Nassim N. Taleb & Scott Patterson — How Traders Make Billions in The New Age of Crisis, Defending Against Silent Risks, Personal Independence, Skepticism Where It (Really) Counts, The Bishop and The Economist, and Much More (#691)

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“If you must panic, panic early.”

— Nassim Nicholas Taleb

“Uncertainty is actually a reason for precaution rather than just throwing caution to the wind and just saying, ‘Well, we don’t know, so what the hell? Let’s just keep going.'”

— Scott Patterson

Nassim Nicholas Taleb (@nntaleb) spent 21 years as a risk-taker (quantitative trader) before becoming a researcher in philosophical, mathematical, and (mostly) practical problems with probability.

Taleb is the author of a multivolume essay, the Incerto (The Black SwanFooled by RandomnessAntifragileThe Bed of Procrustes, and Skin in the Game), covering broad facets of uncertainty. His work has been published into 49 languages.

In addition to his trader life, Taleb has also written, as a backup of the Incerto, more than 70 technical and scholarly papers in mathematical statistics, genetics, quantitative finance, statistical physics, medicine, philosophy, ethics, economics, and international affairs around the notion of risk and probability (grouped in the Technical Incerto).

Taleb is currently Distinguished Professor of Risk Engineering at NYU’s Tandon School of Engineering (retired). His current focus is on the properties of systems that can handle disorder (“antifragile”).

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Scott Patterson (@pattersonscott) is an investigative reporter for The Wall Street Journal, currently based in Washington DC, working on climate and energy policy. His new book is Chaos Kings: How Wall Street Traders Make Billions in the New Age of Crisis, a profile of the rise of “black-swan traders,” such as Nassim Taleb and Mark Spitznagel, as well as a survey of the many perils the world faces today—and how we might fix them.

Scott has covered everything from Berkshire Hathaway to stock exchanges to high-speed traders to the financial regulators. His first book, The Quants, describes the rise of mathematical finance and delves into its role in the 2008 financial blowup. Dark Pools, his second book, tells how computer traders took control of the US stock market, starting from the birth of computer trading in the 1980s to the explosion of high-frequency trading in the late 2000s.

Please enjoy!

Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Podcast Addict, Pocket Casts, Castbox, Google Podcasts, Amazon Musicor on your favorite podcast platform. You can watch the interview on YouTube here.

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Want to hear an interview with someone else who history will remember as much more than a successful hedge fund manager? Listen to my most recent conversation with Ed Thorp in which we discussed music as stress reduction, avoiding unnecessary risks, how to become more numeracy literate, the value of long-term thinking, the price of short-term thinking, making the best financial decisions with unknown variables, how to have fun learning about probability and statistics, and much more.

#604: Master Investor Ed Thorp on How to Think for Yourself, Mental Models for the Second Half of Life, How to Be Inner-Directed, How Basic Numeracy Is a Superpower, and The Dangers of Investing Fads

What was your favorite quote or lesson from this episode? Please let me know in the comments.

SCROLL BELOW FOR LINKS AND SHOW NOTES…

SELECTED LINKS FROM THE EPISODEConnect with Nassim Nicholas Taleb:

Website | Twitter

Connect with Scott Patterson:

Website | Twitter

Chaos Kings: How Wall Street Traders Make Billions in the New Age of Crisis by Scott Patterson | Amazon The Quants: How a New Breed of Math Whizzes Conquered Wall Street and Nearly Destroyed It by Scott Patterson | AmazonDark Pools: The Rise of the Machine Traders and the Rigging of the US Stock Market by Scott Patterson | AmazonIncerto by Nassim Nicholas Taleb | AmazonThe Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb | AmazonFooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets by Nassim Nicholas Taleb | AmazonAntifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder by Nassim Nicholas Taleb | AmazonThe Bed of Procrustes: Philosophical and Practical Aphorisms by Nassim Nicholas Taleb | AmazonSkin in the Game: Hidden Asymmetries in Daily Life by Nassim Nicholas Taleb | AmazonStatistical Consequences of Fat Tails: Real World Preasymptotics, Epistemology, and Applications (Technical Incerto) by Nassim Nicholas Taleb | AmazonHoagie HavenThe Wall Street JournalEmpirica Capital | WikipediaUniversa Investments LPThe Collapse of Lehman Brothers: A Case Study | InvestopediaUnderstanding Tail Risk and the Odds of Portfolio Losses | InvestopediaSilent Risk: Lectures on Fat Tails, (Anti)Fragility, Precaution, and Asymmetric Exposures by Nassim Nicholas TalebBlack Monday: Definition in Stocks, What Caused It, and Losses | InvestopediaS&P 500 Returns since 2007 | Official Data FoundationDid Bruce Lee Say This About the Value of Practice? | SnopesWhat Is a Put Option?: A Guide to Buying and Selling | BankrateSystemic Risk of Pandemic via Novel Pathogens – Coronavirus: A Note | New England Complex Systems InstituteThe Pandemic Isn’t a Black Swan but a Portent of a More Fragile Global System | The New YorkerDid Justinian Create the First Pandemic? | Montana State UniversityBiological Warfare at the 1346 Siege of Caffa | Emerging Infectious DiseasesGreat Plague of 1665-1666 | The National ArchivesHow Five of History’s Worst Pandemics Finally Ended | HistoryTail Risk of Contagious Diseases | Nature PhysicsDon’t Look Up | NetflixEmperor Joseph’s Solution to Coronavirus | University of MinnesotaThe Lazarettos | Experience DubrovnikRevealed: Singapore’s Strategic Secrets for Staying Ahead | GovInsiderManaging the Crisis: Chronological Overview — Chapter Five: 1982 | FDICA Bob Rubin Trade | Fundamental Finance PlaybookRobert Rubin, Former Exec at Citigroup, Apologizes over Financial Crisis | The Seattle TimesNassim Taleb: My Rules for Life | The GuardianEight Terrific Tactics for Dealing with Haters, According to Tim Ferriss | MaximA Dozen Things I’ve Learned from Charlie Munger about Ethics | 25iqIdentifying the Highest and Best Uses of Capital | CitadelTaleb-Asness Black Swan Spat Is a Teaching Moment | Yahoo!Existentialism | Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyIrrational Man: A Study in Existential Philosophy by William Barrett | AmazonCatch-22 by Joseph Heller | AmazonKurt Vonnegut’s Remembrance of Joseph Heller in The New Yorker | Scripting NewsWhat Is Stoicism? A Definition & 9 Stoic Exercises To Get You Started | Daily StoicThe Opiates of the Middle Classes by Nassim Taleb | EdgeSkepticism | Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyWe’re in a ‘Polycrisis’ — A Historian Explains What That Means | World Economic ForumPrecautionary Principle | WikipediaThe Precautionary Principle | New England Complex Systems InstituteThe Precautionary Principle Explained by Nassim Taleb | Atlas GeographicaIs Nassim Taleb Right About Monsanto Company and GMOs? | The Motley FoolMediocristan and Extremistan: The Two Categories of Random Events | Coffee and JunkFat Tails | American ScientistWhere Do Thin Tails Come From? by Nassim N. Taleb | arXiv: Risk ManagementOn Fox News, Dr. Phil Said 360,000 Americans Die in Swimming Pools Every Year. He’s Wrong by Magnitudes. | PoynterRE: Drowning in Swimming Pools | Nassim Nicholas Taleb, TwitterMini Lecture 12: How to Look at the Risks of COVID Vaccines | N.N. Taleb’s Probability MoocsAfter The Bomb: Survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Share Their Stories | TimeKuru: Causes, Symptoms, and Diagnosis | HealthlineThe Monsanto Saga and Launch of “Toxic Exposure” with Nassim Nicholas Taleb | Healthcare UnfilteredAnother ‘Too Big to Fail’ System in GMOs | The New York TimesThe Regulation of GMOs in Europe and the United States | Council on Foreign RelationsAnalysis: Mixed Message on Weed-Killer Reflects Reality of Scientific Uncertainty | ReutersDavid Cameron in Conversation with Nassim Taleb | RSAKarl Popper Debate | BC Forensic League SocietyWhat Did Richelieu Mean by His “Six Lines” Quote? | History Stack Exchange“The Dose Makes the Poison.” | Chemical Safety FactsUnderstanding is a Poor Substitute for Convexity (Antifragility) by Nassim Nicholas Taleb | EdgeSeven Things You Need to Know About Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac | Center for American ProgressPlaza Accord: Definition, History, Purpose, and Its Replacement | InvestopediaProfit and Loss Statement (P&L) | InvestopediaThe Blow-Up Artist | The New YorkerHow Did George Soros Break the Bank of England? | InvestopediaFat Tails, Ellipticality, and Diversification | Bloomberg Professional ServicesIs Globalization a Black Swan? | Mr. GlobalizationHow Lee Kuan Yew Engineered Singapore’s Economic Miracle | BBC NewsSoviet Influence on the Peace Movement | WikipediaThe History behind Germany’s Nuclear Phase-Out | Clean Energy WireThe Source of Germany’s Nuclear Aversion | The Breakthrough InstituteLessons and Doubts from the Chernobyl Disaster | IFRFHedge Funds Since the Financial Crisis: From Boom to Bust | InvestopediaUS Regulator Calls for Greater Scrutiny of Hedge Funds after Bond Turmoil | Financial TimesThe Tale of the Fed and Long-Term Capital Management | Barron’sHow Tech Startups Have Behaved as New Age Ponzi Schemes by Kirti Dixit | LinkedInWorking with Convex Responses: Antifragility from Finance to Oncology | EntropyHeart Rate Variability: A New Way to Track Well-Being | Harvard HealthIntermittent Fasting 101 — The Ultimate Beginner’s Guide | HealthlinePrincipia Politica Third Draft | Nassim Nicholas TalebDoes ‘Black Swan’ Author Taleb Think ChatGPT Is An Idiot? | BenzingaWhat Is the Talmud? | My Jewish LearningAncient Jewish History: Aramaic | Jewish Virtual LibraryThe Summa Theologiæ of St. Thomas Aquinas | New AdventThe Professor Helping Guide Billions in Climate Spending | WSJ12 Ways the Inflation Reduction Act Will Benefit Birds and People | AudubonRepublicans in the US ‘Battery Belt’ Embrace Biden’s Climate Spending | The GuardianSHOW NOTES

Editor’s Note: Timestamps will be added shortly

How Scott and Nassim first connected.Why Nassim would rather be remembered as a scholar than a trader.You can’t forge a new friendship without breaking a few eggs.Silent risk, tail events, and one-trick ponies.What prompted Scott to write Chaos Kings?Pseudo-efficiency, pseudo-optimization, and pseudo-sorries.The joy of writing a preemptive resignation letter.Developing resilience against criticism.Recurring patterns in successful investors.Nassim: contrarian, or simply independent?Jiving with skeptical turkeys.Living in the polycrisis.The precautionary principle.Fat tails, thin tails, and the COVID vaccine.GMO risks and Monsanto intimidation tactics.Implementing the precautionary principle at a large scale.Uncertainty and the climate crisis.Convexity in the face of financial crisis.Are investors overpowered in an interconnected world?Utilizing the precaution principle in the real world (for better and worse).The flow-on effect of having skin in the game.The ponzification of startups and an overdue reckoning.What convexity at the center of all things conveys.Where to find Scott and Nassim.What Nassim is working on now.New insights from ancient words.Parting thoughts.MORE QUOTES FROM THE INTERVIEW

“On my grave, I don’t want to be known as a trader, but as a scholar.”

— Nassim Nicholas Taleb

“If you must panic, panic early.”

— Nassim Nicholas Taleb

“Uncertainty is actually a reason for precaution rather than just throwing caution to the wind and just saying, ‘Well, we don’t know, so what the hell? Let’s just keep going.'”

— Scott Patterson

“It’s what I call pseudo-optimization: If you drive a Ferrari 500 kilometers per hour, you’re not going to get there faster than if you ride a bicycle, because obviously you’re never going to get there.”

— Nassim Nicholas Taleb

“I came into Wall Street and started reading about how there’s this belief that people are irrational and the markets are rational and they are predictable because of this. And I thought that is just crazy. To me, I look at financial markets and I see black swans, I see fear and greed. That to me is what drives markets, not rational behavior, rational expectations.”

— Scott Patterson

PEOPLE MENTIONEDNeil ChrissMark SpitznagelSeth RobertsBruce LeeJustinian IYaneer Bar-YamJoseph W. NormanPeter HoPasquale CirilloRobert RubinCharlie MungerRonald ReaganKenneth C. GriffinEd ThorpCliff AsnessFyodor DostoevskyJoseph HellerKurt VonnegutSeneca the YoungerPierre Daniel HuetJoseph Justus ScaligerPierre BayleDavid HumeAl-GhazalBaruch SpinozaAdam ToozeGeorge SorosKarl PopperWarren BuffettElon MuskRupert ReadPhil McGrawDavid CameronVictor NiederhofferLee Kuan YewVladimir PutinJohn MeriwetherAdam SmithAristotleNoahThomas AquinasJoe Biden

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Published on September 07, 2023 07:55
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