Saturday, November 23, 2024

Book review: Pause for reflection

. 2024. Jaime Lester. Publication of Columbia Business School.

offers an ideal balance between light and serious reading. It is direct, entertaining and expressive, and suggests concrete ways to enhance the best way we approach every thing we try. The creator presents mental models in an accessible, entertaining way that proves to be each memorable and immediately useful.

Jaime Lester is a hedge fund industry veteran and adjunct professor at Columbia Business School. He has divided this powerful book into two sections – Part I: Key Concepts and Part II: Key Frameworks – with an interlude. He suggests that we take things slowly somewhat than quickly to get them done rigorously. To be human is to be imperfect. With this awareness, we are able to counteract impetuous actions and biases. Consistency and the overused word “mindfulness” should reduce erroneous outcomes.

The identification of lots of the cognitive biases discussed by Lester has its roots in investment research, particularly the discipline of behavioral economics, which emerged within the Nineteen Seventies. According to behavioral economics, human psychology and emotions cause fluctuations in security prices which can be often determined irrationally. The rise of robo-advisors is usually described as an answer to those biases, designed to force investors to evaluate their risk, determine essentially the most appropriate allocation, and persist with this system.

At the top of every section in Part I, the creator offers some exercises to try. They include excellent thought-provoking exercises on topics corresponding to investing and science, economics and business, and probability and statistics. I discovered these reinforced the concepts discussed and allowed me to judge my very own biases. Some of the exercises also test basic math skills. Try them and you may find the teachings are value mastering. Have a calculator handy in case your mental math is somewhat rusty.

If your eyes are too drained to read, or you would like to give Lester’s excellent narration a break, take a have a look at the charming illustrations by Albertus Ang Hartono, also often known as Everwinter, which reinforce the book’s intent. You will get the purpose! Look on the illustration on p. 127 within the context of efficient learning to know this reference to marine mammals.

In Part II of the book, Lester is unreserved in his views on necessary investment frameworks. Most readers will wholeheartedly agree along with his five keys to successful investing, but will challenge his recommendations, corresponding to ignoring the worth of the investment portfolio, establishing automatic savings and investment options, and avoiding all investment products with high fees.

Micromanaging or over-controlling assets is unnecessary, but often reviewing asset allocation and holdings does. Setting up automatic savings and investment options must include some flexibility when it comes to risk tolerance and liquidity requirements, which might change while you least expect it. “Set it and forget it” doesn’t meet the needs of responsible, prudent investors. Finally, fees of a big amount is likely to be justified based on the investment product and its objectives. One wouldn’t expect to pay much in any respect for a passive exchange-traded fund, but one would expect a big fee for a dedicated hedge fund.

Lester reiterates and emphasizes that “” (p. 160). Many investment advisor clients still have to employ skilled managers, or they’re unqualified or time-poor and admit they need the assistance of knowledgeable. The investment skilled advises and converses with the investor, provides a forum for investment concerns, manages expectations, and provides regular performance reports to make sure that the investment program is on course and achieving the agreed goal.

But fear not! Lester brings the book to a very optimistic conclusion by addressing the framework of happiness. His focus is on profession happiness, which develops into happiness. He encourages all of us, young and old, to spend less time and energy on activities which can be unlikely to make us joyful, including the seek for the proper job. The creator urges to spend more time and energy on activities which can be prone to make us joyful.

My favorite Lester recipe for maximizing happiness is to take care of appropriate context and perspective by incorporating mindfulness and gratitude into on a regular basis life. When I pause to reflect on why that is so necessary, I turn to our universal pandemic experience and its consequences for every of us, personally and professionally. I feel Lester has hit the nail on the pinnacle along with his unique book that touches the minds and hearts of investment professionals – a book we must always all read.

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