Nicholas Mitsakos

DIGITAL ASSETS, DISTRIBUTED LEDGERS, AND THE FUTURE OF CAPITAL MARKETS

“Distributed ledger technology and digital assets have the potential to dramatically disrupt global equity and debt markets.” (World Economic Forum, May 2021)

Distributed ledger technology (DLT), otherwise known as Blockchain technology, will radically simplify financial markets and, more importantly, fundamentally change the market’s infrastructure. Specifically, distributed ledger technology decentralizes critical data and enables an entirely new financial system where capital flows without the need for traditional intermediaries.

While there are challenges and numerous detractors, DLT is an irreversible disruptive force transforming capital markets and the global financial system.

Regulators (a potential obstacle) are increasingly comfortable with this technology. Distributed ledgers, decentralized finance, and Blockchain-based platforms are creating products and services evolving from exploration and experimentation to commercialization. DLT will be transformative to the world’s largest industry and represents an unprecedented opportunity.

Reshaping Global Capital Markets

  1. Market forces are inexorably pushing capital markets to digitize, and distributed ledger technology will be the standard.

    1. Growing institutional and regulatory comfort with Blockchain technology

    2. Potential central bank digital currencies in China, the US, and the Eurozone

    3. Cost efficiency and client pressure

  • DLT solves capital markets’ inefficiencies from legacy processes, complex technology systems, opacity, and fragmentation across markets. Distributed ledgers have a meaningful impact on costs, market liquidity, and financing capacity, significantly improving operational efficiency and balance sheet management.

  • Smart contracts improve existing capital market processes in numerous asset classes or re-create value chains, causing disintermediation and digital transformation.

  • Competition remains fragmented and has not scaled significantly yet as this market emerges. Development will take many forms, but the opportunity to create substantial value as a new market participant is indisputable.

  • Greater digitization is inevitable. But incumbents are hesitant from uncertainty, operational restructuring, legacy systems, and regulatory uncertainty. Decentralized finance and digital assets, therefore, create a unique opportunity for new market entrants.

New digital platforms created by decentralized finance companies integrate securities and other digital assets comprehensively. The platforms enable market participants and intermediaries to issue, trade, settle, and provide custody services for digital assets, usually consisting of digitally native equity tokens (ICO’s).

These digital asset and financing platforms exist in parallel to existing market infrastructure and securities markets, in many cases offering an alternative digitized version of a standard asset class. Fundamentally, what is disruptive is that this new technology disintermediates all parties, creating effectiveness and efficiency in the transfer and recording of transactions that is unprecedented in legacy infrastructure.

Major Changes

Digital platforms created with distributive ledger technology accomplish several things quite effectively:

  • Introduce a single, verified source for all aspects of the security, including ownership and trading activities

  • Enable digital securities (ICO’s)

  • Settle trades on a shorter and more flexible timeline

  • Investors and issuers interact directly with market infrastructure or each other

Benefits

Why bother disrupting a global industry that seems to be working fairly well? Some of these benefits can make all the difference and create substantial value:

  • Greater transparency for all parties

  • Significantly simplified operations

  • Automating all securities clearing, settling, and compliance

  • Better balance sheet management (e.g. reduced funding requirements for risk capital or liquidity)

  • Issuers can list directly and have greater transparency of ownership without relying on intermediaries, lowering the cost of capital significantly

Risks

These developments are still in their infancy, and many uncertainties are yet to be resolved.

  • A supplemental market infrastructure could introduce additional operational complexity

  • Mechanisms are needed to verify smart contracts when issued

  • Revise regulation regarding responsibilities in securities’ transactions

Disruption

“Equity tokens issued on a blockchain platform are potentially the most disruptive threat to existing equity markets.” (World Economic Forum)

  1. Equity markets

Operations and infrastructure in public equity markets function effectively, but the prospect of digitizing the entire process, including smart contracts enabling transactions and settlements immediately with greater flexibility while eliminating settlement risk while accessing a global base changes the game for public equities.

In addition, privately held equities – which do not benefit from the central infrastructures, standardized processes, and liquidity of the public markets – will be fundamentally changed because the efficiencies of public equity markets will be delivered to the private markets using Blockchain and tokenization.

It is disruptive because distributed ledgers will replace most of the traditional intermediaries and processes in equity markets. By listing securities directly on public blockchains – either on their own or with the help of banks – issuers eliminate many of the processes associated with an offering. Security tokens via DeFi (decentralized finance) through decentralized exchanges enable global and decentralized reach. This is possible with both public and private shares, potentially eliminating fragmented markets and manual processes by creating standardization and automation. Tokenized shares will blur the lines between traditional publicly listed equities and private company shares creating a larger global market for all equities at a significantly lower cost.

  • Debt Markets

The bond market will be significantly transformed by Blockchain-based fixed-income securities. Specifically, it can significantly reduce inefficiencies in issuance and trading; illiquidity in secondary markets; and limited primary market access – mostly due to high minimum transaction sizes.

Bond markets are fragmented and mostly over-the-counter. They are more likely to benefit from distributed ledger transactions, and decentralized digital transformation will probably be easier.

The opportunity is enormous. Globally, the notional value of bonds outstanding totaled $106 trillion at the end of 2019, with an average of approximately $20 trillion issued annually.

  • Asset Management

Perhaps the single most disruptive long-term development from distributed ledger technology may be in asset management. Asset management is central to the capital markets ecosystem, representing a large share of investment dollars globally. In addition to being very actively involved in the broader markets that may be transformed by DLT and other technologies, asset managers face inefficiencies and other challenges for which distributed ledgers and smart contracts offer solutions, including:

  1. Streamlining client investment by allowing it directly via a liquid digital token

  • Enhanced liquidity for all investors – redemption no longer requires fund management approval and prices are established by an independent market providing immediate liquidity for each investor without needing the approval of the asset managers

  • Improving data sharing among all investors and advisors enabling immediate access to all information

  • Transformation of back-office operations

Fund assets tokenized or issued digitally will transform asset management. Tokenized fund shares will be tied directly to underlying asset pools via smart contracts, and traditional fund structures will be replaced by fully customizable portfolios.

Given the central role of asset managers in allocating capital globally, asset management firms and the ecosystems that service them will be affected by digitization. Faster or more flexible trade settlement, shared sources on securities or derivatives transactions, and operational simplification will all have implications for fund managers, custodians, and fund administrators. Shared, real-time data on all underlying portfolio holdings greatly simplify valuation, accounting, and liquidity, especially from new digital-native asset classes or fund ownership.

Once in a Generation

Creating actual efficiency for “efficient markets”

Fundamentally transforming markets requires new ways of thinking. Existing inefficiencies and limitations create an unprecedented opportunity for new thinking in the global financial markets by applying distributed ledger and smart contract technology.

New competitive entities can create an opportunity to fundamentally reimagine how capital markets operate, and this may be a once-in-a-generation opportunity.

  • Distributed ledger technology can eliminate unnecessary complexity and redundancy in capital markets. Important applications regarding debt and equity enable efficient business operations and client interaction and access. Global financial markets can become substantially more efficient enabling global access to investment opportunities and financial products.

  • New business models using DLT-based solutions can exploit existing inefficiencies and deliver new products or existing products more efficiently to a broader range of investors and financiers, and connect the sources of capital to users of capital much more effectively. It is one of the greatest potential opportunities world’s largest industry.

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Remembrance of Things Past – Liquidity, Stability, and Predictability

This article was written by Nicholas Mitsakos: Chairman and CEO at Arcadia Capital Group.


Financial markets are imbalanced and lack liquidity in crucial sectors, even historically stable and predictable markets such as the global bond and currency markets. Investments are slanted in one direction more frequently and the markets are vulnerable to big price swings as a result. These large global markets are not immune to ever more lopsided trades creating extreme volatility. This occurs even when a small change occurs in positions, sentiment, or news.

Even the world’s most liquid markets, US dollar currency trades and US Treasuries, are seeing skewed positioning resulting in surprisingly large shifts in prices and Treasury bond yields.


What’s Happening?

Using the most liquid trades available from the currency markets, we can see how a market that trades $5 trillion worth of currency daily can become suddenly illiquid, dramatically impacting prices and making any long-term prediction challenging.

These large markets hide a fundamental shift toward illiquidity. Using the most popular currency trade illustrates the role liquidity plays in price volatility and sudden market swings.


If We All Run for the Door at Once

Suppose you want to position a trade based on recent news where you conclude that the US economy will grow faster than the European economy. Therefore, you conclude that interest rates will rise in the US relative to Europe. If that’s the case, the US dollar will rise relative to the euro. This prediction is based on news regarding a new outbreak in Covid infections. Additionally, you predict increasing partial lockdowns in Europe are likely, and the Euro-wide economy will be impacted negatively. In the meantime, America seems to be faring better. Its economy is picking up, inflation seems less transitory, and lockdowns are off the table (for now). Therefore, a reasonable trade would be to bet on the Federal Reserve raising interest rates and the European Central Bank keeping rates the same (or even lowering). One way to profit from this prediction is to short the euro against the dollar.

But, wait a minute. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission publishes positions of traders in currency futures and options. Upon checking the CFTC data, this position is already crowded. Therefore, there are fewer potential sellers to drive down the value of the euro against the dollar, and this lack of balance in the trade – illiquidity – poses several significant risks. One, if sentiment improves for the euro, there will likely be a short squeeze, driving losses as traders buy euros to cover their short positions.

Another, if sentiment changes in general, even without a short squeeze, as news continues to be uncertain and speculative, prices will move dramatically and erratically because the market now has an imbalance of sellers and buyers. Prices are a function of supply and demand, and if supply is increasing dramatically while demand remains low, price shifts are magnified. This news creates a vicious cycle where those magnified price movements trigger additional supply and demand driving even greater price movements. It is now a global phenomenon for all securities.


Immune No Longer

While this example shows the impact of a currency trade, we are seeing the same impact from illiquidity in Treasuries – another supposedly large, liquid, and global market allegedly immune from illiquidity. But it is not. A smooth liquid bond market has become unpredictable, volatile, and less liquid. Essentially, the hidden driver to this volatility is also illiquidity. As surprising as it now seems, it is increasingly challenging to move in and out of bond positions quickly, and prices become more extreme.


When the Fed is Gone

Excessive liquidity created the opposite effect in March 2020 and February 2021, according to a report from the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve. It showed that the Fed providing excessive liquidity enabled bond prices to stabilize after dramatic jumps in bond yields resulting from extreme negative news regarding the pandemic. Now that liquidity from the Fed is being withdrawn as it tapers its bond buying despite increasingly bad news and quick-changing investor sentiment.

The market is experiencing more frequent and extreme price movements and it does not look like the Fed is coming to the rescue anytime soon. Uncertainty and less liquidity are increasingly extreme in what would otherwise be considered a liquid and more stable market with transparent price discovery.


I’m the Government and I’m Here to Help

Today’s circumstances can be connected back to regulations enacted after the global financial crisis of 2008. These made it much more expensive for banks to hold large inventories of bonds to facilitate trading. This lack of inventory available to supplement proprietary and client trades has greatly reduced market liquidity, especially in treasury bonds. Now, a small group of electronic high-frequency traders has filled the void created by these new regulations.

The high-frequency traders keep the market liquid most of the time – except when it matters most. They are thinly capitalized and therefore cannot hold bonds in inventory. In volatile markets, these firms are forced to take less risk because of their thin capitalization. The bulwark against short-term illiquidity and volatility is gone.


Stability and Predictability?

So, when liquidity is most needed in the bond market, it vanishes. This is not a good formula for stability, long-term predictability, and price discovery, and is driving even more extreme volatility because there is no prospect of additional liquidity being provided to the market anytime soon.

These changes in market structure make positions more extreme. In addition, bond buyers are a relatively homogeneous group. Funds are bigger. Information flows quickly and is available to all. Momentum trading is far more prevalent in bond markets and algorithmic trading magnifies the imbalance, buying recent winners and selling recent losers, driving these price differences further.


The Madness of Crowds

Before the financial crisis of 2008, market-makers were willing and able to defend against momentum and take a long-term view based more on fundamentals than immediate market sentiment. Large banks could hold inventories of bonds and be patient as volatile forces pressured the market, acting as an effective counterbalance.

Not anymore. Positions are crowded, and when sentiment goes against a popular trade, price movements are sudden and dramatic. Any semblance of rationality to the market is an increasingly distant memory.

The market now leans too far one way or the other, and that imbalance will be forced to reverse more powerfully and unpredictably.


The Road Ahead

Even in the world’s most liquid market, trades are increasingly imbalanced, and liquidity is drying up. Large positions that cannot be held for days (or even seconds) combined with illiquidity will cause more extreme and frequent volatility in the global bond market, and that will impact all other markets, from currencies to equities more dramatically.

Don’t expect stable or smooth markets anytime soon.

Digital Assets, Today's Technology of Freedom

Register for May 2022, Global Investor Conference: https://bit.ly/3pwTyCs

PANELIST: Chris Lee (Senior Partner, Farron Augustine & Alexander Investments and Private Equity), Chloe White (Managing Director, Genesis Block), Chris Berg (Co-Founder and Co-Director, RMIT University), Nicholas Mitsakos (Chairman and CEO, Arcadia Capital Group)

Technology such as digital assets presents an unprecedented opportunity to recapture individual freedoms in this digital age - to expand individual rights, protect property, and defend our privacy and personal data. How are governments planning on working with crypto? What industries are making the most of this technology? We sit down with Chloe White, Australia’s leading expert in digital asset policy, and Chris Berg, leading authority in regulation, technological change, and civil liberties, cofounder of RMIT Blockchain Innovation Hub and author of 11 books.

Nicholas Mitsakos Discusses the Complexity of Successful Investing. There Is No Simple Formula.

Straightforward analysis and simple formulas are inadequate. In Nicholas Mitsakos's new book, “Investment Principles: Strategies for an Irrational World” (Investment Principles: Strategies for an Irrational World), he discusses a variety of disciplines that require a depth of understanding and analysis. Each one of these areas, ranging from economic analysis to globalization, to human behavior, would each require study and understanding. Interconnecting these and other areas is the key to investment success, so says Nicholas Mitsakos.

His book is organized in such a way that it can be read as a narrative on investing success, as well as be a reference book with distinct sections. Investment Principles: Strategies for an Irrational World is broken into several topics and subtopics meant to stand on their own. The book is as much a reference book, with distinct sections intended to deal with independent topics in greater depth and understanding. The book is organized this way, as Nicholas Mitsakos states, because he proposes that thoughtful observation of complex factors and understanding their interrelation are necessary but not sufficient for successful investing.

Investment success, according to Mr. Mitsakos, is accurately predicting the future. That requires a greater breadth and depth of understanding of many seemingly unrelated topics. Nicholas Mitsakos discusses this at length in his book and describes it as creating a context for understanding - a way to think about how to think. Nicholas Mitsakos believes approaching investment decisions with this methodology is more important than any simple formula or narrow analytical approach.

Those looking for a simple formula and they “how to pick stocks” book will be disappointed. Those who want their intelligence respected and given a methodology and foundation to think more thoroughly and successfully will be rewarded. In Nicholas Mitsakos's new book there is no simple formula. Complex factors, understanding their interrelation, and predicting the outcome of these interactions require “slow thinking.” This is demanding work, as Daniel Kahneman explained in his book “Thinking, Fast and Slow.” That is why the book does not contain a series of numerical models and algorithms. These tools are a simplified sideshow intended to turn numerous and dynamic factors into a simple, and typically misleading, analysis.

Nicholas Mitsakos believes reducing complex analysis to simple numerical models and algorithms delivers misleading and inaccurate results far too often. For the most part, he believes this approach is nonsense. Often, numerical models and algorithms are a simplified sideshow intended to turn numerous and dynamic factors into an easy-to-understand, typically misleading analysis, and ultimately worthless exercise.

Nicholas mitsakos believes it is important to consider a wide range of factors when looking at investment possibilities and developing a successful investment strategy. Many topics, including disruptive innovation, new technologies, globalization, leadership, fiscal and monetary policy, and other topics, usually relegated to economics or behavioral textbooks, play an outsized role in influencing investments and their ultimate value. Inferior performance comes from not understanding that all these elements, as well as human behavior and irrational choices, influence investments disproportionately. Reducing this to a formula is not effective and for the most part, wasted energy.


Nicholas Mitsakos's New Book Is Not a “How to Pick Stocks” Book

Nicholas Mitsakos not only discusses investment principles and strategies, he also analyzes disruptive innovation and the importance of effective leadership along with other critical factors for successful investing.

Nicholas Mitsakos's new book is not a “how to pick stocks” book. Along with useless platitudes, there are no simple formulas, heuristic, or any other effortless way to outperform the market. Deep thinking about the factors that matter is complex, challenging, unique to each situation, and escapes simple formulas.

Simple formulas are intended, more than anything, to make the reader feel good without giving him or her any useful information to think more deeply about analysis and conclusions that matter. Understanding what really influences the value of any given investment, how that value may change overtime, and the convergence of many factors that can accelerate either the increase or decrease in value goes well beyond simple statements. Deep thinking about the factors that matter is complex, challenging, unique to each situation, and requires deep thinking.

there is a full range of factors that matter. Understanding those factors is the other challenge. Since it is unique to each situation, there is no straightforward and simple algorithm that applies in all areas.

Nicholas mitsakos understands this complexity and the challenge is to think deeply about a full range of factors. Those factors are not just economic, but also include human behavior and emotions, as well as, as described by Mr. Mitsakos in his book, “The X Factor” which is effective leadership.

Leadership is not a single person, even though the popular press wants to personify success as a single person, whether that person is Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, or someone else. Real success comes from a team of people.

Nicholas Mitsakos believes the successful companies are led by teams that work well together, are creative, but also have commercial discipline. There is only so much capital available to do innovative and disruptive things. Not all actions create value, but without commercial discipline combined with creativity (no small trick), it’s Essentially impossible to create real value that is sustainable.

Nicholas mitsakos new book is not organized as a straightforward narrative, but in sections addressing different topics the book can be a reference source, as well as a descriptive analysis.

Nicholas mitsakos used a 40-lecture series that he developed over the course of several years as the foundation for this book. Since he has been an entrepreneur, investor, and educator for over 30 years, there are many topics that Nicholas mitsakos has found essential to understanding the value of an investment and essential for any investment decision.

Since Nicholas mitsakos has served on over 35 boards of directors and been involved with over 50 startups, he has an acute and personal understanding of the factors that can create or destroy value. He has initially combined these experiences into his lecture series and also a series of articles on entrepreneurship, leadership, innovation, disruption, and rational approaches to investing. It is these many experiences in business and academia which has formed the foundation for his new book. His academic experience includes lecturing and researching at Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of technology, and UCLA.


INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES - Assume No Knowledge By Nicholas Mitsakos

Nicholas Mitsakos's new book, “Investment Principles: Strategies for an Irrational World” Investment Principles: Strategies for an Irrational World is broken into several topics and subtopics meant to stand on their own. The book is as much a reference book, with distinct sections intended to deal with independent topics in greater depth and understanding.


The Ten Year Horizon: Volatile, Intense, and Mostly Harmless (Opportunity, Irrationality, Transformation, and Absurdity Book 4)

This book explores the next decade’s more frequent and intense economic, geopolitical, fiscal, and market volatility, technological innovation, disruption, and hype.

Long-term opportunity exists, and this book uses a 10-year horizon as a surrogate for a long-term perspective. Some of the world’s most important industries are being disrupted, especially finance via digital assets and Blockchain-based businesses, life sciences via gene editing, DNA sequencing, and CRISPR, and communications via advanced wireless data networks, software technologies including artificial intelligence, and new interactive platforms such as the Metaverse.

Success requires not only understanding how to assess these industries, the potential disruptions, the sustainability of new business models, and other economic forces, but also understanding that human emotions swing market cycles, impact values, and skew competitive dynamics.

This is not a hyperbolic “this time it’s different” sermon, but we are entering an era that will be characterized by persistent uncertainty and rejection of the halcyon days of “growth equals value regardless of profitability.” Vulnerability to economic and social shocks will also be higher and there may be many dark days along the way to the horizon.

The world is becoming a zero-sum chess game. The players, China and the US, hope to either control or influence other pieces – queens to pawns – ranging from Russia and Ukraine to India and Turkey.

This book explores the chills of discontent that ignited these fractures and looks at potential avenues for re-engagement and mutual benefit. The foreseeable future is disjointed and fractured, but, there may be an ultimate realization that long-term benefit from reigniting mutual engagement will be in everyone’s best interest.

Traditional industries that drive the world economy – metals, minerals, plastics, and energy – are essential to any “green revolution.” Technology, innovation, and disruption need minerals, metals, plastics, and energy to build and deploy their products. Technology, and potentially life-saving innovation, are useless without these basic industries - now impacted more than ever by geopolitics and global trade.

Technology and innovation can solve potentially existential threats from climate change to food scarcity to global pandemics But, as I discuss, technology is also an uncontrollable monster that can lead the world into a downward spiral of distraction and meaninglessness - and solve nothing.

I explore whether the future needs the Metaverse, cryptocurrencies, or NFTs (it doesn’t), Blockchain technology and other digital assets (it can), or artificial intelligence and machine learning (it does). The Metaverse and cryptocurrency are mostly a sideshow. Blockchain and digital assets are platforms enabling the digitization and potential disruption of finance. While all these technologies are often lumped together, I discuss the significant distinction between them.

I also explore what can be predicted, what should be ignored, and why basic science and fundamental discovery are our most potent weapons and greatest opportunity to create value and benefit society. I emphasize the need to ignore policy recommendations that attempt to manage outcomes for a shortsighted, politically popular goal.

I close this book with some very personal thoughts from my experiences.

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New Edition of Investment Principles: Strategies for an Irrational World

Investment Principles: Strategies for an Irrational World proposes a context for understanding – a broader, methodical, and disciplined way to think about investing. Investment success requires understanding many elements ranging from global economics, competitive and microlevel analysis, game theory to human behavior and emotions.

This integrated approach develops a more informed and distinctive way to think about the future. Investment success combines predicting the future, the confidence to make bold choices, and the fortitude to stay with those choices. I assert that wisdom, which I define as combining a broad range of observations into a new set of knowledge to predict the future more effectively, is the essential component of successful investing. The foundation of knowledge, assembling relevant facts from many sources, produces better decisions and superior returns.

There is no simple formula. Thoughtful observation of complex factors, understanding their interrelation, and predicting the outcome of their interaction is challenging. In Daniel Kahneman’s words, it requires "slow thinking" and demanding work. Breathless and urgent recommendations from social media quips are usually misguided. Superficial ideas and quick thinking are even worse.

One thing this book does not contain is a series of numerical models and algorithms. Those kinds of tools are a simplified sideshow intended to turn numerous and dynamic factors into a simple and, typically, misleading analysis. This approach is nonsense.

This book discusses topics ranging from disruptive innovation and technologies, globalization, leadership, fiscal and monetary policy, and other topics usually relegated to economics or behavioral textbooks. But inferior performance comes from not understanding all the elements, both macro and micro, that influence investment choice, the policies impacting those decisions, the competitive environment, and the leadership qualities essential to succeed within this context.

General statements are a waste of time, profoundly inefficient and misleading, and designed simply to make the reader feel good without giving him or her any useful way to think more deeply about analysis and conclusions that matter.

This is not a "how to pick stocks" book. Along with platitudes, there are no simple formulae, heuristics, or any other effortless way to outperform the market. Deep thinking about the factors that matter is complex, challenging, unique to each situation, and escapes simple formulae.

This book is not organized as a straightforward narrative, but in sections addressing different topics. The foundation comes from my articles and lectures and may seem disjointed, but each topic and subtopic is meant to stand on its own. The book can be just as effectively read in discrete sections and not necessarily in any narrative series. This can be a reference book, as well as a descriptive analysis.

Visit At:- https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09QJH2WL4/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_tkin_p1_i1

Transformation and Disruption: Innovation and Absurdity (Opportunity, Irrationality, Transformation, and Absurdity Book 2)

Transformational and Disruption: Innovation and Absurdity highlights the extraordinary opportunities and risks associated with disruptive technologies and the global transformation they are causing. Instead of headline-grabbing hyperbole, I attempt to create a context to understand these developments – a broader, methodical, and disciplined way to think about disruption and transformation.

Some of the world's most important industries are being profoundly impacted by new technological innovations and platforms, such as artificial intelligence, digital assets, blockchain-based businesses, gene editing, and DNA sequencing, enabling unprecedented disruption to business and economic models.

Investment success requires not only understanding these impacts but also grasping many other economic forces and elements ranging from global economics, game theory, competitive and microlevel analysis, as well as human behavior and emotions.

Stable predictability is increasingly anachronistic. Every company or industry will either be a disrupter or disrupted. The leading growth companies of today stand an excellent chance to be memories tomorrow.

This new world makes stability and a static competitive advantage less relevant. Looking for “moats” is becoming a fool’s errand. Investing will require more technological expertise, knowledge of major developments, and an understanding of the accelerating impact permeating the world’s economy.

The factors that influence any investment's true value are beyond a simple formula. Extraordinary returns are generated by a combination of factors beyond what the market understands. The total of all market decisions does not create an understanding of the future value of any investment. It is a static snapshot and passive investing works for passive decisions but is a flawed tool for any active decision-maker.

This book discusses topics ranging from disruptive innovation and technologies, globalization, leadership, fiscal and monetary policy, and other topics usually relegated to economics or behavioral textbooks. But, inferior performance comes from not understanding all the elements, macro, and micro, that influence investment choices, the policies impacting those decisions, the competitive environment, and management's leadership qualities essential to outperform.

This book also avoids general statements ("invest in creative destruction," "disruption and transformation will create wealth") that sound good, and tend to be popular, but are meaningless. I am much more concerned with how to think about a problem and develop a unique and better decision.

Specific situations are dynamic and quickly escape a simple formula or any broad sweeping conclusions. General statements are a waste of time, profoundly inefficient and misleading, and designed simply to make the reader feel good without giving him or her any useful way to think more deeply about analysis and conclusions that matter.

This is not a "how to pick stocks" book. Along with platitudes, there are no simple formulas or any other effortless way to outperform the market. Deep thinking about the factors that matter is complex, challenging, unique to each situation, and escapes simplicity.

This book is not organized as a straightforward narrative, but in sections addressing different topics. The contents are a combination of a series of articles and lectures and can seem fragmented. But each topic and subtopic is meant to stand on its own. It can just as effectively be read in different chunks and not in any narrative series. It can be a reference book, as well as a descriptive analysis.

Visit At:- https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09VMRBMDX/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_tkin_p1_i2