Saturday, December 31, 2016

Will there be sperm in the air in 2017 ?

In the final 2016 issue of the Economist, Vienna was declared the city of the century for its intellectual and cultural accomplishments. Vienna was the city which won the accolade because it could employ the diversity of its population to create new ideas and philosophies so much so that writer Stefan Zweig commented that "There was sperm in the air. "

Singapore can potentially become an intellectual capital of the world with its world class PISA scores, cultural diversity and strong governance, but something is clearly holding us back. There is still very little "sperm in the air".

To try to examine this issue further, I spent a month in Ayer Rajah which aspires to become the Silicon Valley of Singapore.

a) Ayer Rajah Tech Cluster needs a gathering point every week.

The role of gathering engineers and investors used to be borne by an accelerator in Block 71. It is very expensive and unfair that this be sustained by the private sector. It may be worth using tax payers money to get everyone together for a networking session and showcase the latest government e-services or upcoming tenders to everyone. Not to mention allow the private sector to talk about their tech offerings for an advertisement fee.

b) Free internship systems should be encouraged.

I had a great time doing my free internship. Not getting paid gave me the freedom to choose the technology I want and I was able to get myself exposed to the MeteorJS Framework and Solidity smart contracts programming by exchanging a small part of the my legal research skills. The rest of the time, I hung out with BFP folks and swapped investment ideas which was located next door. The only thing lacking was that I did not have lawyer friends to exchange ideas with.

One idea at the back of my head is that if I were to insist on a small stipend for an internship, I might have spent a month doing PHP programming or Ruby on Rails ( Or god forbid, .NET, the framework for dinosaurs ! ), great technologies which pay but may not be the cutting edge technologies I want more exposure in.

One idea I have is that it will be great if someone consolidates a list of start-ups and share their technology expertise to give one-month stints to folks who complete, for example, a specialisation course in Coursera for students to continue working on a real-world project. Start-ups get free labour and interns get to network with each other.

( In such an arrangement, there is always fear of exploitation, but I did manage to use my new-found technical expertise to share it with my latest law firm interview and got one step closer to a training contract for the future. In asking for a free internship, I was also exploiting my Employer )

c) Rethink the relationship between technology professionals and food.

Food matters in creating intellectual capitals. If you work at Ayer Rajah, you will find out that Timbre+ is greatly overrated.

Business at Timbre+ is good in the afternoon with folks getting access to relatively cheap hawker food but the foot-fall does not come close compared to the Foodcourt at Blk 69, where I could get a plate of vegetarian bee-hoon at $2.70. The pragmatic engineers from India and China likes to gather and queue in such a zone to get access to cheap food.

If you ask around, most of the folks miss that old hawker centre and the prata shop in that area.

Policy makers should not underestimate the magical effects of cheap sarabat stalls and affordable prata. Vienna's intellectual strength arose partly due to its coffee culture. And intellectuals are not exactly money-minded individuals.

Engineers will alway be realists. Looking hip and appealing to poseurs may work in the short term but never will work in the long term.

Right now, Singapore is hardly the city of the century and intellectually, we are probably light years behind Vienna during its prime.

But who knows, Ayer Rajah might be tweaked in such a way that there will be indeed sperm in the air as our economy restructures. However, too much control and over-engineering the tech sector might cause this segment of the economy to go limp.

Or worse, there might be premature ejaculation.







Friday, December 30, 2016

Tools for Titans #18 : Doing something you're unqualified to do.

Dan Carlin is the host of the podcast Hardcore History.

a) Don't be afraid to do something that you are not qualified to do

Unless you are looking at legal or medical work, there are very few things that require an actual qualification to do.

This suggestion makes sense because life is too short to seek permission to do something.

It is often the only way to get promoted sensible manner. Most companies do not promote a person so that he can start doing work of a higher grade, this almost leads to everyone being promoted into incompetence (Peter Principle). It is more likely that you will need to find ways to start doing work of a higher grade before you are considered fit to be promoted.

Ambitious folks are better off seeking forgiveness rather than permission. But please don't do this in the civil service.

b) Copyright your faults

There is no such thing as bad publicity. If you have a glaring flaw, it will be used against you so you might as well turn it into a calling card that reinforces your personal brand.

If you observe our so called famous influencers in our local blogosphere, this would almost always be certainly true.

People have consistently been able to monetise their bitchiness.

c) Listen to Hardcore History

The idea that an amateur historian can come up with a great podcast intrigues me.

All that is left for me to do is to listen to it.


Thursday, December 29, 2016

Tools for Titans #17 : Specialisation is for insects.

Chase Jarvis is the CEO of CreativeLive and a highly decorated photographer who emphasises on dynamic shots and sports. While Chase is undoubtedly a creative, I find his ideas quite interesting.

a) Going premium on day one.

I am very familiar, and quite sympathetic to the systematic abuse of design and creative professionals in Singapore having worked ( and paid on time ) with book cover designers and web page UX experts. Our local SMEs still adopt the mindset that creative professionals or artists can be paid with "exposure".

One defence, which I hope to teach my kids (which includes my artistically inclined daughter) against this is to simply not to become a creative professional. You can pursue artistic interests as a hobby.

Another approach is to simply go premium from day 1. Be good enough so that you don't need to work for exposure. I guess the trick is to skip the stingy SMEs and start working for the MNCs and big companies immediately.

Same goes for real life. You've got to have some standards.

Don't date or associate with people flagged by your craydar.

b) Different, not just better

I am not surprised that this is the rallying cry for creatives everywhere. Being better is not enough, you need to be different so that people will notice you. Its hard to disagree with this.

Strangely the business world is in agreement with the creatives. Management strategists talk about product differentiation. Marketers talk about Unique Selling Proposition. There is even a business book on this theory called The Blue Ocean Strategy which puts in detail how to be different.

The funny thing is that  this idea itself, fails the "Different, not just better" test.

Just sayin...

c) Specialisation is for insects

Robert A Heinlein was the original author of this statement. His opinion is somewhat romantic. As a human being you must be able to do many things, butcher a hog, plan an invasion, build a wall. Specialisation is for insects.

It's really easy to come up with pithy statements which people will buy into. The problem is that these statement can come with dire consequences.

While I certainly aspire to have multiple skill-sets myself, I would like to remind the reader that your time and capabilities are not infinite. You can be a generalist and go for broad based skills but they will never be as deep as a trained specialist. Scott Adams mentioned in a previous article actually proposed a powerful strategy which works for ordinary people -  be top 25% in two fields.

In a changing economy, generalist skills may allow you to adapt better, but it is the specialist skills of the future which bring in the bacon and give you your financial security.

As such, I propose that the generalists-specialist divide is a false dichotomy.

To survive we will often need to be both.

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Tools for Titans #16 : The Value of Stupid Goals.

Shaun White is a professional snowboarder and skateboarder. He is also a two time Olympic Gold medalists.

This section is rather short so I only have two points to make.

a) Self-talk

Shaun adopts self-talk which Andre Agassi used which goes like "I'm here. I'm going to try my best and I'm going to go home and my family's there." It's a great way to keep calm in a stressful situation.

Maybe I should try it before a critical exam.

b) The value of "stupid" goals

Shaun decides on two goals every year. One goal is serious and involves winning a major competition. Another goal is "stupid". One example he gave was to win as many cars as possible that year as automotive companies were really focusing on his sport so they were quite generous with sponsorship that year. Shaun ended up winning 9 cars.

Not too obvious in the book is why "stupid" goals worked for Shaun ?

First of all, the term "stupid" is a misnomer. A goal like to win as many cars as possible a year is to an attempt to gamify an aspect of a person's life. Turning the goal of winning cars into a game can encourage harder and more inspired work.

Imagine if a salesman were to have an app which lets him track the number of rejections he gets and aims to be rejected 100 times a day. It is not difficult to imagine that playing this game can lead to increased sales.

Something worth trying if you intend to build up your wealth or go on a diet.


Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Tools for Titans #15 : Systems, not goals.



Scott Adams needs no introduction to most readers because he is the creator of everybody's favourite engineer and corporate drone Dilbert. I find that Scott's section is one of the best sections in the entire book because which introduces elegant and effective tips on how to have a better life.

If Scott were to stop drawing cartoons, I'm pretty sure his self-help books will end up being best-sellers or classics. As such I strongly encourage readers to pick up Scott Adam's How To Fail At Almost Everything And Still Win Big which I did feature on this blog some time ago.

a) Systems, not goals.

Goals have been all the rage since the 90s and we were lapping up books by the likes of Tony Robbins and Stephen Covey. Scott takes it a step further and proposes that systems are more important than goals. The example he gave was his blogging which had a negligible effect on his revenue but functioned as an R&D platform for his writing and led him onto bigger things.

It's good to have dreams and aspirations but far better to design daily rituals which make a you a better and more effective person day by day.

b) The odd effectiveness of affirmations.  

Scott seems to be able to sell the idea of Affirmations even to a skeptical person like myself.

Like many folks who are into personal development, I paid a princely sum to buy Tony Robbin's Personal Power II tapes and over a decade ago and spent quite an amount of time telling myself that "Every and every way, I'm getting better and better." The question for me as I get older was whether successful folks tend to enjoy listening to  affirmations instead of whether listening to affirmations were able to make a person successful.

Eventually, as I figured out more effective ways to develop hard-core skills like investment finance, I quit the Toastmasters movement which I spent more than a decade with. Everybody was spouting affirmations, making motherhood speeches, but no one was really getting ahead in life. I met many Toastmasters who were washouts from the corporate world who are looking for a place to maintain their self-esteem. I also got bossed around a lot by people who called themselves Governors.

If you are starting out on your journey of self-improvement, affirmations are a great way to bootstrap yourself for more success. The grandmasters look for academic papers on affirmations written by psychology PhDs and use it to advice trainers instead.

c) Diversification to manage stress

This is easily my favourite part of the Scott Adams section. The benefits of diversification on investment portfolios has won some folks the Nobel prize. Diversification, at a broader level according to Scott Adams, is a great way to manage your stress and can benefit non-financial areas in your life .

If you can hold onto two jobs at once, you would definitely feel enjoy more job security than hanging onto one. If you have several cliques of friends, you are definitely more secure than just having one group to hang out with on weekends.

If you look at the best financial ideas, most can adapted and abstracted to non-financial areas in your life. The Black-Scholes theory is another example of such a theory. An education in a new skill or language can be modelled as a real option. Real options tend to increase in value when the situation is very volatile or chaotic.

The more uncertain we are about the economy, the more valuable are the investments we make when we are learning a new skill or language.

The trick is to accumulate these options when times are stable rather than wait for retrenchment to start a new course.







Monday, December 26, 2016

I am 42 years old ! Personal Update.

I became 42 years old yesterday and received a lot of well-wishes from social media. This is a good time to summarise the year for me before I talk about what to look forward to in the new year in a week's time.

a) Year started out quite rough.

2016 has been a fairly bad year for me. The year started out rough with my mum's cancer diagnosis which was about the same time my second child was born. Fortunately, things stabilised sometime the first quarter of 2016 and things started to get better for me.

b) School

It was also a very ho-hum year for me in school. I probably made my worst academic mistake last semester when I went out of my comfort  zone to take subjects I was not completely equipped to deal with and got my ass-kicked for one lone subject.

Nevertheless, you only live once.

c) Career

While I lacked a career at this time, yesterday was the day I decide to start taking steps to change my career strategy.

While I will continue to pursue a training contract for 2018, I will start looking for jobs based on my previous degree skill-sets. This means that I will have start to seriously consider work outside the legal sector and postpone the bar-exams for a year or two until the over supply of overseas law students winds down.

My first interview for a non-lawyer work will actually be in two days ! Wish me luck !

d) Financial markets

Dividends investors probably had a bad year in 2016. But bad years are never that bad if you are an income investor.

I mark my third year without dipping into my investment reserves and managed to even prepared my bar exam money this month by withholding some reinvestments into the stock market.

My "sense of urgency" to find a job after my final exams in April next year is not so much driven by my expenditure needs but my desperation to catch the downturn in the market for dividend income stocks. As interest rates keep re-adjusting, the time to accumulate income stocks at 8% with every pay-check is now.

e) Maintaining tech skills and leaning new Legal tech ones

The most enriching thing I did in 2016 was to find unpaid internships with start-ups with technology which I an personally interested in. I have been working for a tech startup Attores for the past few weeks and have unlocked some really interesting achievements.

i) Using the MeteorJS framework, I deployed by own web application. Even wrote something to make my D&D games better. It's great to re-acquainted with Javascript again after more than decade since I got myself the Sun Certified Java Developer qualification. Sun Microsystems does not even exist anymore !

ii) I actually wrote a smart contract to notarise a document and committed it into the test Ethereum network by completing a tutorial on the Solidity programming language. This is my major milestone for the year given that I want to be at least the first law graduate in 2017 to actually code out a smart contract which can potentially disrupt notaries in the industry.

I did it all with minimal supervision downloading my own IDE, employing Github,  hosting on Galaxy and setting up a MongoDB on the cloud.

For the rest of the year I will be wrapping up my internship and then I will begin my last semester in SMU.


Saturday, December 24, 2016

Tools for Titans #14 : You may not have a single purpose in your life.

James Altucher is hedge-fund manager who founded more than 20 companies. He is a polymath as over a decade ago, I remember reading a book on Algorithmic trading on Visual Basic written by him. These days his books tend to be more like self help books.

a) What am I embarrassed with ? What am I doing about it ?

This might be secret formula to be a top blogger. 

Think about what embarrasses you or what you are struggling with right now and then proceed to write articles on your struggle and what you are trying to do about it. 

I believe that this formula works because people can relate to the personal struggles of others. Sharing your approach to dealing with it also helps readers solve problems of their own.

b) Easier to generate 20 ideas than 10.

The second idea basically says that its easier to generate 20 ideas than 10 ideas because we tend to be a harsh judge to ourselves. There is an overarching theme to this book that creative ideas are generated when you are less judgemental about it and one recommendation is to generate daily lists of ten items as a ritual.

I have another tip on creative idea generation. Do it alone - and if you can't help doing it in a team, do not generate ideas in the presence of smart people. Some smart folks like those I met in Law School can't help but use their critical thinking skills to kill off ideas before they can be fully formed. You need to protect your crazier ideas and allow them to be developed before you send them into the firing squad. 

c) You may not have a single purpose in your life

I struggle with this statement because I do not come from a culture that make it so important to have a purpose in life. While I consider myself quite driven, I have always met with people with no real purpose to their life or existence.

Based on my personal observation, the downside to not having a purpose in life is that you end up having a dull existence which is moderated by computer games and material consumption. Another side-effect is that I notice that people in general respect folks who lack a life purpose less.

But it's a liveable life and no big deal. 

There are worse people out there in society today. 




Friday, December 23, 2016

Tools for Titans #13 : Don't retreat into a story.

Seth Godin is one of the most well-read blogs today although I can't seem to be able to appreciate why.

I guess this is the power of one of the best direct marketers today. In my opinion, Seth Godin's write-up is quite long compared to the others but it is full of folk wisdom which people reading it are already inclined to agree with so I could not find any real insight into how to succeed in life. Also I tend to be skeptical of people who are fans of Zig Ziglar.

Nevertheless, here are my choice picks :

a) First, ten people.

One way to start anything new is to present your ideas to ten cheerleaders who already like you. This is powerful because it is motivating and functions as a boost to morale. More importantly, if you get negative feedback from those who love you, you better correct it before you present it to those who hate you or are ambivalent towards you.

Ten is also quite a big number of fans. I can generate ten fans from asking around on this blog to test out my next book because it is non-fiction and about making money. People give a shit about making money. It is much harder to find someone if I am a fiction writer or a poet  I mean, in a world full of narcissistic assholes, who gives a shit unless the poem is about them ?

But even if you wish to impose on your ten biggest fans, be open to feedback and change accordingly.

And sooner or later, you would have to expose your goods to people who are more inclined to kick your ass.

b) Don't retreat into a story

Another point which I really like is the idea that we are too inclined towards a narrative of ourselves. It's actually great to create some meaning in our lives to get us to motivate ourselves further but there is a risk of retreating too far into a story.

This section is too short on specifics but I've seen people who live their lives as if they are some protagonist in their Wuxia series. It's always their struggle and how the world conspires to make them fail in their lives.

Another problem is that a story is just one perspective and one point of view. I prefer to employ models to explain the things around me - the more models backed by research, the merrier.

c) Honey Oat Vodka

The Seth Godin's section contains a vodka recipe which may justify the price of the entire book.

Not sharing it here because I think folks should just buy the book.

I'm actually gonna try this out for my class party next year.




Thursday, December 22, 2016

How the financial blogosphere does good for ourselves and our readers.

Ok, I'm going to stop my usual Tools for Titans programming to just quickly talk about some of the good stuff coming out from the financial blogosphere in Singapore.

While I do not have a direct business relationship with Big Fat Purse, I am grateful for the the work that they have in put in to unite financial bloggers under one informal grouping. The gatherings and networking sessions conducted by BFP ( with food duly paid by them ) was very beneficial because, at least for me, I was allowed to befriend other financial bloggers and tap their brains when I face some investing dilemmas of my own. It's also not easy to get a group of introverts to get out to share investing ideas with each other.

A couple of months ago Alvin Chow shared a paper with me by Dr.Fong Wai Mun on the Novy-Marx Gross Profitability approach modified with a dividends investing methodology and was kind enough to reveal that he wants to develop a new approach to investing in local stocks.

The paper was very interesting so I brought it one step further to use SMU's Bloomberg terminals to backtest the strategy to see what would have happened if I applied this form of investing for the past 10 years.

The result is that I would have made 19+% per annum with a fairly impressive Sharpe ratio.

Not revealed in BFP's article is that the minimum dividend yield of this approach is 4.57% which makes it fairly attractive to a dividends investor as well.

I will not steal the thunder from BFP but I think whatever they intend to do has been independently verified by me using a Bloomberg terminal.

This means that there is a compelling reason for an intermediate investor to listen to what BFP has to say about investing in the local stock market in 2017.

I hope to reinforce the idea that we financial bloggers are the good guys in this industry and we are rapidly evolving into a serious counter-weight to the financial advise industry in Singapore.

You may find the link to the BFP annual letter here.

( No, I am not paid to write this article or do research for BFP. )

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Tools for Titans #12 : Failure is Overrated.

Today's section is a real treat to me for I have always been a big fan.

Peter Thiel is one of the members of the Paypal mafia and is the founder of Palantir, which in my opinion, is one of the most important new companies in the world because it employs data analytics to make the world a safer place. Peter Thiel is special because he came up with this brilliant idea to pay off top-performing undergraduates to drop out to start businesses. He is also famous for funding Hulk Hogan in a lawsuit to destroy Gawker ( for outing him as gay ) and amongst the first people to support Donald Trump in his bid for Presidency.

It is no surprise that Peter's section is chock-full of wisdom :

a) Failure is overrated, but more importantly, overdetermined.

It's actually good that folks in start-up world paint a more realistic picture about failure because failure is a tragedy that robs company founders of a good life and a youth which should have been lived more fully.

More valuable is the idea that failure overrate is that idea that failure tends to be overdetermined. It's too easy to reduce failure to just a few mistakes or reasons. Failure is often multi-dimensional and just because you did avoided a misstep from a failure in the past does not mean that you have avoided other missteps.

I love failure, only when other people fail. This led me to take a difficult Insolvency module which may cost me a better degree classification. ( Irony right ?)

b) Become less competitive to become more successful.

A large part of my own personal struggle is trying to live up to this ideal of becoming less competitive but more successful.

Admittedly, I am failing in this regard.

My portfolio bothers me even though its private. My law degree grades really irk me every semester even though it should not as I have my own portfolio of skills.

I really have no idea how I can make my kids see the big picture over things like the PSLE because even if we really want to break out of this cycle of KPIs for all Singapore citizens, its easier said than done. This is why I believe in portfolio building in lieu of paying expensive tuition expenses so that my kids can win/succeed in the future.

But this just means taking my competitiveness to a whole new level against other Singaporean parents.

Like Oberstgruppenfuhrer John Smith of A Man in the High Castle, I can't seem to beat the system.

c) Three questions for start-ups or individuals

As I am still interning in a start-up, this section has three questions every startup founder needs to ask himself.

But I think it can be generalised for an individual :

i) Do you have a large market share in a small market ? Are you a big fish in a small pond ?
ii) Do you have a secret that others do not know ? Do you have a special X factor that others don't ?
iii) Do you have a way not just to create but to deliver the product ? Can you act on your dreams ?


Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Tools for Titans #11 : Which Philosopher to Start with ?

Reid Hoffman is co-founder and executive chairman of Linkedin. After covering 10 sections from Tools of Titans, I am starting to sense that I have an inherent bias for start-up business leaders and against folks who made it doing creative work. Hopefully readers will be mindful of this bias as we walk through the rest of the book together.

a) One philosopher to start with.

I spent more than a decade being a big fan of philosophy and even spent a lot of time attending philosophy cafes. All these years, no one has bothered to answer the question as to where to start if a layperson is interested in Philosophy. Philosophy undergraduates begin with Logic 101 and legal philosophy has a tendency to give a person really horrible nightmares.

As such, Hoffman's suggestion to begin with Ludwig Wittgenstein is highly refreshing.

For the layperson, the first step is to realise that a lot of problems we face in the practical world comes from limitations in the logic of language. For example, flame wars have erupted on Facebook over the concept of "Rule of Law" with many opposition supporters claiming that our government does not follow the rule of law. Studying these arguments, we will realise that the government and opposition groups have a different definition of rule of law. The government adopts a thinner and more formalistic definition which puts a premium on clarity as part of rule of law but the opposition supporters tend to infuse that definition with socio-democratic values adopted from the West.

How can language be used more effectively in work and communications ?

One possibility is to have a common vocabulary. Too many technical arguments between engineers over matters over matters which may be disagreements in jargon use but not in substance.

b) Keep your subconscious busy

Another excellent suggestion from Reid Hoffman is to use your sleeping time to work on an important problem. To do this, simply write down a problem that you need to solve before going to bed. Upon waking up, spend an hour or so trying to tackle the problem while you are alert.

I have experimented with idea on and off for the past 3 years and it is relatively effective. I guess the key is to do it regularly in a disciplined manner.

c) Blended reasons are inferior to a single reason to drive an expensive decision

I can't verify this idea and I think there is enough merit to test this hypothesis out.

Hoffman's belief is that when a decision is backed by many small reasons, it tends to turn out to be bad decision. Conversely, when there is one big reason to do something, the decision generally turns out to be the right one.

This is intuitively attractive to me because even in spouse hunting, men rarely look at the many small things which look good on paper  to decide who to marry ( like education levels, wealth of the family, religion ). Men tend to only go for that one big reason to marry some : They find their future spouses attractive.









Monday, December 19, 2016

Tools for Titans #10 : Hope is not a strategy.

The next person to be featured in Tools for Titans is documentary filmmaker Morgan Spurlock who was nominated for an Oscar for his work in Super Size Me.

a) Once you get fancy, fancy gets broken

The book does not go into any detail on this idea but it does mention that this applies to a person's gear.

I see potential in this idea. As we live in a consumerist society, everything we buy gets successively more sophisticated as time goes by. Another words, our gadgets becomes progressively more complicated and fancy over time. A setup with many components gets broken more easily.

One example is in photography, amateurs are getting more equipment which is progressively used by professionals.  Having more equipment means that individual components like a lens or a stand may break while the camera is in use. Another interpretation is that progressively more time is required to use the equipment competently.

At a personal level, I have been tinkering with using a Raspberry Pi as a media player. I always encounter problems using this setup because of the minimalist hardware of the Raspberry Pi. My windows desktop does not give me the same problems.

This idea is likely to tie in with minimalism which may become a more popular movement in the future.

b) The Kanye West strategy

Apparently Kanye West has a big portrait of himself on his wall. His justification is that he should cheer for himself before anyone else can cheer for him.

While I agree with the book that this idea is logical, this is also the kind of shit narcissists do. You know, the kind of folks who want a great body just so that they can admire themselves in the mirror.

Why can't Kanye West put a picture of his family on his wall to remind himself of what's driving him to do what he does ?

I can't say anymore because I am not Kanye West.

c) Hope is not a strategy, luck is not a factor, fear is not an option.

I'd like to digress and just talk about Rogue One. The movie expresses the idea that "Rebellions are built on hope." A nice rallying cry for many readers because it gives everyone a warm fuzzy feeling for the Christmas holidays. But in A Man in the High Castle, rebellions are not built on Hope but on exploiting the suffering of other people.

"Hope is not a strategy" is a much better message than those being hawked by MLM and Internet Marketing people.

Once of the central ideas on this blog is that success over passive income and financial independence does not come from motivation but on strategy, self denial and hard work.

There is no point talking about investing your money if you cant save it.

There is no point talking about saving your money if you can't earn it.

There is no point talking about earning money if you do not have the relevant skills and qualifications to hold onto a job.









Sunday, December 18, 2016

Tools for Titans #9 : On Anger and Doing What You Hate.

This section is on Casey Neistat who is a film maker and Youtuber. His online movies have been viewed 300 million times which is not bad for someone who ran away from home at age 15.

I really enjoyed ripping apart this section of the book. In my view, Casey Neistat does not deserve an entry in this tome. ( But what do I know ? )

a) Anger as a motivation

Casey's first advice is use your anger to motivate you to create things and inspire your creative projects. One of his most viral videos was made over an unpleasant incident from receiving summons from a traffic cop. The video was so successful it forced Mayor Bloomberg to take a question during a press conference.

In my view, anger has a mixed record in personal development. A lot of what I achieved in my 20s and 30s was driven by some kind of anger about the rich, undeserving brats from select schools along Bukit Timah road. As I get older, I have met folks who claim to wield their anger and dissatisfaction towards their personal goals but with absolute no results to show except their bitterness.

What I know is that you should not combine anger with perfectionism. You will never launch anything of use within a reasonable time and your anger will eat you up from within.  

b) What is the most outrageous thing you can do ?

Just don't.

Because of Casey's personal experiences and track record, he was able to take on money from an investor and waste it on a personal vacation while making a viral video over that process. It's not something anyone can get away with.

One aspect of personal development is that it generally comes from America which does not penalize the lack of conscientiousness as much as other societies.

This is one of those things which a person can try to do at his own personal risk. Casey's action was a bad idea because it could have been construed as a contract breach and an investor with no sense of humor could have destroyed him over that breach.

This is one of the most negative effects of having Millenials who read Tim Ferriss. They start thinking that they can get away with outrageous shit and do irresponsible things to destroy their lives.

c) It's about how little time you spend doing the stuff you hate.

On first inspection, this really sounds wise and something you can employ in your next Toastmasters meeting - It's not about how much time you spend doing what you love but how little time you spend doing what you hate. 

Upon closer inspection, it is selfish ethos. No one adopting this philosophy would enjoy starting a family and having kids because more time is spent on unpleasant tasks than those which are pleasant. And don't me started on commuting to work, scientifically proven as one of the most unpleasant tasks of the day.

Casey ran away from time at 15, at 17, he's already a dad because he is then entitled to welfare payments so i am not surprised that he lives by this code.

It's not always about yourself.

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Tools for Titans #8 : Awaken the Giant Within


Anthony Robbins needs no introduction on this blog. I'm quite sure many readers are already big fans of him and have followed him from his NLP days until his latest book on Money, which I felt, was a very credible read.

Anthony Robbins is a one-man motivational army who has been credited with many successes today. In fact, I constantly try to compare Tool for Titans against Anthony Robbin's latest epic Money. And so far, Tools for Titans comes up short. 

Regardless of his epic status as a first class self-improvement coach, a critique of Anthony Robbin's ideas is in order :

a) State -> Story -> Strategy

At a personal level, Tony Robbins has a great point about the management of a person's state. You need to be in an elevated state before you can craft a narrative to give your life any meaning. Only after these steps are taken can you proceed ahead to plan your strategy.

At a broader level, I think this is a fundamental problem with the West. The West is constantly trying to build up the self-esteem of their youths before they can start to figure out how to master something. You have overly-confident folks who can't do shit.

( How do I know ? Exchange students from EU who come into SMU always project confusion when they witness how Singaporeans get into their schoolwork.

As such, I do have classmates who are quite reluctant to have European students in their teams. )

Putting self-esteem before mastery is wrong. Trying to master something is always painful and frustrating. In my opinion. self-esteem needs to come as a result of mastery, not the other way round.

I would re-position the process differently as a feedback loop.

A minimal state can be reached where you can just barely give yourself the motivation to carry onto the stage where you develop the strategies and skills for success, Thereafter, small successes will be fed back to your personal state to reinforce your self-esteem as you go through the frustrating process of mastering something. This feedback loop often fails because your level of mastery cannot sustain your state. I learnt this the hard way during my International Moots class this semester.

At least you will understand why there are truly few masters and experts in this world.

b) Four commonalities across the world's best investors.

This is a nice section on investing that is a great lesson for readers because it has been so abstracted that it no longer has any utility.

Nevertheless, they are :

Best investor always cap the downside. Details on whether this comes in the form of put options, a cash hoard or diversification was missed. I might even argue a great career is a cap on the downside.

Asymmetrical risk and reward is also obvious but useless because they need to be discovered and exploited. Nevertheless arbitrage always wins for the best investors in the world. Sometimes the risk rewards comes from politics like betting on a Trump victory. I think the best businessmen use regulatory barriers and natural monopolies to attain this. It's not something that anyone can do by reading a self-help book.

Best investors keep a mix of assets because they know they will be wrong. I am pretty sure all investors understand diversification but also notice that it is not really mutually exclusive from the two earlier points.

The last point on Contribution is excessively hypocritical and politically correct.

Tony Robbins has been consistently talking about giving back to society in all his books stretching back to Unlimited Power. While giving back is good, a realist will give back only because he does not want to be persecuted for being wealthy. This also does not reflect the reality in Asia when billionaires avoided Bill Gates when he showed up to convince them to give to charity because we Asians are fundamentally dynastic in nature and want our children to have comfortable lives.

( I am not arguing against charity here, I am arguing against conflating charity with a wealth building strategy which Tony Robbins tends to encourage. )

The best lesson from reading this section of Tools of Titans is this :

If we keep abstracting how people get rich and build wealth for the sake of becoming more easily understood or pandering to "ordinary people", what will happen is that we will end with a set of fundamental principles which will not be useful in wealth building at all. 

You will just end up with some maxims that you can toss around in an Internet marketing or MLM seminar.







Friday, December 16, 2016

Tools for Titans #7 : Nicholas McCarthy

Nicholas McCarthy is a pianist who was born without a right hand but proceeded to graduate from the Royal College of Music in London.

As this section is really short, there is only one significant lesson to share today which is about :

Playing the Long Game

Nicholas could have made a fast buck using his malformed right hand to play the piano as a gimmick, but that would have given him a very short time in the limelight. Instead, he focused on serious playing with his left hand which led to a long lasting career.

This lesson may have implications for many of us here in Singapore.

When you latch onto a new technology by attending some bootcamp ( in my case its MeteorJS ), are you looking to make a fast buck in a start-up or trying to build a long term career ?

Same goes for investing.

You see a lot of guys getting tricked or scammed by people who claim to make a lot of money via binary options. In fact, I would like to think that the same goes for the folks who sell TA trading courses. It's about making a fast buck and not about long-term wealth generation at all. In a world where people write algorithms to trade forex and stock counters, it would be ludicrous to think that it's possible to use your trader instincts to outwit an AI.

I know of some folks who peddle TA seminars who are now switching to dividends investing after many years who suddenly realise that anything value investing related requires a different and more involved skill set of reading financial statements and following the business news.

The attraction of TA has always been that you can get rich quick and can develop the ability to get started without investing time in serious study of finance as a discipline. This allows ordinary people to get started in investing.

As such, I recommend the reader to avoid any course or seminar which claims that something is "easy" and a panacea to rescue "ordinary people".

This is an age where being average is barely enough. In finding a job, developing a career, or investing your money for above average returns.

No one can develop an investing approach which can save someone mediocrity.

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Tools for Titans #6 : Matt Mullenweg

Matt Mullenweg is the original lead developer for WordPress and is currently the CEO of Automattic, a company that is worth more than $1b USD.

a) Words that Work

Matt is obsessed with a person's choice of words. Unfortunately the book does not have any examples which illustrate this point about Matt and instead directs the reader to a book called Words that Work by Frank Luntz which I purchased immediately. The books is probably about interpersonal communication and possibly a compulsory read for law students.

b) Productivity tools and hacks. 

The best part of this section are the productivity tools and hacks which is great for any middle aged professional because tools change so quickly, we can't keep track of what the cool kids are doing. I'm only going to list three hacks here, the book has more :

i) Install the Momentum Chrome extension

Someone thought of creating a new front page for Google Chrome which makes the user reflect upon what he will do today and includes a nifty to-do list as well.

ii) Install Telegram as a replacement for Whatsapp

This tool is rapidly achieving mainstream use as a Whatsapp with better encryption and allows use from all devices.

iii) Use a DVORAK keyboard as a replacement for the QWERTY keyboard

I have been meaning to consider switching since the 1990s except that I have never seen a DVORAK keyboard for sale in Sim Lim. Any reader suggestion is welcome. I do have doubts about this suggestion as getting used to DVORAK means bringing your own keyboard to work.

c) 104 McNuggets

There is this strange story about how Matt ate 104 Chicken McNuggets all thanks to McDonalds sweet and sour sauce during the Superbowl. Reading the story several times, I have no idea what is the intention of sharing this anecdote to readers.

I hope readers with a clue would explain this to me.

This is random shit which should have been taken out by the book editors. But by this time, Tim Ferriss would be so famous that no sane editor would risk challenging his writings for fear of losing access to the revenues it would bring.








Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Tools for Titans #5 : Alexis Ohanian

Alexis Ohanian is the co-founder of Reddit and Hipmunk. This is a very short section of the book and has at most two major ideas for the reader.

a) You are a rounding error.

Alexis was once told by a Yahoo executive that their traffic was so small, they are just a rounding error. This is a lesson for us in taking some of the negatives being thrown at us and turning it into a motivation to push ourselves forward in our lives.

The less obvious lesson is that you should avoid wanting to talk trash and act like a dick to other people because you might wind up becoming the reason of their success.

b) You've got to give a damn.

Part of Hipmunk and Reddit's success is that they craft cool error messages which people still tweet about. This is a lesson about caring enough about your business to give attention to the small details which makes customer want to give you more revenue. A more important lesson is that sometimes, these small things takes up only a few minutes of a person's time.

The thing I noticed about some folks around me is that many can't even get to the point where they can even give a damn. Businesses can't even generate revenue. People don't even get out of bed. People want results but refuse to put in any effort then come up with excuses on why they are such failures.

Most of us are not even at the stage to find this advice helpful yet.


Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Tools for Titans #4 : Derek Sivers

I used to shut myself down when I read about Derek Sivers because I hear about him all the time from Internet Marketers. Fortunately, thanks to Tools for Titans,  I was able to acquaint myself with this person properly. Derek Sivers started a CDBaby, a business selling music CDs online and made $22 million from the sale.

I think Tim Ferriss is more excited about this section than I am.

But nevertheless, we can learn quite a bit from Derek Sivers:

a) What I like - Don't be a donkey

Will an upcoming M&A succeed ? What going on with Fintech ? Do they code this Ruby of Rails ? I wonder how they deploy this application ? Did they consider IP rights when they launched this product ?

This section resonates with me a lot because even if I was not a donkey, I am very likely to become one. With skills in IT, Finance and Law, I get more distracted these days because I can get my hands dirty looking underneath the hood of any piece of news I read.

This section reminds me not to become Buridan's Ass and become so inundated with choices, I get starved to death. If there is a generally good idea with a great pay off just go with it and don't get distracted along the way.

b) Of questionable value - Be more open to opportunities when you are new to something, you can be more selective later

This is too intuitive but there might be number of folks who get it wrong.

When you are starting out in something, you might have to be very open-minded and say yes to any gig you get. Subsequently, after you succeed at something, you might want to raise your standards a little so that you only do the stuff with a higher pay-off.

Maybe a reader can explain to me why this is such a fabulous idea.

c) What I dislike - Always choose options which maximise flexibilities

The third idea is to always choose to maximise your flexibility, preferably options which produces more options for you.

I would be careful with advise which is so general in nature.

Of course, having an option is better than having no option. But doing something with the expectation of a certain payoff can beat merely buying an option with a probabilistic pay-off. For example, a general degree opens many doors and provides many options but is worth less than a medical degree which locks you down for many years and only provides one solid career path upon graduation.

Underlying the decision tree is a probabilistic payoff equation and cannot be reduced a simple heuristic.

Monday, December 12, 2016

Tools for Titans #3 : Conan the Barbarian !


It is interesting that the section on Arnold Schwarzenegger  is parked under the wealth section and not the health section, but this is the best section so far. Here are the key learnings :

a) Arnold was already a millionaire before his first movie break

Arnold was already a millionaire prior to his breakthrough in the movie business. He already had a great business selling seminars, courses on bodybuilding before becoming a movie star. Having calculated that given the rate of inflation in those days, Arnold bought and held onto as much real estate as he could.

b) Arnold never auditions for his role

Another great lesson is that Arnold never auditions for his role. All of his roles were made for him. The reason he was a break-through was because he was a beefcake in an era where Hollywood was dominated by actors like Al Pacino and Dustin Hoffman. This made him different and unique.

The fact he was already a millionaire allowed him to patiently to wait for a role which only he could play.

c) Arnold's most profitable film was Twins.

This is a really teachable lesson. As no one thought that a comedy starring Arnold Schwarzenegger would make it big in Hollywood, Arnold negotiated a unique revenue-based pay-off for himself and did not ask for a salary for that acting gig. As the movie eventually did very well, Arnold was able to take a huge cut of the box office sales.

Collectively, this section showed that life is not fair.  The fittest folks who excelled in athletics are also the top scholars.

The biggest lesson for me is that simply being financially independent can be a great asset to a person's future career. You can custom make a career which provides you to niche to perform well and you can take your time to structure a pay-off which gives you a big advantage compared to your peers.



Sunday, December 11, 2016

Tools for Titans #2 : Marc Andreessen

Marc Andreessen is the living legend who co-founded Netscape. Due to his godlike status, it is almost impossible to disagree with some of his points. Here are some which I think deserves further discussion :

a) Don't Fetishize Failure 

I am really glad Marc said this. Failure is failure. It's a fuck-up which destroys the value of investors who placed their trust in you.

The Singapore Tech Community is guilty of this sin. In a country where some kids will  commit suicide if they have Bs in their PSLE scores, I was truly disgusted when so many people rushed forward to pat an accelerator on its back when it closed down for good.

b) "Nerds at Night" Test

This is a really great idea. The value of the person is not judged by what his day job consists of but what he does at night. What you do at night goes beyond what you do for a living. It's something you are passionate about and tells us more about your potential.

When I was an IT Professional by day, I was a dividend investor and studied finance at night.

c) Study the Opposites

This idea is particularly fun. Marc studies value investors like Warren Buffett but reminds himself that he will always be a different creature. The example he cited is See's Candies which is a Warren Buffett portfolio mainstay. While See's Candies is a great value investment, a bet on it is a bet against change. Marc wants to know what a high tech candy company would look like because he is betting for change.

This one of my favourite ideas so far.

In my view, the smartest guys in law school are going to make a lot of money because they are, in essence, betting against change and for the status quo. We IT-inclined JDs need to think differently and rethink the legal sector because we are betting for change - and betting against the smartest kids in our class.

A daunting prospect.

Saturday, December 10, 2016

Tools for Titans #1 : Chris Sacca

[ I am starting a series on Tim Feriss's latest book Tool for Titans which has a section on becoming wealthier in life. There will be no full summary of the section, just a discussion of the key points. I encourage readers to pick the book up to join the discussion on this blog. ]

Chris Sacca is an early stage investor and is the first person mentioned in the Wealth segment of this book.

a) What i like - Sweet and Sour Summers 

Chris mentioned the way he was brought up as a kid. During his summer holidays, his parents would find him a decent industrial attachment where he was able to learn a lot and be treated very well. Subsequently, he would then be made to work in a horrible job where he was ragged. In this way, he learned that there are great opportunities in this world but a person can end up with really shit jobs if he was not careful.

We have a system which is close to what Chris went through, its called NS but there are no cushy internships here unless a parent can pull some strings for you.

b) What's worth debating about - Are you on the offense or defence?

The idea of offence or defence in personal finance is a false dichotomy but has some utility.

In my view, an offense strategy works on increasing your revenue while a defensive strategy works on containing costs. Many of us bloggers are biased towards defence because costs are easier to control but both strategies are important to expand our range of savings.

c) What I dislike - Good stories always beat good spreadsheets

This probably applies in the world of private equity where spreadsheets tend to be projections and there are not much revenues to speak of. It is entirely possible to invest without stories, which introduces its own bias. Numbers are critical when investors look at publicly listed companies.

A good screen filter backtest on Bloomberg can have a dramatic improvement over ETF returns. For example, it is possible to have extra returns if you filter for low P/B ratios and high dividend yields in your investments. One latest filter I tested returned 19% over 10 years with a Sharpe ratio of 0.91 after reading a academic article on the strategy - I can't share so much of it right now but will talk about it later.

I actually recommend being skeptical of most investment stories.



Friday, December 09, 2016

Personal update and what to look out for in this blog.

Ok, here's a quick personal update.

a) Finances

There is supposed a 100% probability that the Fed will raise interest rates before the close of the year. I think it's already built into the REIT prices so even if it happens, a rally for REITs should be around the corner. More worrying is Singapore's new found status as a sick man of the East. My position is that the downturn is built into the government goal to restructure the economy and not widen the rich-poor gap any further. If a recession is a deliberate strategy, then a more aggressive investment stance is justified.

Recently, most of us investors of Neratel got a massive pay-off in end November and the priority would be to diversify our portfolio's further. Much of the concern now is whether Neratel without it's payments business would continue to be a good dividend counter. The consensus from the stock market is "no" and it is one of the poorest performers in my portfolio for the past few months. I'm holding onto it as for now.

On the cryptocurrency front, Ethereum's performance was so bad it was comical, but I think the longterm potential of smart contracts remain and it might be an opportunity to make more strategic bets as the year closes on the currency. I am a believer that every hack makes a cryptocurrency stronger and more robust and a short term weakness should be viewed as a strength.

Overall, it feels good to reach my third year without eating into my investment capital.

b) Law School

Or rather the lack of school. I've spent the past few days being an unpaid intern for a startup which works with smart contracts and it's been quite fulfilling so far. Beyond doing legal research on electronic signatures, I'm picking up some coding skills in Meteor.js framework which allows me to quickly prototype websites in Javascript making this possibly one of the most unique learning experiences in my life.

Some of the things I learn can be quite disturbing at the broader level. You can pick up the latest textbook on a programming framework but the code and methods in their worked examples may be obsolete by the time you pick the book up. I've managed to instinctively complete the tutorials without following the instructions closely as they are no longer valid.

[ All the extra time I spent on events programming on Microsoft Foundation Classes and messing with Linux fifteen years ago paid off in spades. For the technically inclined, I wasted a few hours on setting Session variables on by web application because the ability to do this by default was disabled after version 1.3 of Meteor.  ]

At the end of the day, developers may be running on instinct and Google searches to solve engineering problems. IT is all about fooling around.

If you follow the news, NTUC is collaborating with General Assembly to bring programming bootcamps to the masses of PMETs but I doubt picking up specific coding skills would be helpful to build industry-ready software engineers. A lot depends on your mental flexibility and IT foundational skills honed over many years of general practice to know instinctively how to react when instructions fail. The strongest beneficiary of programming bootcamps will always be IT professionals and engineers and not non-IT types.

c) Future Talks by Financial Bloggers.

Work has started on planning the next talk which would be on mid-January. We are planning a session on Money and Relationships and will be sharing money management tips within the context of a family.

Can't share anymore as research on the topic starts this weekend for me but it should be fun.

d) What to expect on this blog

Beginning tomorrow, I'm going to try to post everyday.

I'm currently reading Tim Ferriss's Tools of Titans and rushed my way from the Heath section to the section on Wealth. I'm going to do a quick write-up on each wealth expert featured in his books and talk about whether I agree or disagree with Tim's writeup and the person's ideas.

Tim Ferriss is one of the most influential thought leaders in personal development today and I expect many readers of this blog to be big fans of the man. However, my personal view was that Tim made it really big too quickly and catapulted himself to the level of being a VC-level investor without a solid grounding in Finance. He invests more like an entrepreneur than an investor.

I would expect his advice to quite polarising and worth getting into on this blog.






Tuesday, December 06, 2016

Example on how to Review your Job and Relevance within your industry.

Just thought I would provide an example on how to review your current job and predict the degree of disruption which you will face over the next ten years. The example I will use is the task of a litigator and if you actually know some litigators, you will understand these are supremely confidant guys who will never believe that their work will ever be replaced by an AI.

So to review the work of the litigator, the first task would be to break the work of litigation down into multiple parts, which according to my reference book is as follows : documentation review, legal research, project management, litigation support, e-discovery, strategy, tactics, negotiation and advocacy. If you are an software developer you might end up with different tasks like : Feasibility Study, Business Analysis, Systems Architecting, Programming, Testing, Deployment.

For each component of litigation work, we try to determine what level of commoditization the work has reached. For example, legal research and documentation can potentially be done by legal processing outsourcing teams in India so fall into the packaged territory. Project management can be tracked using MS Project or Prima Vera or even conducted by a PMP instead of a legal professional. Advising on strategy and tactics remains a bespoke service which the customer expects from the litigator himself.

Litigation State of Commoditization
Document Review Packaged
Legal Research Packaged
Project Management Systematized
Litigation Support Standardized
Electronic Disclosure Standardized
Strategy and Tactics Bespoke
Negotiation Bespoke
Advocacy Bespoke

At least the full picture I tried to craft for the litigator looks like this. A smart litigator will focus on understanding his client more and find ways to offshore the document review and legal research part of the work, being good at the law is not enough. Thereafter, savvy law-firms may wish to look into non-lawyer headcount to do project management, litigation support and electronic disclosure.

More interestingly, whoever harbours ambitions to disrupt the legal sector should likely focus on the low hanging fruit like document review rather than to cut against the grain and try to take on tasks with a heavy client interfacing tasks.

I'm sure many legal practitioners will find an issue with the table I built to which I invite you for feedback. After all, I don't have any working experience in the legal industry yet.

But many readers can employ this approach to catalog the work you do for the company and start finding ways to do more of the bespoke work which leads to a higher income and lower odds of industrial disruption, if the bulk of your work can be easily packaged or completely commoditised, start making plans to either retrain or leave your company.

Sunday, December 04, 2016

Can your job be replaced ?

I've just started on my unpaid internship with a start-up that deals with smart contracts. The power of an unpaid internship is that it is very easy to fall into the trap of doing the bare minimum and I was very careful not to let it happen to me. My start-up has a a number of objectives which I can work towards which I intend to meet, otherwise I am spending my December trying to pick up two key skills :

a) The first is to pick up the MEAN stack of writing software using MongoDB, ExpressJS, NodeJS and AngularJS. Fortunately, I paid $26 four a course from Udemy which gives me a small taste of how to scaffold and refine a simple website with this technology.
b) The second skill set is to spend a months trying to think about the legal industry and the forces which are intent on disrupting legal work. The book I am reading is Tomorrow's Lawyers : An Introduction to Your Future by Richard Susskind.

Interestingly, the book I am reading on the legal industry has enough generic information which is useful to folks from the IT or finance industry and I think it would be useful to develop a generic framework that would give a readers an idea of how vulnerable you are to being replaced.

The book has an interesting framework to measure the degree of commoditization of someone's labour. Instead of just applying labels like bespoke and commoditized, the author suggests five ways to measure the degree of commoditization of the work you provide for your customer.

Bespoke work is what every knowledge worker dreams to work on. A litigator for a top firm does bespoke work and so does a top neurosurgeon. This is the safest haven for professional workers, but requires not just a lot of technical skill, it requires a combination of soft skills and domain knowledge to remain relevant. Every knowledge worker should strive to provide bespoke work to a customer.

One step below bespoke work is standardized work. No work is truly unique and there generally have to be the kind of work which looks similar to problem faced before. Sometimes, a lawyer goes through a checklist when drafting an employment agreement rather than to create one from ground up. A complex brain operation may have a complicated checklist which the surgeon must undergo. He is not creating new medical science. Similarly, what I have learned in software engineering is that most websites we create come from a common framework which we scaffold and modify later to the client's requirements. Standardized work is still a money spinner and a bulk of work falls into this category instead.

One step below standardised work is systematized work. Where the checklist can be automate and tracked using computers, the work become s systematised. IT Operations moved into this phase when ITSM was created and standard ticketing was done to streamline helpdesk operations. This is an emerging phenomenon in legal work when I was doing my pro-bono work with Criminal legal aid. Some sort of ticketing work flow exists to allow means testing to take place and have the lawyers perform data entry on the case in a CRM system. Automated document assemble of contracts comes into this category.

The next step is packaged work. At this stage, there is a sufficient degree of systematization which allows the work to be packaged and done online. One example of tax preparation. This work can reasonably be done by outsourced workers remotely.  Some of the work may not even require a a professional to perform it.

At the final stage is commoditization, where the work has become so commonplace that it may become open-sourced. Imagine a contract of employment which is so cookie cutter that it is available online for free and HR professionals can just download and modify it within 5 minutes before deploying into their organization.

This is a very useful model for all professionals to measure the risk they face from commoditization of the work they do. The trick is to not to look at the job they face but break the work down granularly to determine which parts can be done at a cheaper rate by someone else.

Say for example, the person in question is some sort of financial advisor, there is a trend of customers turning to robo-advisors to set up their portfolios. The work of calculating the stock ratios to determine the best stocks to buy have already reached the commoditization stage. The question is whether these robo-advisors can adequately capture the risk tolerance of a customer in such a way that the work of face to face engagement can be sufficiently systematized to kill off most financial advisory roles in the industry.

If you believe that your work is reaching the systematization stage, then it might be useful to see if it is possible to start advising something else instead. Currently advising on wills, trusts and settting up of a family office is not facing disruption yet.

 

Thursday, December 01, 2016

Motivating readers to take control of personal finances.

Many of us bloggers face the same problem, our readers are already fairly motivated to take control of their personal finances. the challenge is to be able to reach out to the folks who can benefit from our articles the most.

As such a mini-revision on personal motivation would come in useful today. The bulk of today's material comes from Barking up the Wrong Tree Blog. There are three conventional ways to think about motivation but I'm going to offer one novel suggestion.

a) Finding meaning in what you do.

You can construct meaning behind your financial planning by asking yourself what broader purposes lies behind your efforts to save money.

Everybody likes to have money, but most average folks just want what money can buy or travel to exotic locations. If the broader purpose behind money management is more consumption or coolness, your plans are unlikely to be sustainable. To work, the money in a savings account or a stock portfolio must somehow lead to a more secure future for any long term financial plan to work.

It's actually quite sad to construct the meaning of a person's life around brands like Apple or Prada. But I think a lot of Singaporeans have this problem.

b) Attaining sovereignty or autonomy in your life. 

Do something because you want to and not because someone wants you to. Specifically, having sovereignty and autonomy at work means having leeway as to decide how something gets done. If you are being micro-managed at work, it would be very difficult to develop the motivation to work hard for the organisation. This is why the government sector is full of deadwood managers who are surrounded by unmotivated workers who are ring-fencing experts. The salary becomes the only reason to get up in the morning.

You need to find corporate cultures which grant you that autonomy in your life. Entrepreneurs can work punishing hours and enjoy it because of the autonomy of they have which other workers don't.

Similarly, I prefer couples to have separate bank accounts, so that there is more autonomy.

c) Doing something tough is easier than thinking about how tough it is when you see other people doing it.

Sometimes, people just need to start doing something to determine whether it suits their lifestyle. When I was single and saving 80% of my income, it was much more motivating than saving 60% of my income although outsiders think that I am self-flagellating.

Something looks tough because you are a third party. When you actually start to do it, it may not be that bad.

d) Self-Esteem as a cornerstone of your identity and allows you to weather the storms.

I have a fourth suggestion which came from watching Westworld and talking to a down-to-earth classmate who was a cop in his past life.

In Westworld, the best hosts are those with a personal tragedy programmed into their AI. I think that this is wrong, the best folks to sustain the best money habits are those who have minor victories in their personal memories. These victories reinforce their self-esteem and makes them grittier in life.

If you have done well in your PSLE in the past or won trophies in sports, you will always have something to turn to when you are facing adversary and suffering in the hand of other people. This cornerstone provides the resilience to sustain a regime which can brutal. If your boss chews you up, you might want to think about points in your life where you have been very successful to take whatever an asshole throws at you.

In summary, motivation readers to manage money better is not easy because it is a marathon and not a sprint. People also find very creative ways to sabotage themselves in their lives.

These four points provide a foundation in figuring out whether a person can be easily motivated to accumulate wealth or would simply be destined for a simply and mediocre life.






Wednesday, November 30, 2016

On PSLE.

Ok, my exams are finally over and I am moving into my final semester beginning next year.
Starting tomorrow, I begin a short unpaid internship stint with a startup. I hope I would be able to learn something significant this year end holidays with some programming high on my list of priorities. It has been a largely relaxed semester so there's no need for any break this time round so off I go...

Of late, there has been much talk on the PSLE exams and how demotivating it is for the majority of the primary six students who had to take it. I have been ranting for the past year about the anti-PSLE movement where people share their low scores to console the students who did badly, but they are just taking this opportunity to get some old fashioned humble-bragging into Facebook.  Instead I just want to spend some time sharing with readers two things about the PSLE.

a) PSLE's biggest problem is that it summarises a 12 year old's entire worth as a human being into one T-score metric. But therein lies its genius.

I think the most onerous part of PSLE lies in its ability to summarise the value of a 12-year-old into one simple t-score number. It sucks to do badly but making matters worse, parents invest so much money and time into this game doing badly is also a reflection of how bad the parents are.

But the PSLE's genius is the T-score itself. With one metric, the education system can be bound  to one national agenda and future changes to adapt to the new economy can occur with a simple adjustment to the subject syllabus. This is how Singapore's education system can achieve such ratings with PISA and yet incur so little overheads and explains why we spend so little of our tax payer's money on educating our children.

Imagine administering hundreds of primary schools and  you are not just required to educated these students, you also need to use the system as a sorting machine to ensure that the best secondary school places go to the most deserving kids (and every parent thinks that their kids are the most deserving.) As even the most highly paid management consultants will be hawking a Balanced Scorecard to MNCs, implementing one metric is genius.

Adults, of course, are extremely unhappy with such an arrangement, but society itself is more like the PSLE than we would care to admit. Closer to home in SMU, if a law student scores a GPA less than 3.0, we cannot practice. Another example are dating apps like Tinder and OkCupid. The way men look at female profiles employ one simple metric as well : Men only go for women with good looks. Some of my friends complain that they only get matched with "Pork chops" when the "Pork Chops" at least would be more willing to look at other traits beyond a guy's appearance.

b) The folks who do badly talk about how demotivating the PSLE is but it's become politically incorrect to talk about how much it boosts the self-esteem of students who do well. 

We have a different problem with western liberals in Singapore. Singapore is caught up with it's own form of political correctness which is bordering on Fascism this year. Instead of Black Lives Matter, in Singapore, it is (PSLE T-Score < 220) Lives matter.

I don't disagree with the idea that poor grades should be played down to preserve a kid's mental health, but not a single posting on FB talks about positive effects of doing well in the PSLE.

I am going to provide two alternative perspectives.

One of my ex-colleague's son scored 266 for his PSLE and I sensed a lot of pride in his kid's result. He was quite mischievous, first baiting us into asking by pretending that his kid did badly. I think he earned it because unlike the other parents in his batch of engineers, my friend and his wife focused on coaching his son instead of blazing ahead in his own career. His son's results goes beyond that guaranteed seat in Hwa Chong Institution, it is also an important source of self-esteem for the my colleague who made the career trade-off. It gives a source of self-esteem whenever he encounters his peers who are directors in their respective companies.

My niece has also done remarkably well at 258. My wife's side is Malaysian and my niece is on the way to getting into a IP program. If you think about it, at least the PSLE makes the T-Score a criteria for entering into the best schools. Malaysian Chinese who stay in Malaysia have to do an extra year in secondary school purely for racial/linguistic reasons (This is known as the one year removed penalty mostly imposed on ethnic Chinese). My niece is quiet and shy, and now at least, she has done something significant to give her an anchor to say that she can make it if she puts enough effort to get something done.

Ok, that's all for ranting about PSLE for now as my own exams were over just this morning.








 

Friday, November 25, 2016

Financial Bloggers meet-up with SGX.

On Wednesday evening, financial bloggers were invited to meet up with SGX over and informal dinner session. This event was coordinated by Timothy Ho of Dollars and Sense, so I am grateful to him for giving me the opportunity to meet up with SGX.

As this is an informal session, I was speaking to the SGX representative as to what she intends to achieve with this session and came away with the impression that they really just want to get to know financial bloggers better and have no desire to really find out where we stand on key issues.

I thought, perhaps collectively, it would be beneficial for SGX to know the following things about us :

a) Financial bloggers are diverse and seldom have achieve consensus on many key issues.

I thought the most important view is that we seldom agree, but we get along really well with each other in spite of that.

Investment Moats have views on which dramatically differ from mine when it comes to transferring CPF-OS to CPF-SA. I think what's more important is to figure out why we have a different points of view and let the public be the judge of that. At the expert level, personal finance is highly contextual and a financial plan is generally bespoke and tailor made for the individual.

I expect a lot of healthy disagreement with my friends in the future.

b) Financial bloggers are often wrong individually, but collectively we can be really smart.

The mark of a great investor to me is how great his investment mistakes are. I scoff at some folks I meet in law school who make bold claims that they would not rookie investment mistakes. A real investor will punch himself quite hard and turn his mistakes into war stories to be shared with others. I certainly still make rookie mistakes.

Individually we can be quite stupid with our investments, but collectively I think we are smarter than any individual CFA-endowed hedge fund managers. Opposing views are shared and the better argument can often win the day.

And I do happily change my mind if some blogger writes a convincing counter argument to my investment idea. The trick is to read as far as possible the volume of articles we product everyday to get an idea of what we are thinking about as a collective hive-mind.

c) Financial bloggers have the ability to say that the Emperor is not wearing any clothes

As more of us gain financial independence, we will become bolder. And,  If I ever get a practicing certificate, I will start helping my bloggers stay out of trouble from lawsuits, that's something I want to do as they made me so much money in the past.

We've always been very candid with the insurance industry, clashing with them with ideas like "Buy term and invest the rest", pointing out the folly of buying Integrated Health Shields and warning buyers away from picking up ILPs.

Over time, this boldness will find itself in our ability to point out the faults in a particular investment without fear or favour. Fund managers and journalists face a lot of career risk when they say negative things about an investment product.  We do face much lower risks when we write our articles.

d) We have no idea on how to help with poor trading volumes.

Unfortunately, due to my exam preparations, I did not think too deeply as to how we can carry this relationship further beyond dinner. But I doubt anyone of us can help SGX with their big elephant in the room which is their problem of low volumes in the stock-market.

To a great extent, financial bloggers love dividends investing is one of the  major reasons why volume was so low in the first place. When I showed my dad how to just invest passively and collect rent every three months with his portfolio, he just stopped listening to his broker and trades no more than 2-3 times every month.

In the dinner session, I have tried to propose that the government increase the amount of leeway some of us can use our CPF to invest in the markets, or loosen up with policing the markets but that is not ultimately within SGX's control.

Readers are encouraged to share their views on how to improve trade volumes in SGX here. I will find a way to consolidate it and share it with SGX.

Looking towards the future, my personal wish is that some of us get to be invited to sessions such as those sessions which discuss dual classed shares, we might be able to contribute positively to the discussion.







Friday, November 18, 2016

How a visit from an old ex-colleague made me $100,000 richer !

On Tuesday, an old friend decided to come all the way to my home for a visit. My friend is transitioning quite well into real estate sales and was kind enough to share some really basic tips with me on managing my own property.

As you guys might know, while I have quite a decent amount of REITs in my portfolio, I am not too familiar with actual real estate. I live in an Executive Condominium which I service with the money I have left in my CPF-OA. Personally, I don't really think very much about my primary residence because I expect to live in it up to the medium term because my kids would have to go to school nearby. Furthermore, five years is not even up so I would not have been able to have a decent sale even if I wanted to.

So my friend introduced me to SRX, which allows me to input my home address and it would spit out an estimate of the value of my home along with the mount it would fetch if I rented it out. And, lo and behold, it gave me a valuation which is almost $100,000 higher than the price I paid for.

I have always been quite conservative in counting my net worth. For my EC, I simply took its value as the amount which I paid for when computing my net worth. Because my friend showed me the possibly of a different way to calculate the value of my home, I was made instantly richer.

You might ask why is this important at all ? It's all psychological right ?

Not exactly so.

Section 4A of the Securities and Futures Act defines an accredited investor as as someone whose personal assets exceed $2,000,000 or whose income in the last 12 months exceeds $300,000. My friend's "revaluation" of my property puts me very close into striking distance of accredited investor territory even though I had been unemployed for the past 3 years !

I think this is one area of the law which deserves some degree of reform in the future.

I'm not too sure accredited status should factor in a person's primary residence. A lot of Singaporean Baby Boomers qualified for AI status because they sat on their landed property for decades but have no real access to liquid assets or the knowledge to deal with sophisticated instruments.

Right now I have yet to reach AI status so I still cannot confirm whether this is a good or a bad thing. But based on what I know, some of the good things I qualify for are the more prominent value based funds ( like Aggregate ) and not to mention BFP's new flagship Angel investing course.

But with the good comes the bad.

The general approach is that accredited investors can look after themselves and regulation is quite lax for businesses which only deal with AIs. Land banking can no longer harm retail investors but it can still attract business from accredited investors. There is also a problem with diversification. If I need $250,000 to buy one structured note position, I would not be diversified even if I have $2,000,000 in my portfolio.

All in all, try not to lose the protection given to retail investors even if suddenly find yourself an accredited investor, the government puts it there for a good reason.

Anyway, if I ever volunteer to give up this protection and charge into accredited investor territory, I would probably have to be also very willing to put my legal training into good use.

So, what did my friend get for making me $100,000 richer ?

I bought him kopi and Thosai.











 

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Personal Update

As exam season is upon us, this blog would be facing erratic updates over the next 3 weeks :

a) Financial outlook

One of the most important result of the Trump victory is that it's become impossible to read what will happen to the markets next. Analysis found on Friday's issue of the Economist is already incorrect in many ways as Trump is already working to back track on many of his campaign promises. The most promising news for investors is the question of whether the Fed to proceed to raise interest rates on December ( They might not ). The most negative news is on TPP but Singapore already has a mesh of trade deals in place so I'm not too sure whether the negatives will outweigh the positives.

But the most interesting thing is this. From what I'm seeing, the purported experts who are saying "I told you this would happen" are not backing it up with real market action.

I continue to invested in high yielding counters and there is another avalanche of payouts over the next few weeks which would need me to spread my portfolio further. While I have no data backing me up, everything seems more positive than negative to me over the next 12 months as some readers know that the killing I made was mostly done during the Great Recession of 2009.

When no one really knows anything and can't figure out what will happen next, I think the solution is to stay invested, spread your dividends over a wider number of counters and bargain hunt over time.
 
b) Alternative investment

One thing I started in 2016 and not done too well are the forays I made into the alternative investment world. I continue to pay my tuition fees in this area.

In the crowdfunding space, we are still trying to sue the guarantor of Rupini to see if we can recover the amount of money loaned to them. As a law student, this development is fascinating as a lawsuit like this can make or break the entire crowdfunding space. It's interesting to see professional lawyers get schooled by the courts on the finer details of making statutory demands as the case unfolds. This also cuts too closely to my law school adventures with one professor  asking me in class whether I expect to get my money back in my campaigns. ( I guess in life, its either you win or you learn. )

My losses in crowdfunding in total is around $500 since 2 out of 4 campaigns failed.

In cryptocurrencies, I have paid about $60 in tuition expenses but learning quite a bit about Ethereum. It would have been in the thousands had I built my own mining rig a few months ago. The currency has been beaten down due to the continuous hacking by some unknown parties.

I'm very optimistic about Ethereum because every hack creates a bargain opportunity and every hard fork make the currency more robust to future attacks.

c) Miscellaneous Readings

Out of the blue, I've been reading too many books on the new jobless economy so I wanted to cheer up so I picked up a book called Hygge by Charlotte Abraham.

Hygge is probably the most un-Singaporean concept you would ever encounter. The folks in the west are currently obsessed with this Danish concept which is some sort of Danish conception of happiness but contains within itself a few aesthetic components which reflects cosiness in product design and hanging out and talking to a bunch of friends ( who never seem to be jerks ).

I have no idea what kind of drugs I ate to even bother about this book ( And I'm on several ). The author spends an inordinate amount of time whining about her personal life and the rest of the time, the book features a large amount of Ikea furniture.

As it turns out Hygge works if you have long winters and constantly need to snuggle up to something. It also functions if you have a homogenous culture with generous welfare benefits so no kwai-lan friend can afford to inflict some micro-aggression at you with their latest Rolex watch purchase.

Well that's for this Sunday. If there are updates over the next few weeks, it's likely to involve IPOs and some SGX Listing Manual rules because I have to mug them for the exams.








Wednesday, November 09, 2016

Triumph of the Trump !

What an amazing year ! We've got the election of Duterte, Brexit and now Trump.

Let's talk about what investors should consider next.

Unlike the liberals who will spend the rest of the day depressed over the US elections, I don't think that Trump is crazy. He carefully crafted a message for white voters and thrashed Clinton at the polls. And I doubt any family man wants to be remembered as a Hitler-like personality given that his kids will have to live with that in the future.

This means that while there will be bargaining opportunity in the markets but the bargain hunt may be short-lived.

Value and yield investors should act quickly to buy up stocks which have been beaten down today. If it is anything like Brexit, some capital will move to Singapore which is already a fairly cheap market by international standards and we may even see a rebound over the next few days.

Of course, none of us have a crystal ball to conclude what would happen to the markets over the longer term in a world of Trump, Xi and Putin. I am confident that most intellectuals have underestimated Trump, the US has enough checks and balances to keep things running smoothly, in fact, the US will experience a lot of fiscal stimulus to upgrade its infrastructure in rural areas.

Singapore can take comfort because we've always adapted to whoever is in charge of the superpowers. We have the social capital and the educational investment to make the smartest choices.

This can come in the form of a greater pivot towards China or negotiating more trade deals since TPP is likely dead in the water.  

Saturday, November 05, 2016

Is Singapore entering a lost decade ?

First, a personal update.

Sick and tired of sending resumes to law firms and getting roundly ignored, I did something unusual and spent the week chatting up legal startups to see if I can get an unpaid internship for December. I managed to get a positive reply within a matter of hours with my resume and within 24 hours managed to gain some access to a couple of startup founders.

In a short 2-3 years out of the IT industry, the hiring process for IT guys have almost completely changed. The hirers are more interested in my Github.com account than my resume. Fortunately, I actually have a portfolio of projects from the last time I did my Data Science specialization and I could even showcase the Portfolio Simulator I wrote in R to these companies.

In the face of difficult employment conditions, the question I want to pose to readers is whether Singapore is entering its own lost decade. A pal who returned from Taiwan came back with conspiracy theories hatched in the Taiwanese media about how China intends to plot Singapore's destruction with the Kra Canal and the One Belt One Road initiative.

One of the things Singapore is doing right is the Smart Cities project.

Regardless of how it pans out, we will be able to benefit immensely from the project but not from the jobs it would create. We should see Smart Cities not as a vehicle for job creation but as a vehicle to make income inequality tolerable. What smart cities should ideally eliminate is consumption inequality. In a Smart City, a blue-collar non-degree male Singaporean can gain access to cheap sources of games and media download and can entertain himself in a virtual reality space for at least 30 hours a week and experience high life satisfaction. A combination of Steam, Netflix and Amazon can make this a reality. Smart Cities allows Singapore to tolerate (but not avoid) a decade of structural unemployment and deflation.

So here's a nub of my thesis for this article. We are entering our Lost Decade because Smart Cities will net-net destroy jobs.

Governments face this thing called an employment trilemma according to The Wealth of Humans by Ryan Avent.

Singapore can have an economy with jobs which meets 2 out of 3 following conditions :

a) Jobs with high productivity and wages
b) Jobs that are resistance to automation from robots or AI.
c) Jobs that employ a lot of people and can scale across the economy.

If you follow government propaganda, the emphasis is on (a) and possibly (b) in the light of driverless cars and the emphasis on Block 71. This automatically means that such jobs being promoted are not scaleable across the economy. Not even IT professionals in my generation has the statistics foundation to cope with the rise of AI and Deep Learning.

Think about it, driverless cars will make all taxi drivers obsolete. Tray return systems will reduce the need for F&B staff. The initial job losses will be absorbed by foreign immigrants we took in in the past but locals will not be spared from these technological advancements. The Uber drivers are not going to be repurposed as Natural Language Processing experts or Deep Learning gurus overnight.

If you actually want to useful in a Smart City :

a) You should immediately look into the concept of micro-credentials such as a nanodegree from Udacity. Quickie degrees which take about 3 months tops that arms you with the tools to create the systems which can disrupt the economy.
b) Achieve a clean break with your current skills and learn something which will be relevant in the future.

Unfortunately for everyone these are hard skills which go beyond what most ITE and non-university bound Poly diploma  students can attain. I say this with some authority as I have seen their performances in various hackathons in my previous life.

[ It would have been reason for Lawyers to be a little cocky in light of these developments until I realised that legal work can hardly be made more productive, can't scale in Singapore, and there are serious efforts in the technology space to at least reduce the dependence on lawyers in the finance industry. ]