Quote of the Week:
“Success is the sum of small efforts—repeated day in and day out.” — Robert Collier
Thinking smarter and making better decisions
Investing, in certain ways, is a problem-solving exercise: it uses a human-based tool (thinking) to solve a problem (growth of capital) under a variety of constraints (risk). It may sound kind of silly, but to get really good at investing, above all else, I’ve come to believe you have to consistently refine the main tool: your thought process. This is immensely hard, especially as we get older, and tend to become more rigid in our views and biases. “We’re blind to our blindness,” Daniel Kahneman, the pioneering behavioral psychologist, once said. “We have very little idea of how little we know.”
Kahneman, the Nobel-prize-winning academic and author, died this week at age 90. In 2012, Scientific American published a short excerpt of his most famous book, Thinking, Fast and Slow, that I often revisit. This book was profoundly influential on me. It cast doubt over the rationality of the human thought process, revealed our tendency towards cognitive biases, explored the concept of “blind spots” that lead to poor judgement, examined the science behind “intuition,” and much more. Most importantly, the book inspired millions of us readers to reconsider what we think we know—and how we use that (often incorrect) information to make decisions.
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How to start the next trillion-dollar company
The investor and Y Combinator founder Paul Graham recently gave a speech [published here as an essay] to high schoolers, but the ideas he explores will resonate for anyone interested in technology or investing. Graham’s advice centers on the idea of pursuing a core curiosity—while actively wandering in unrelated fields to generate inspiration.
For example, Graham writes that Steve Jobs would likely never have created such a design-centric product were it not for his early passion in calligraphy: “No one, including him, thought that this would help him in his career,” Graham writes. “He was just doing it because he was interested in it. But it turned out to help him a lot. The computer that made Apple really big, the Macintosh, came out at just the moment when computers got powerful enough to make letters like the ones in printed books instead of the computery-looking letters you see in 8 bit games.” He continues:
A few more links I enjoyed:
*Special note*
This week, we launched Nightpixels: A data-driven visual blog about investing, business, and technology. It’s compiled and published by Nightview Capital analyst Cameron Tierney. (Follow him on X).
I’ll be including a link to Nightpixels at the bottom of each edition to The Nightcrawler going forward. I think you’ll enjoy it.
Nightpixels Issue #1: Visualizing the brain, NVIDIA-powered robots, and more.
This information should not be considered a recommendation to purchase or sell any particular security. It should not be assumed that any of the investments or strategies referenced were or will be profitable, or that investment recommendations or decisions we make in the future will be profitable. This article contains links to 3rd party websites and is used for informational purposes only. This does not constitute as an endorsement of any kind. While Nightview uses sources it considers to be reliable, no guarantee is made regarding the accuracy of information or data provided by third-party sources. Nightview Capital Management, LLC (Nightview Capital) is an independent investment adviser registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended. Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. More information about Nightview Capital including our investment strategies and objectives can be found in our ADV Part 2, which is available upon request.