Markets are constantly in a state of uncertainty and flux  and money is made by discounting the obvious and betting on the unexpected.
If investing is entertaining, if you're having fun, you're  probably not making any money. Good investing is boring.
The main difference between me and other people who have  amassed this kind of money is that I am primarily interested in ideas, and I  don't have much personal use for money. But I hate to think what would have  happened if I hadn't made money: My ideas would not have gotten much play.
The prevailing wisdom is that markets are always right. I  take the opposition position. I assume that markets are always wrong. Even if  my assumption is occasionally wrong, I use it as a working hypothesis. It does  not follow that one should always go against the prevailing trend. On the  contrary, most of the time the trend prevails; only occasionally are the errors  corrected. It is only on those occasions that one should go against the trend.  This line of reasoning leads me to look for the flaw in every investment  thesis. ... I am ahead of the curve. I watch out for telltale signs that a  trend may be exhausted. Then I disengage from the herd and look for a different  investment thesis. Or, if I think the trend has been carried to excess, I may  probe going against it. Most of the time we are punished if we go against the  trend. Only at an inflection point are we rewarded.
 
 
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