As many of you will know, I very much enjoy reading the investing memos of Howard Marks. And buried somewhere in one of them is an analogy about the kind of investors who try and time the market and/or who constantly chase the next hot thing (whatever asset class that may be).
It goes something like this: If you're trying to catch a bus and you're running from bus stop to bus stop trying to perfectly time the arrival of the next one, there's a chance that you might never catch a bus. But if you patiently wait at one stop, eventually a bus will come and eventually you'll be able to get on it.
I like this analogy because you see this jumping around in every industry. In tech, a lot of people have moved from the crypto bus stop to the AI bus stop and, in real estate, we've seen it, and are seeing it, with industrial, student housing, and other in-demand asset classes. Capital wants its yield.
Now, it's obviously important not to ignore macroeconomic shifts and fundamental changes to your sector. If your bus route has been cancelled or rerouted, you don't want to be waiting patiently at that stop. You want to be on the move.
But if the long-term fundamentals in your sector haven't changed and everyone else is distracted by what's new and shiny, hanging out can be a powerful strategy. And this brings me to something that Marks recently wrote about in a memo called "