Our Financial Lives are Intertwined with Perceptions of About Time

by Cullen Roche, Pragmatic Capitalism

I went to see Interstellar last night.  I won’t ruin it for you, but if you’re in to things like time travel, intergalactic travel and space ships then you should probably go see it.  One of the central themes of the movie is relative time discrepancy.  Due to gravitational anomalies time in the movie is a relative unknown.

Naturally, this got me thinking about how this relates to money and investing.  Money, after all, is essentially a way of trading our time so we can obtain access to other needs and wants within the economy.  Investing in financial assets is a way of trading money now to obtain more money in the future.  Money and time aren’t just related.  They are two sides of the same coin.

Therefore, time is a key element in our investing lives.  But it’s also a relative unknown.  In my book I call this the “intertemporal conundrum” – the problem of time in a portfolio.   That is, we have our own relative time discrepancies in our financial lives.  The majority of academic models that discuss investing use a linear model of the financial world and apply financial asset allocations based on this linear thinking.  This is the essence of the rationale for “buy and hold” investing.  That is, in a linear system with a long enough time horizon stocks will have a more predictable and linear output.  That is intuitively obvious and factually true.  Of course, this model of the world assumes that it applies to our portfolios in a practical sense when, in reality, it doesn’t since our financial lives are actually a series of events and not the start and stop model that many use for planning.  Interestingly, day traders do the opposite.  They try to trade their way to the future thereby playing a game of low probabilities and high frictions generally resulting in financial ruin.

And this is the danger of the ideas espoused by advocates of “the long-term” or the “short-term”.  These models try to distort time and often apply approaches that result in a highly impractical approach to portfolio management.  There has to be something in the middle.  Something more balanced that accounts for the dynamism of the financial system and our financial lives.  Anything else is impractical and defies the reality of the way our portfolios relate to our actual financial time frames.

 

 

Copyright © Pragmatic Capitalism

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