Saturday 4 July 2015

Extreme Investing - Blood Sports and Hoarders.

If asked to define our aims when investing, most of us would be able to give a reasoned reply and describe an outcome we are trying to achieve, whether it's to buy a house or retire early. We know how much we need (well roughly :-)) and we are making plans to get there.

But, like the huntsmen with their hounds, some investors seem to chase profit for it's own sake and delight in making a killing even when they have no real use for the spoils. Accumulation and growth is the thing, the excitement of putting another "0" onto the bank balance, just like the thrill of the chase and watching the dogs kill the fox, are what it's all about. Investing has become a sport in which owning a large amount, or making large gains, are aims in themselves and not means to an end. In fact, after a certain amount of wealth has been generated, there simply can't be any other "end" than to make more of the same. When you are able to have anything money can buy with the click of a finger, making more money becomes the only challenge.

Then there's those investors who treat investing like a game of chess, a challenging intellectual pursuit with sophisticated tactics and gambits. The figures at the end of the balance sheet are almost academic, rather than a practical goal, because that's what the whole exercise has become.

Although these types of relationships with investing can seem alien to most of us, who just aim to have enough money to do what we want in life, there is a further attitude towards money that also often results in "having too much" and which is even more toxic from an economic point of view, and that is cash hoarding.

We all know about the gradual shift of the world's wealth into the hands of the 0.1% and how it has continued to the extent that they can't possibly spend it and put it back into the economy. However it also seems that the super rich aren't investing as much as we might expect them to either. They have stopped building business to the extent that they were "meant to" by the economic model and are becoming more content to let their capital feed on and nourish itself.

Cash hoarders have bloated bank accounts full of "stuff" they have no use for. They take delight in counting it and checking that it's all still there, rather than in what it can do to improve their lives. There is an argument that these people are to be pitied just as much as those who fill their homes with old newspapers and other rubbish. However, on the other hand, a TED discussion concludes that: " the harm caused by a wealth hoarder is generally imposed upon their community while for other forms of hoarding it is the hoarder themselves who bears the brunt of that behaviour." 

Those of us in the PF/FiRE world often (and rightly) pour scorn on the need people seem to have to buy more and more "things" and have more and more "stuff", but stock piling wealth for its own sake could be regarded as just as much, if not more of, a sin. I see it time and time again on MSE forums - people who obviously have far, far more than they need raising anxious questions about what to do with the rest to make sure it continues to grow. I struggle to see how having all that money is enriching their lives (although Freud could probably give me a theory :-))

In the budget next week George Osborne is expected to introduce more incentives for building, keeping and passing on wealth for those of us who are fortunate enough to be in a position to do so. Maybe he should be concentrating on encouraging us to see the benefits of knowing when we have enough and giving us ethical and effective ways of investing it back into the world we live in.1


1 See Mr Z and DD for some ideas

5 comments:

  1. Once you know that governments can seize all they like, can you ever have enough? If I knew how to keep some money in Switzerland and Singapore I would.

    Remember the Jewish families who survived because they'd always kept an emergency fund in diamonds.

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    1. Having distrust in the government to this extent would be a pretty miserable way to live but I suppose there must be ways of hiding cash (tin can buried in the garden?) if this is a concern.

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  2. Really a very interesting post, Cerridwen.

    You're right of course. The super-rich rarely have the economic effect people believe. The idea of trickle down (that is, the super rich spending and it going into the growth of the broader economy) is flawed. An individual, can, as you say, only spend so much at any one time.

    I remember seeing Theo Paphitis and Peter Jones on Top Gear once and they described their wealth as a score card. That is all it is. However, whereas with a scorecard like that of crazy golf or something you don't get the benefit of filling the scorecard yourself or a nice game in the meantime. The money scorecard is largely self-filling. Where is the fun in that?

    I hope one day to have enough money to live off comfortably. But beyond that? All I can think of is it being used to help others live a little more comfortably themselves. To just hoard it seems pointless and antisocial. A new age of philanthropy would be greatly welcomed in this regard!

    Thanks for the mention as well. Much appreciated!

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    1. Thanks DD. I love your idea of a new age of philanthropy. :-)

      Personally though, I'd rather the distribution of wealth was achieved by measures to promote greater income equality rather than by the rich giving to the poor. That way we all get to feel better about ourselves and the society we live in, not just those with the means to choose to put their excess into the charity box (or not).

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  3. I must confess to loving the sport of accumulation and growth, but I'm also attracted to the intellectual side. It's a good mental workout. Be interesting to see what I'm like when I've more than "enough" in the bank.

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