)

• How Did the U.S. Run Out of Missiles in Iran?: $800B a year in defense spending, and the stockpile still came up short. (Doomsday Scenario)

The Inside Story of Five Days That Remade the Supreme Court: Secret memos obtained by The New York Times illuminate the origins of the court’s now-routine “shadow docket” rulings on presidential power. Adam Liptak reconstructs the emergence of the Supreme Court’s shadow docket. (New York Times) see also Two justices, one quest: push to gut Voting Rights Act reaches final act: Latest ruling is culmination of Justices Roberts and Alito’s campaign to slowly but surely strangle efforts to protect democratic rights of Black and other minority Americans The Guardian traces a decade-long Roberts/Alito project to dismantle Section 2. The arc was never accidental. The latest ruling is culmination of Justices Roberts and Alito’s campaign to slowly but surely strangle efforts to protect democratic rights of Black and other minority Americans (The Guardian)

The Mind of a Minotaur Displaying Picasso’s dark side: If Picasso were alive today, I have to imagine he would have been canceled by now. Some tried to do it post-hoc, on the heels of 2018’s #MeToo reckoning, and failed. The Brooklyn Museum’s 2023 exhibition It’s Pablo-matic, curated by comedian Hannah Gadsby, notoriously attempted a grand reappraisal of the man in light of his mistreatment of women, urging other museums to reconsider how they present him. (The Point)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business this weekend with Lawrence Calcano, CEO and Chairman of iCapital, The firm is a fintech platform built to be the OS for alternative investments and complex products for financial advisors, wealth managers, and banks. The firm has over $1.2 trillion in active global assets on platform, across 2,455 funds used by 123,ooo financial professionals.

 

Oil Hits Wartime High Above $120 a Barrel 

Source: New York Times

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

~~~

To learn how these reads are assembled each day, please see this.

 

The post 10 Sunday Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

MiB: Lawrence Calcano, iCapital CEO



 

 

This week, I speak with Lawrence Calcano, chairman and CEO of iCapital, about how he helped build the company into one of the globe’s leading platforms for alternative investments for wealth managers, advisors, bankers, and other financial professionals.

On iCapital’s fintech platform is over a $1 trillion in client funds across 2,100 funds managed on behalf of 118,000 financial professionals.

A transcript of our conversation is available here Sunday.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube (video), YouTube (audio), and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business next week with Joe McLean, Managing Partner at MAI Capital Management, where he leads firm’s Sports & Entertainment division, serving 100s of pro athletes/entertainers across NBA, NFL, MLB, PGA + NASCAR. His path to finance runs directly through the locker room as a 4-year NCAA Division 1 player at U of Arizona. Dubbed the athlete’s “Money Whisperer” by the New York Times, he is known for his non-negotiable 60% savings mandate for clients.

 

 

 

Current Reading/Favorite Books

 

 

 

The post MiB: Lawrence Calcano, iCapital CEO appeared first on The Big Picture.

10 Weekend Reads

The weekend is here! Pour yourself a mug of Danish Blend coffee, grab a seat outside, and get ready for our longer-form weekend reads:

The Un-Fuckening: Stop talking about AI like this: Stop it with the rageposting. Stop it with the performative fearmongering. Stop behaving like little brats getting a high from scaring each other in the locker room, desperate to prove they belong. There is no shortage of voices predicting some version of social collapse. Their vision of the future somehow always involves most people getting left behind. (Dadalogue)

•  The Strait of Hormuz is today’s energy chokepoint. China is tomorrow’s.: A Big Think piece arguing the geographic chokepoints that matter for energy security are shifting east. As the global economy moves beyond oil, the strategic importance of the world’s most critical hydrocarbon chokepoint is likely to decline rapidly. (Big Think)

The 30 Greatest Living American Songwriters: The NYT Magazine’s definitive ranking — guaranteed to start arguments, end friendships, and generate more heat than light. That’s the point. (New York Times)

The Old Guard: Confronting America’s gerontocratic crisis: Between 1960 and 1990, the median age of members of Congress was in the early fifties. In the three decades that followed, the median surpassed sixty. Among the effects of this trend has been the on-­the-­job senility or death (or both) of those who govern us. (Harper’s Magazine)

11 Discoveries That Changed My Worldview: Have you ever taken a pause and considered the events, learnings, and forks in the road that have constructed and built your current worldview? (The Great Simplification)

The Social Edge of Intelligence: An argument that what we call ‘intelligence’ is mostly social cognition wearing a lab coat. Worth a read if you think IQ debates miss the point. AI doesn’t really “think.” Rather, it remembers how we thought together. And we’re about to stop giving it anything worth remembering. (The Ideas Letter)

•  U.S. Mint Buys Drug Cartel Gold and Sells It as ‘American’: A jaw-dropping investigation into how cartel-laundered Colombian gold ends up in U.S. coins. The supply chain rinses cleaner than the money. As prices for the precious metal soar, the industry’s guardrails have broken down. (New York Times)

•  What Can We Gain by Losing Infinity?: Mathematicians are quietly exploring physics without infinities — and finding the framework holds up. A satisfying primer on a deep idea. Ultrafinitism, a philosophy that rejects the infinite, has long been dismissed as mathematical heresy. But it is also producing new insights in math and beyond. (Quanta Magazine)

•  An Oral History of the Harvard Lampoon, the College Magazine That Remade Comedy: A look back at the 150-year-old college humor magazine whose alums went on to write Conan, SNL, The Simpsons, and a generation’s worth of American comedy. (Washington Post)

What to Watch For at the 2026 Kentucky Derby: We found the 5 most important rules of thumb when trying to figure out which horse will wear the roses. (Neil’s Substack)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business this weekend with Lawrence Calcano, CEO and Chairman of iCapital, The firm is a fintech platform built to be the OS for alternative investments and complex products for financial advisors, wealth managers, and banks. The firm has over $1.2 trillion in active global assets on platform,  across 2,455 funds used by 123,ooo financial professionals.

 

SpaceX Is Going Public. Why a Tesla Merger Could Be Musk’s Real Endgame

Source: Barron’s

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

~~~

To learn how these reads are assembled each day, please see this.

 

The post 10 Weekend Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

Regime Change at the FOMC

 

 

No, not that regime change.

Swapping out Kevin Walsh for Jerome Powell will not matter much — to either inflation narrowly or the economy more broadly.

This is because the dominant theme in government policies – the one driving the overall economy – is less susceptible to FOMC action in this regime than in the last. The entire post-financial crisis era (aka the 2010s) was driven by monetary policy. The era during and after the pandemic was characterized primarily by fiscal policy.

This is why the Fed was unable to get inflation up to 2% in the 2010s; it’s also why the Fed has had such difficulty getting inflation down to 2% in the 2020s.

What made the GFC unique was the over-reliance on monetary policy. Following the credit-driven collapse of the financial crisis, the biggest risk to the economy was DE-Flation, that gravitational pull toward zero. Between ZIRP (2008 to 2015) and $3.6 trillion in quantitative easing (QE),1 Disinflation was the driver. PCE stayed under 2%, as soft job creation and wage gains kept consumer spending modest and inflation expectations anchored.

Congress abandoned its usual playbook and let the FOMC do all the heavy lifting. The post-GFC era was notable for a lack of fiscal stimulus – along with (not coincidentally) weak job and wage numbers.

QE and ZIRP primarily benefited capital, not labor; stock and bond holders did well; real estate owners saw a recovery, followed by price gains. Creditworthy individuals and healthy companies each refinanced their outstanding debt at low cost.

Credit was cheap, and Capital was practically free.

That changed during the pandemic era and beyond (2020–Present) as the opposite regime took hold. As Jerome Powell put it last August at Jackson Hole, “As it turned out, the idea of an intentional, moderate inflation overshoot had proved irrelevant.”

The foolish GFC fiscal austerity – including sequester and debt ceiling fights – was replaced with the largest peacetime fiscal expansion in U.S. history. This, combined with Powell’s “intentional overshoot,” helped to drive inflation up to 9%. Congress failed to engage on the fiscal side following the GFC; they wildly overcompensated for this error during the pandemic).2

The chart above is from Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid – he points out that  the change from lower inflation was inevitable:

“Whilst many thought we were in a permanent period of lower inflation, the post-pandemic era has shattered many of those assumptions. We had already passed peak globalisation and the point of most supportive demographics by the mid to late 2010s, foreshadowing future inflationary pressures. But then the record peacetime stimulus of the Covid period, combined with significant supply chain disruptions, accelerated this trend. Then a war-related energy spike in 2022 further cemented inflation, and in 2026 we’re faced with another energy shock from the Iran conflict.”

Forget Warsh for Powell; swapping Fiscal for Monetary policy is the regime change that matters.

 

 

 

Previously:
2% Inflation Target is Silly (July 26, 2023)

The Fed is Finished* * (…Raising Rates) (November 1, 2023)

Inflation Comes Down Despite the Fed (January 12, 2023)

Why Is the Fed Always Late to the Party? (October 7, 2022)

Five Ways the Fed’s Deflation Playbook Could Be Improved (Businessweek, August 18, 2023)

Who Is to Blame for Inflation, 1-15 (June 28, 2022)

 

 

__________

1. To say nothing of Operation Twist, and the use of forward guidance as a policy tool…

2. Raise your hand if you think you know why!

 

 

 

__________

1. To say nothing of Operation Twist, and the use of forward guidance as a policy tool…

2. Raise your hand if you think you know why!

 

The post Regime Change at the FOMC appeared first on The Big Picture.