2025 Reflections on a rollercoaster ten days. | Apr. 15 The emotional nature of markets. | Mar. 14 As a group, institutions don't beat passive indexing either. | Feb. 14 If your finances seem too complex, 2025 is the year to simplify | Jan. 17 2024 Stay away from crypto | Dec. 13 iBonds and interest rates; a look back | Nov. 15 What is scarce in investing | Oct. 18 Economic charts for your beach reading | Jul. 19 Capital gains taxes, the sequel | Jun. 14 Why both profit centers and bankruptcy are important | May. 17 Beware of optionality loss | Apr. 12 Financial planning ideas as you think about retirement | Mar. 15 Inflation equals the end of money printing | Feb. 16 Zombie Firms | Jan. 19 2023 Draw what you see | Dec. 18 The asymmetry of the bond market | Nov. 17 The divergence of short-term and long-term perspectives | Oct. 13 Is dominance of big tech in the S&P 500 a problem? | Sep. 15 Financial planning: the effect of withdrawals versus savings in down markets | Aug. 18 Profits declined and the market rose. What's going on? | Jul. 21 Match your investments with your time horizon | Jun. 16 Applying Berkshire Hathaway techniques to your own investing life. | May. 12 One Day In July named Best Investment Firm in the State of Vermont / Plus real estate thoughts... | Apr. 18 Silicon Valley Bank, and its applicability to you | Mar. 17 Optionality is good | Feb. 17 One thing to think about for your 2023 financial life. It will matter. | Jan. 20 2022 2022, and winning the loser's game | Dec. 28 2022 Growth and Value + Businesses start to scale back. | Dec. 16 FTX. And an example of why diversification matters | Nov. 18 Some interesting longer-term financial perspective | Oct. 14 Looking for patterns in markets | Sep. 16 Are Wall St Analysts getting it perfectly wrong again? | Aug. 12 Harold Hamm is not happy | Jul. 15 Staying with what has worked long-term in investing | Jun. 17 Markets cause butterflies | May. 13 Things are not predictable | Apr. 15 Real Estate and Inflation | Mar. 25 On Russia... | Mar. 4 An important principle of markets | Feb. 18 Sliding into 2022 | Jan. 28 2021 Asset Performance - Year in Review | Jan. 7 2021 Wrapping up 2021 | Dec. 31 Some inflation history, and inflation optimism | Dec. 17 Behavior, Bubbles, and Inflation | Nov. 30 Financial Technologies: look but don't touch | Nov. 5 Wealth vs Money | Oct. 15 Free Riding and Indexing | Sep. 24 Back to school: breaking down an index fund | Sep. 3 Space Rocketeers and Creation of Industries | Aug. 13 Captialism Mechanics | Jul. 23 Bird, Jordan, Hamilton, Jefferson: an American Fourth | Jul. 2 Interest rates = financial gravity | Jun. 11 School Bus Jenga. Plus Bitcoin. | May. 21 Taxes. Fun. | Apr. 29 An observation worth considering from Vermont monks | Apr. 9 Investing lessons from bitcoin and baseball | Mar. 19 The Segway | Feb. 26 Firm Update/ One thing to ask... | Feb. 12 Fun things with Gamestop | Feb. 5 Good patterns for 2021 | Jan. 15 2020 A final thought for 2020... | Dec. 22 The dazzling stock market of November 2020 | Dec. 4 Annuities, please go away | Nov. 13 The search, sometimes financial, for happiness | Oct. 23 Advice + Products = Conflicts of Interest | Oct. 2 Investing and politics do not mix well | Sep. 11 Dot-com 2.0? | Aug. 28 Experts and dissenting views | Aug. 14 Two thoughts on market timing | Jul. 31 The U.S. Government opens the door for the financial industry in 401k | Jul. 17 Walt Whitman and the United States | Jul. 3 The bright side of collapse: simplification | Jun. 18 Inequality is emerging as a big winner from Coronavirus | Jun. 5 What is going on with the stock market? | May. 22 Explaining the purpose of bankruptcy | May. 8 Hazards | Apr. 24 United Flight 232 | Apr. 9 A roller-coaster week | Mar. 27 A primer on viral spread | Mar. 23 Fear is normal. It's part of why we're here. | Mar. 20 A crisis builds. Mental preparation. | Mar. 17 Coronavirus | Mar. 4 How to take lots of money from average Americans. A primer. | Feb. 21 Even Warren Buffett didn't beat indexing | Feb. 7 Two paths for real estate investments | Jan. 24 2019 in Review | Jan. 10 2019 A final thought for 2019... | Dec. 27 Predictions and antifragility | Dec. 13 The bowling alley of investing | Nov. 29 Politics, investments, and change | Nov. 15 Crashes and swans | Nov. 1 Markets are high, but so is fear. Why? | Oct. 18 Hedge fund training 101: go after indexing to get attention for your fund | Sep. 20 After inflation, the average stock fund investor lost more than 11 last year. This is one reason why. | Sep. 6 Will we have have a recession? The yield curve weighs in. | Aug. 23 How financial firms make money from your cash | Aug. 9 Looking back a year: 3 things to learn from the Treasury bond market | Jul. 26 Dividends as a form of annuity | Jul. 12 Something to think about on July 4th | Jun. 28 Alternatives to tariffs | Jun. 14 On emotions in investing | May. 31 A cacophony of signals | May. 17 The not-surprising decline of the internal combustion engine | May. 3 Decisions made at the edge | Apr. 19 Looking back to the future | Apr. 5 Our obligation as we see it and first quarter notes | Mar. 22 Share buybacks, an introduction | Mar. 6 A way to think about market ups and downs | Feb. 22 Is art a financial investment? | Feb. 8 Europe vs the United States - an investor lesson | Jan. 25 John Bogle, creator of the index fund, has died | Jan. 17 2018 stock market observations | Jan. 11 2018 A final thought for 2018 | Dec. 28 Fear and risk protection | Dec. 14 Peeling back the onion: the financial advice business | Nov. 30 Explaining the Dow Jones | Nov. 16 Keeping a wary eye out for inflation | Nov. 1 Two thoughts on current markets | Oct. 19 Consider the null hypothesis | Oct. 5 What do we know? | Sep. 21 The Chart of Shame | Sep. 7 How nouns can help you | Aug. 24 5 big tech stocks. And 5 of their strategies. | Aug. 10 Saving a lot. Often. And again. | Jul. 27 The chemistry of decision paralysis | Jul. 13 The Soviet Union vs Microsoft | Jun. 29 Peanut butter, jelly, and Wall St | Jun. 15 Laggards and leaders | Jun. 1 Every now and then, friction is good | May. 18 Changing and not changing | May. 4 The (arguably boring) importance of a strong Plan B | Apr. 20 Finding Real Estate Joy | Apr. 6 Fiduciary Rule R.I.P | Mar. 23 Indexing and the Venture Capitalists | Mar. 9 Signal vs Noise | Feb. 23 The long-term, quiet glory of dividends | Feb. 9 Elusive Simplicity | Jan. 26 What makes up investment return. It's these three things | Jan. 12 2017 And one final thought for 2017... | Dec. 29 Bitcoin: is it mania, or merely revolution? | Dec. 15 Mutual fund survivorship bias | Dec. 1 The end depends on the beginning | Nov. 3 What we can learn from Scott Legacy | Oct. 20 Preparing for downturns is like landing airplanes without engines: you have to practice | Oct. 6 Unusual thoughts on saving | Sep. 22 Social networks, dopamine, and their relation to investing | Sep. 17 On the value of focusing | Sep. 8 Firm update and some industry observations | Aug. 25 Theologian teaches capitalists a thing or two | Aug. 11 4 behavioral traits that a great investor must have | Jul. 28 The oil business, and why industry sector bets are a terrible idea | Jul. 14 On clients' minds when they first talk to us... | Jun. 30 Investing is a probabilities game. (I'm 97% certain.) | Jun. 2 The lessons of Puerto Rico, and an example of the fee machine of active funds | May. 19 The hedge funder Warren Buffett trounced wasn't all wrong. Just mostly | May. 5 Taxes float and the lessons of April 15th | Apr. 21 Q1 observations, the drag of taxes, and our bull market's future | Apr. 7 401K and 403B, Q1 Dividends, and the mechanics of why active managers almost never outperform | Mar. 24 Optimism in investing wins, big time. Market timing doesn't. | Mar. 10 Index fund portfolio construction. No yawning, this is important stuff | Feb. 24 Fiduciary rule, and where investors lose big money | Feb. 10 Oh attention-grabbing Dow Jones, you toy with us so... | Jan. 27 Index Fund Fundamentals | Jan. 13 2016 2016 Wrap-Up Observations | Dec. 30 A Heartfelt Thought | Dec. 16 The predictable nature of unpredictability | Dec. 2 We know at least 4 things to be true. Maybe more | Nov. 18

Investor Insights

Sign up for the One Day In July newsletter to receive meaningful musings and investor insights from founder and CEO Dan Cunningham. Once a month, direct to your inbox.

Reflections on a rollercoaster ten days.

April 15, 2025

What a week+. Before I get to the newsletter, some announcements:

For those of you in Vermont and New Hampshire, I will be on VPR Vermont Edition radio this coming Tuesday from noon to 1 PM, along with Moshe Lander, an economist at Concordia University in Montreal. We will be discussing the current situation, he from the macroeconomics side, and me from the investing side.

If you live anywhere near Montpelier, Vermont or Middlebury, Vermont, we now have new offices open in each town. The signs are under construction and are going up shortly. Montpelier's One Day In July office is above Capitol Grounds, and Middlebury's is right next to the main bridge.

Background

So you know the relative context, Bloomberg published this:

Chart showing the US effective tariff rate from 1930 to today. Tariffs are high in the 30s (near 20%), then decline steadily with some variation. Around 2020 the tariffs are around 2.5%, and then in 2025 they spike to above 15%.

There are some bright spots. For one, United States citizens in the past 10 days may have gotten their biggest economics lesson in history. Next up is a good article if you want to understand tariffs. CATO is a free-market think tank in Washington DC that has for decades fought against tariffs, in part under the mantra of "people who trade goods don't trade bombs."

https://www.cato.org/publications/separating-tariff-facts-tariff-fictions

If you are interested in the legal proceedings, Simplified Stationers will likely be the case to follow. There is an army of legal support lining up behind this Pensacola business owner, initially from conservative groups but expectations are that this is going to be a bipartisan effort. More info here and here.

Generation X, of which I am a member, has lived its adult life bouncing from one crisis to the next. I have now invested through the dot-com crash, 9/11, the global financial crisis, Covid, and tariffs. A substantial amount of learning from the prior four crises is already embedded in client portfolios, as well as the structure and behavior of the firm. Each crisis adds new angles, which we are studying.

I am going to give you a few ways to look at this that are hopefully different from what you are reading online.

1. The first thing you have to do to be a great investor is box out your emotions. For example, it's hard to believe, but if you look at the 1-year total returns of the S&P 500, it is actually mid-single digit positive. In Vermont, when it's 40 degrees in late October, it feels much colder than 40 degrees in April. The direction from which you approach the point you are at matters to your outlook.

2. Related to #1, I am surprised how many investment advisory firms are already out reconfiguring portfolios and altering strategies. This is a terrible mistake and a sign of an inexperienced investor. If you don't have the plan designed correctly prior to these periods, and the confidence to stick with it, that's a problem. The news should not be driving your plan. This doesn't mean we don't tweak portfolios sometimes in these periods when clients come to us with specific concerns or anxieties.

3. The business situation is likely worse than the tariff chart above implies. This is due to the fact that it's not just the rapid price changes, but the fact that no one in the business world has any ability to plan at this point. So the reaction is to batten down the hatches, and this then spreads to consumers. The wild swings you see in the market reflect this uncertainty. (Remember that in theory market prices are just current values of future expected corporate profits. In reality: plus a lot of emotion thrown in.)

. On the bright side, people working in and running businesses are creative, and they have to survive. The U.S. economy is probably the most dynamic in the world and quickly everyone is trying to work around this self-imposed shock. So you have a large number of people working together to mitigate the situation. This includes a long list of powerful people, from different political parties, who are now unified on the same team. I have to say, that feels good.

5. A positive takeaway educationally from this will be that people realize that good markets are made up of transactions between consenting parties, with both parties willing to the arrangement. When a third party interferes, as in the case of a central-planning tariff, things go sub-optimal fast. You can apply this thinking to a lot of scenarios in economics, business, government, and life.

6. 22 years ago Warren Buffett proposed the idea of a market-based internal credit system that would smoothly reduce the trade deficit, likely without conflict. https://fortune.com/2016/04/29/warren-buffett-foreign-trade/

Finally, I could have included graphs here showing all of the crises over the past century in the stock market, and how well everything worked out, but I'm not sure that's helpful when you are in the moment. More helpful is trying to reduce news consumption. You will feel a lot better putting hard limits in place; we have a group of clients who have worked at this and been successful. Just try to redirect your thoughts and energies to local projects, your garden, helping someone, playing golf actually on the fairway, getting better at your job. Things you can control.

For my son's confirmation, his sponsor (who happens to be a client here), gave him a plaque that says "You are what you think about." We keep that plaque next to our kitchen table. Keep that in mind when you feel tempted to read more news.

Dan Cunningham

1. S&P 500 total return source: Stockcharts 4/10/24 - 4/10/25: 3.5%
2. Graph source: Bloomberg: 4/10/25

The emotional nature of markets.

March 14, 2025

To get right to the crux of the matter, let's go over some ways to process financial news and anxiety when every illuminated surface now seems to have a stock ticker.

The first thing to remember is that as an investor, you are not buying a super-charged CD. Markets do not go up in straight lines and also have returns better than something like a savings account. There is no financial system in history that has offered that (though lots of salespeople have!), as the return would be high and the risk low. Historically you have gotten better results over years and decades by accepting volatility. (If you want the equivalent of a CD but not super-charged, we can do that, but your after-tax result will approximate inflation. So you're not really making any money.)

Today the S&P 500 is back to where it was in September. And this is a critical point: Assuming equivalent corporate earnings, as equity markets decline, they get safer. They do not get riskier as they go down, they get riskier as they go up. Because equity markets rise when the news is good, you are paying more money per unit of corporate earnings, and while this feels good, it is quietly riskier.

The problem is that human beings are not wired for this. Emotion drives decisions. For example, only in a few periods since 1987 has economic bearishness polled as high as it is today:

Chart of investor sentiment (% bearish) from August 1987 to August 2024. The line fluctuates up and down. In 2024 the % bearish sentiment appears to have spiked to almost 60%. Chart is titled: American Associate of Individual Investors Sentiment Survey, % Bearish

Source: The American Association of Individual Investors Sentiment Survey as of 3/6/2025.

Note that bearish spike points historically have coincided with some solid buying opportunities: early '90s, the '08-'09 financial crisis, December 2018, Covid, and 2022.

On the contrary, in mid-2021, which was a banner investing year, a poll came out that people expected 17.3% returns above inflation, a near-mathematical impossibility! But the human brain maps recent events forward in time. What happened next? 2022, which was one of the worst investing years in four decades.

The takeaway point: media-driven emotion has no predictive ability and will not help you as an investor.

Our clients generally own indexes, and in the stock indexes, those are real businesses under the hood. While the price of those businesses varies, it almost never matches the real value. The price can be too high, and it can be too low. The beauty of the market is that it just takes the average point of hundreds of millions of daily investor opinions on this question. Over time the price will be close to the value, but not exact.

Modern markets are intensely democratic machines (1). No one can control them; they are pure voting systems. Unlike many other areas, you don't have to be in a position of power or brand to make a lot of money swimming against the tide. If you think you are right and everyone else is wrong and you are in fact right, you will make a lot of money. And the numerical earnings of businesses will be the judge, so you will get a fair grader.

As a firm, One Day In July is structured from the bottom up to mitigate emotional impact of news on the investor. This would be a difficult structure for competitors to copy, as it has taken a long time to implement, and it is designed deeply into the firm. But we see the news media and the emotions it creates as one of the biggest risks for the investor, and we are paid to remove risk that doesn't add return.

Though I can't do this for work due to my job, on a personal level I have started to look for ways to hedge off news risk. I found this engineer, building a dot-matrix printer that prints out the headlines once a day, like an old AP news terminal.

"But you must watch something!" you say. All right, all right, I'll give you a little peek.

1. First, rail car loadings. These are looking healthy.

2. S&P 500 dividends have been rising.

3. U.S. Treasury bond issuances. On Wednesday the U.S. government sold $39.7 billion in a standard auction. The bid-to-cover ratio was 2.69, which means there were 2.69 offers for each bond sold. This is above 2024's average of 2.53. There is still strong demand for U.S. debt in the immediate term.

Dan Cunningham

1. I say "modern markets" because early markets weren't so fair. Andrew Carnegie and Cornelius Vanderbilt, among others, made arguably the majority of their money through what today would be illegal insider trades.

As a group, institutions don't beat passive indexing either.

February 14, 2025

Look at this beauty I found.

The abstract:

CIOs [Chief Investment Officers] and consultant-advisors oversee about $10 trillion of institutional assets in the US. They have underperformed passive management by one to two percentage points a year since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 (GFC). They rely heavily on expensive alternative investments; and the more they have in alternatives, the worse they do. Large institutions use scores of managers, making them high-cost closet indexers. Inefficiency abounds.

The red color above is mine. Long-time readers of this newsletter know I don't use highlighter much, but I couldn't help myself.

So institutional firms that have large budgets for investment advice as a group did not outperform passive management. The key takeaway is that more money does not lead to a performance edge.

Also, good luck when someday they have to close out those alternative positions and mark them to market in the process. Some of our clients have discovered, as those positions get closed out, that the bids come in lower than recorded on the statements.

In credit to the institutional managers, their arguments are etymological showcases. Words like "alternatives," "color," "tail risk," and everyone's favorite: "synergy."1

What is going on here? All this high-powered talent and they can't outperform? All those years studying through school, getting the B- on the organic chemistry final and pulling the panic ripcord, switching to a finance track from pre-med but ending up at Chase instead of Goldman, eventually realizing that's ok but brushing up on the vocabulary (see above, I'm working on it) to get an in-house institutional position because it's going to be less pressure and also easier on kindergarten drop-off days? But then you become an institutional manager, and you can't beat the plain-vanilla index? What?

The problem they are trying to solve is exceedingly difficult. At its core, you can be correct in your investment thesis, but perhaps not correct enough. There are so many variables swimming around that you have to weigh them all accurately, an impossible task. The human mind likes stories and theses, and it attaches to storylines in securities analyses that sound reasonable. But it is all of the other storylines that you may not have weighed correctly that can overwhelm the choice you made.

There is another difficulty I have noticed over the years. A lot of securities analysts have been doing that job their whole lives. Many of them haven't been in operating businesses. And that's a disadvantage. For example, in high school I worked at CVS as a floor stocker. I would have to go through hundreds of little tubes of lipstick and repack the ones that didn't sell by a certain date. This was eye-opening to me one because I didn't know you could theoretically come up with that many variants of red, and two because I couldn't believe how many problems resulted just from this repack operation.

I could see the cost related to that complexity. When something like Trader Joe's shows up, with their simplified model versus Kroger, I intuitively know all the steps on the floor that no one has to do. In theory you can see this on paper, but sometimes doing the job itself, or experience in an industry, gives you insights that you believe more strongly.

Before signing off, I'll note that I'm not sure that an analyst with industry experience would matter anyway. The markets are so efficient that the benefit in today's world might be instantly competed away, and the passive indexes would still outperform you.

Dan Cunningham

1. I love the term "synergy." In 2001 Smucker's bought Jif Peanut Butter from Proctor & Gamble. The investment bankers were crowing about "the synergy between the peanut butter and the jelly." I thought "this is a job I can always do as a backup if needed."

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