A Man for All Markets

Very interesting book. I learned a lot new things from the origin of card counting, beating the roulette with the first wearable device (with Claude Shannon!!!), beating the markets based on managing risk, etc. The author is truly remarkable.

It is interesting how Edward moved from Chemistry to Maths due to problems with fairness in this Chemistry “career”. And still he didnt find much fairness in Las Vegas, and even worse in the stock market. He was driven to solve problems people didnt think had a solution. And was impressive how he taught himself. And likely he was a pioneer in computer-based trading. He is against the low latency trading. He mentions many times Warren Buffet and his investment style. As well, Citadel, as his continuation about the management of risk. It seems he didnt look for the sort term profit but going long, looking for mis-priced stocks.

I am happy he doesnt believe in the efficient market neither.

The Places in Between

This is the story of crossing by foot Northern Afghanistan after USA invasion. Not the best moment. The author had already travelled by Iran, Nepal, Pakistan but this one was really meaningful. You dont read many travel books about Afghanistan. He is trying to follow the path of the emperor Babur.

The most interesting part of the book is his interaction with the locals, with the good and bad things, and how different “tribes” he finds in his journey. His relationship with the dog “Babur”.

And what a disaster was the invasion. Western culture/democrazy can’t be imposed. EU had to go through several centuries of wars to notice that democracy/union was the less evil. Let’s see if we get back to the old habits…

The Panama Papers

This is a book that makes you to reconsider how you look at the “elite”. For me, paying taxes is one of the most fundamental part of a working democracy, and it is equal to trust and equality. And yes, we all want to pay less taxes. But if you knew everybody paid their part and everything was used properly, and you could live decently (imagine: good education, good health system, good infrastructure, etc) I doubt you wouldn’t do it.

With the Panama Papers, you can see how powerful is Mr Money. Everybody has their hands dirty: politicians (Kirchers-Argentina, Camerons-UK, Iceland, Russia, Ukraine, Spain, China, etc), banks (nearly all German banks), conglomerates (Siemens), artists, sports (FIFA, Messi…) And this is just the tip of the iceberg. Amazon, Apple, M$, etc have billions in tax heavens. This remind me to a similar book regarding off-shore investments where it said there are trillions of $ hidden from us.

I am still surprised this is still “legal” and main player/countries are still allowing it. If USA doesnt crack it down, then, there is still something “worth it” for some people there…. Looks like a lost battle. But still worth it. I hope you dont ever again cry for Messi, CR or any other “star”. Very likely they dont deserve you.

Still, I am happy there are publications like this. Well done for the authors.

Hidden Potential

This is an ebook about personal performance. You dont need the genetics, attend the best school, come from money, etc to be great. In many areas, the most successful individual were not prodigies. Although we have a lot of literature highlighting being a prodigy was the source of everything else. The book gives plenty of examples to contradice that. And this is a great example: Raging Rooks

With the right opportunity and motivation to learn, anyone can build the skills to achieve greater things. Potential is not a matter of where you start, but of how far you travel. The “soft” skill/qualities underrated: proactive, prosocial, disciplined, determined are more important that maths or reading skills.

Character: It is a learned capacity to live by your principles. It is how you show up on a hard day. Being comfortable being uncomfortable.

Character skills predict and produce success in life.

Then you need to the scaffolding to maintain those character skills when things dont go well (it will happen) Those structures will sustain your motivation. He puts the example of the Chilean mining accident in 2010 about the importance of “teaming”. It shows why intelligence agencies failed in early 2000 attacks

Finally, the book talks about building systems to expand opportunity. And the best example is the Finnish education system.

I will have to read it again (in paper)