The decline made economies grow, businesses thrive, assets more valuable, and borrowing cheaper, creating an easy period for asset owners and borrowers.
It created risky behavior and moral hazard, making the financial system and economy more precarious.
He believes it's decent with moderate interest rates, but not as favorable for leveraged investing as the previous low-rate period.
Because it's not knowable and almost nobody can achieve superior knowledge, making it difficult to outsmart the market.
It describes his investment career at Oaktree Capital, emphasizing consistent positive outcomes with occasional exceptional results and no catastrophic failures.
Both are meritocracies with a blend of aggressiveness and defensiveness, and both involve a degree of luck and the need for a game plan.
He believes risk is inescapable and necessary for financial success, but one must be aware of the potential consequences.
Diversification protects against what you don't know, but you should concentrate on what you do know to potentially outperform.
In times of crisis, all correlations go to one, meaning everything moves together, making diversification less effective.
1) Stick to an average strategy over the long run. 2) Stop obsessing over macro forecasting. 3) Focus on what really matters: long-term growth and repayment.
Warren Buffett doesn’t need investment advice. But he does listen to fellow billionaire and co-founder of Oaktree Capital Howard Marks. Here, the legendary investor shares his insights on the market, the psychology of investing, why low interest rates can lead to unwise behavior, and why “always good, sometimes great, never terrible” describes his remarkable career.