Sunday November 22, 2009 9:58 PM ET
SmartMoney
Comments

Story Comments

RSS RSS | Join the SmartMoney Twitter Community
An Interview With Burton Malkiel
The author of "A Random Walk Down Wall Street" recommends index funds.
 
You must be registered to use comments. Please login
BackType
Comments From Around the Web
Posted by: Robert Miller on CARPE DIEM

the odds that all those investors who were mentored by Graham posted market-beating returns over long time frames by chance seems vanishingly slim to me. No, Buffett didn't pick "all those investors." He picked only those who were winners out of tens of thousands of people employing Graham's techniques. There are no odds because they were a deterministic, not a random draw. Buffett didn't talk about those mentored by Graham who lost everything they owned. BTW, Buffett's crystal ball seems a bit hazy lately. Companies can have a negative enterprise value when they are flush with cash. Stock prices reflect the expected profits of the firm in perpetuity. The two are not at all related and are therefore not contradictory under the assumption of EMH. I'm well aware of the theory of secular bear markets, but that doesn't mean we're in one. We're in the aftermath of a particularly nasty bursted bubble which was fueled by government policy which is continuing. I am rather pessimistic about...(Read more of this comment)

Posted by: David on CARPE DIEM

Yet at the same time, Malkiel (in a Barrons article) argues for investing China. Shouldn't a proponent of index investing believe that allocation of one's portfolio to geographical regions should be based only on the market capitalization of each of those regions? Why would it be easier to beat the market on geographies than on individual equities?

Posted by: DaveinHackensack on CARPE DIEM

I disagree with you that Buffett was "full of manure" in his Columbia speech: the odds that all those investors who were mentored by Graham posted market-beating returns over long time frames by chance seems vanishingly slim to me. But set that aside for a moment. Let me address another problem I have with the efficient market theory: how does it explain stocks trading at negative enterprise values? At the beginning of this year, I spotted a number of these, and this makes no sense intuitively from a market efficiency perspective. Reasonable people can disagree on what a particular profitable business is worth -- you might think it's worth some multiple of its average earnings over the last few years; I might think it's worth $1. But how is it reasonable for such a business to be worth, say, -$2,000,000? That's the implication of valuing a profitable company for (often, several million dollars) less than its net cash, and the market did that for a number of stocks earlier this year. ...(Read more of this comment)

Posted by: Robert Miller on CARPE DIEM

Dave: Buffett's tale is full of manure. When he began talking about cancer I was reminded of real-world cases of "cancer clusters" which have been falsely attributed to chemicals, nuclear reactors, electric wires, cell phone towers, etc. The existence of "clusters" of winning callers sharing some familial, geographic, academic, military, philosophical or other qualities is a statistical certainty given a large enough number of coin flips. The fallacy is called fundamental attribution error. Observers see a cluster of winners and seek a common attribute. The search is not methodical or comprehensive. They seek attributes consistent with some theory which explains the outcome and when they think they've found it, they stop looking. In this case the outcome is successful stock picks and the attribute is a particular book, school, mentor, author, or technique. There are few observations of the LOSERS with similar or identical attributes. If losers are observed, the gullible observer wh...(Read more of this comment)

Posted by: DaveinHackensack on CARPE DIEM

Buffett refuted Robert Miller's coin-flip analogy twenty five years ago in his Columbia speech, "The Superinvestors of Graham-and-Doddsville": I want to present to you a group of investors who have, year in and year out, beaten the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index. The hypothesis that they do this by pure chance is at least worth examining. Crucial to this examination is the fact that these winners were all well known to me and pre-identified as superior investors, the most recent identification occurring over fifteen years ago. Absent this condition - that is, if I had just recently searched among thousands of records to select a few names for you this morning -- I would advise you to stop reading right here. I should add that all of these records have been audited. And I should further add that I have known many of those who have invested with these managers, and the checks received by those participants over the years have matched the stated records. Before we begin this exam...(Read more of this comment)

Posted by: Robert Miller's boyfriend on CARPE DIEM

I agree with Robert, of course. Wall Street is full of poltroons who want your money. Robert is even right in his coin toss analogy.

Posted by: Robert Miller on CARPE DIEM

This is great advice. So many people think there are great stock pickers out there but an extensive body of research shows that fund managers do not have sustained returns which "beat the market." Remember years ago when someone pitted a dart thrown at the financial pages of the WSJ against the top fund managers? The dart method performed better than most of them. Many people forget though, that the closer they get to retirement they have to rebalance their funds from risky to riskless assets. While long-term gains in an Index Fund are pretty secure, as we've recently seen, short-run events can wipe out a lifetime of gains very quickly. I believe that there are some inefficiencies in the stock market, but I highly doubt that anyone can successfully exploit them net of fees and taxes. The "winners" who so proudly walk around with their chests puffed up were just lucky, not smart. If everyone flipped coins, a small proportion of us would call the correct outcome of the flip considera...(Read more of this comment)

Advertisements