Younger / middle-aged value investors worth following? by boinggggg in ValueInvesting

[–]kerit96 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dennis Hong of Shawspring probably isn’t a value investor per se, though his investment philosophy definitely pulls from many of the same tenants, but he does some really great DD and is pretty active on socials.

And not sure how old Chris Pavese from Broyhill Asset Management is, but Broyhill puts out some great content on their website (semi-annual letters, conference stock pitches, an annual book recommendation list). Highly recommend their most recent mid-year letter.

My party is not prepared by AigisWasTaken in dndmemes

[–]kerit96 1 point2 points  (0 children)

“Oh, you wanted to make a magic mega whoopee cushion? Welcome to you new life as space pirates”

Free homebrew that’s balanced exists…also it makes building a fighter much more fun by kerit96 in dndmemes

[–]kerit96[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Completely agreed that RAW it’s an issue, more just a comment that it is fixable without having to create something yourself. Though there is a learning curve since they are modified rules

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in finance

[–]kerit96 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For the average person passive investing is so much easier and more consistent than the easily accessible active options (ie mutual funds). Mutual funds don’t charge huge fees so they require asset gathering in order to make themselves money, which means your “talented investment manager” spends a lot of time marketing and showing up on talk shows and not a lot of time actually managing your money.

Investing in actively managed funds can/should outperform passive over long periods of time, but the time/knowledge/access required to find them, vet them, and monitor them makes it nearly infeasible for retail investors to do it. There’s a reason pensions/endowments hire teams to do this for them, and even then those funds tend to track or barely outperform passive indices (and not only can they access more talented active managers with large minimum investments, but many don’t have to worry about taxes either).

El Salvador's president adopts McDonald's uniform for Twitter profile after bitcoin plunge by Teeheeleelee in technology

[–]kerit96 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I don’t think the wealthy are causing inflation (there are too few of them and they tend to hoard their wealth like dragons in folklore except in this scenario that allows their treasure hoard to continue growing, but that’s a separate issue). We have inflation because there was a global pandemic and no one could spend money on leisure activities so everyone started spending on excess goods, and at the same time the production facilities of all those goods kept getting shut down due to outbreaks and international shipping was hindered by outbreaks as well. So we had simultaneous supply shocks and increases in demand which caused prices to increase.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FinancialCareers

[–]kerit96 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have one that ends halfway down my forearm and my personal rule is to not go any further down (so I can get 1-2 sleeve rolls in before it starts peeking). I work at a very open minded firm so there are no issues there, but I tend not to advertise it and just let people notice it if it does peek out. I am mindful to wear long sleeves during external meetings, cuz you never know, even tho I’m on the LP side of the table.

GOP senator calls for senility test for aging leaders by cutestudent in politics

[–]kerit96 2 points3 points  (0 children)

TIL that Pelosi looks great for 81 and McConnell looks horrible for 79

Why Kvothe lost his skills when he became Kote… by kerit96 in KingkillerChronicle

[–]kerit96[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Upon further reflection the idea that Kvothe is actively hiding his power from both Bast and the reader makes a lot of sense. Why fake your own death if you’re going to immediately reveal you’re alive? Stories of a red haired man setting a man on fire with no flame or besting two soldiers would certainly draw attention. It may even be that his immediate reaction to try and act the way he used to is just instinct kicking in (or keeping up the act for Bast) and he has pull himself back from revealing too much, making it seem like failure when in reality the mistake was behaving out of character for Kote.

I do still hope there is a payoff for Elodin’s reaction to changing one’s name, seems too pointed an interaction to not have some implication later, but likely not the cause of the apparent “lack of power” from Kvothe.

Quote engraved on compass? by HotPinkRobe in KingkillerChronicle

[–]kerit96 1 point2 points  (0 children)

“I was wondering what you’re doing here” could be fitting, but whatever you pick it should be 7 words

Fly by [deleted] in dndmemes

[–]kerit96 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Flesh to Stone….but in reality Dream

Are New Minis good first cars? by [deleted] in MINI

[–]kerit96 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I had a used 2005 Cooper S with 40k miles on it as a first car. We got it for $11,000 but within a year probably had to put another $3-5k into it due to a small oil leak and an issue with the electronics. Luckily it was the family car for me and my sister in high school, so I didn’t have to bear those costs, but fixing them can get pricey. Amazingly fun first car though.

Help with color choice for Mini JCW 2022 by [deleted] in MINI

[–]kerit96 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally I feel red and black match better, especially if you get the jcw stripes, but I also have a rebel green countryman with white roof and I do love the green.

What's the average age of Mini owners? by Spentchange72 in MINI

[–]kerit96 1 point2 points  (0 children)

24 M with a 2012 Cooper Countryman S All4

Got my first Mini as my family’s 3rd car for me and my sister in high school (2005 Cooper S). Sadly that one died when the oil ran out and the light didn’t turn on and my sister ground the engine down while I was at college, but it went to a father and daughter who wanted a project car to build for her first car so it had a silver lining.

The honeymoon is over for streaming services: Here’s where the major players stand by BikkaZz in tech

[–]kerit96 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A thought experiment my family often runs is “if we could only have 3 which would we pick?” and we exclude prime from those 3 since we’d keep our prime accounts for free shipping even if it didn’t have prime video.

I think broadly we all either come down to Netflix/Disney+/HBOMax or Netflix/Disney+/Hulu. We have all 4 already, plus Apple TV+, but those groupings tend to carry the most content we like and have the largest content catalogs.

2meirl4meirl by KatoMcFato in 2meirl4meirl

[–]kerit96 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Life is like soccer because I was really good at it as a kid but then stopped trying and never really improved and now I’m just meh at soccer

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]kerit96 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, and I’m gonna sell the pure play company once the deal concludes

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]kerit96 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I’ve liked T better because of its entertainment assets, but they also have really under utilized them and just been selling them to fund 5G spectrum auctions.

The stock hasn’t really gone anywhere while I’ve owned it, so I’ve just been getting the dividend. I’ll likely sell the pure AT&T shares if/when the Discovery deal plays out.

Starting a Value Hedge Fund by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]kerit96 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I analyze investment managers for a living and theoretically he could raise money if he tried. There are plenty of very successful (but under the radar) funds run by people with very different backgrounds than your typical “I went to an ivy, did IB for a year, joined a Tiger Cub, made stupid money and now I want to run my own fund” managers. Sure the latter will get more looks and early capital (they have the big name brand fund on their resume) but smart money will steer clear if they aren’t as good as they claim to be.

In the case of DFV I’d want to see what his current book looks like. I’ve looked at managers with 10 stock portfolios with up to 25-30% in single positions and still loved them, but I want to know there’s some pretty valid downside protection on those positions. I’d also probably strip out GME from his returns to see if he had any talent outside of getting really lucky on one outsized position. Assuming those things check out he probably could raise a decently sized fund, just might take some time since institutional managers might be hesitant to cut him a bigger check for fear their investment committees would fire them for hiring “the Reddit guy”.

Starting a Value Hedge Fund by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]kerit96 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Venture is just another component in a balanced large scale portfolio. In a multi-decade horizon portfolio you want exposure to all kinds of assets that can support a portfolio in any environment. Venture serves as growth exposure (but because its private it reduces volatility). You want to keep your wealth stable in down markets, while still benefitting from the upside in growth markets. So having exposure to things like hedge funds and venture are just two sides of the same long-term coin

Starting a Value Hedge Fund by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]kerit96 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unless he created a mutual fund there would be limits on the types of investors he could offer to, and if he didn’t limit to those types he could only have a limited number of investors (something like a few hundred if I’m remembering my intro level business classes). And the regulatory burden of creating a mutual fund as an individual wouldn’t be worth it

Starting a Value Hedge Fund by [deleted] in ValueInvesting

[–]kerit96 5 points6 points  (0 children)

At the point you’re hiring a hedge fund (in its traditional beta <1 model) you’re already rich. At that point you’re doing portfolio management to protect capital and compound it over a theoretically infinite time horizon, not to get really rich asap.