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A great interview with Stanley Druckenmiller
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A great interview with Stanley Druckenmiller

Your Sunday morning thought piece
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I don’t listen to as many interviews and podcasts as I used to, or indeed as I should (more fool me), but this interview this week with legendary investor, Stanley Druckenmiller, happened across my desk and I highly recommend it, if you can find the time. It’s long, but well worth it.

Druckenmiller founded Duquesne Capital in 1981 and closed it 2010 with some $12bn in assets. He is said to have made $260 million in 2008 alone. He was also, from 1988 to 2000, lead portfolio manager of George Soros’ Quantum Fund. (Many of the best parts of the interview regard what he learnt from Soros).

There are great stories, insight and wisdom, and a great deal to learn from him.

George Soros, right, with Stanley Druckenmiller in 2000, when Mr. Druckenmiller resigned as manager of the Quantum Fund. Credit...Peter Morgan/Reuters

Here are some of my take-aways:

In his 45 years as a chief investment officer, today’s set-up is like nothing Druckenmiller has ever seen, because the bond market is so distorted with all the central bank buying of the last 12 years. He is not sure how it pans out. Normally, if he sees a bear market, he would hide in bonds. But that is not such an obvious option, when is inflation 8% and they are only yielding 3%. (Currently he seems to be mostly on the sidelines - more on this in a moment).

“Once inflation gets above 5% it has never come down unless the Fed funds rate gets above CPI. And that is currently 8%.” He doesn’t think the Fed funds can get to 8%.

He is generally bearish regarding today’s markets, but also makes the point that he has an overly bearish mindset, and part of his process is managing that. 90% of his fortune, and of any good short-seller, he says came on the long side, in growth stocks (in his case). The maths is with you.

Think a year ahead

Stock markets are predictive - particularly companies within the stock market. The homebuilders, the truckers, retail - they can all tell you where the economy is going 6 months or a year from now. (He thinks a recession is likely).

Retail investors tend to focus on what’s happening right now, and that is why they do not outperform. Current fundamentals are already reflected in the price. His advice is to focus intensely on what moves the stock price - what’s going to change 18 to 24 months from now? Will the company be in better shape? How are people going to react to that change?

“My number one advice: Do not invest in the present. The present does not move stock prices. Change moves them.”

He is not a fan of the diversification advocated in business schools. A big problem for investors is stale longs and stale shorts, he says. One should have a good knowledge of all asset classes and be able to switch between them. The act of doing that keeps you on your toes. It keeps you thinking and questioning.

If you have an idea, it often pays to act quickly on it, then do the research later. Today markets move quickly and there is often not time to wait on a good idea. If an idea appeals intuitively and fits with his macro thinking, he tends to invest quickly and then do further research. If he is wrong, he can get out quickly. Good ideas tend to spread fast in the market - people talk. When an idea catches on, a security moves fast, erasing much of the trade potential, so it is important to be in as early as possible. Soros has spoken of this strategy in his books as well.

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Never mind the market, what about you?

A key thing he learned from Soros is that “sizing is 70% to 80% of the equation ... Part of the equation is seeing the investment, part of the investment is seeing myself in a good trading rhythm. It’s not whether you’re right or wrong it’s how much you make when you’re right and how much you lose when you’re wrong.”

“I believe in streaks,” he says, “Like in baseball. Sometimes you’re seeing the ball, sometimes you’re not, and one my number one jobs is to know when I’m hot and when I’m not. When I’m hot, I need to turn the dial straight up. When you’re cold the last thing you should do is make big bets to get even. You need to turn yourself down.”

He applies this same logic to those who work for him. Placing big bets with those within his firm, who are on a winning streak, and often even betting against those who are on losing streaks.

We could perhaps apply the same logic to those we follow - to commentators such as myself: know when they are hot and when they are not. (I am not hot at the moment FWIW).

Many great traders talk of the need for humility and part of Druckenmiller’s success lies, I guess, in knowing when to be humble - knowing when he’s off. On one occasion in 2000, he went to Africa for six months, switched out of the market altogether - no screens, no papers nothing - came back and made 40% in a month.

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Macro chaos coming

Druckenmiller sees “macro chaos” in the years ahead and feels investors will need to be able to switch between assets. He is worried about global trade and does not rule out a return to the 1930s.

He thinks blockchain is going to be very big three to five years from now, a major feature of finance - but has no major positions. He is too old to compete.

He may go back to short equities, but the obvious big gains have already been made, and the big concern is a humungus counter-trend rally. "You can get your head ripped off" in short squeezes, he warns

“My best guess is that we're six months into a bear market that has some room to run. For those tactically trading it's possible the first leg of that has ended. But I think it's highly, highly probable that the bear market has a way to run.”

He thinks there will big plays in forex. In a few months he may look to short the dollar - the US was first to tighten, others will follow. He is not persuaded by US exceptionalism.

But he is very concerned about the big picture. “In my 45 years as a practitioner, I have never seen a constellation such as we have now, or frankly studied one, so I have more humility in terms of my views going forward than ever.

I am open minded to something really bad. This is an analysis harder than you’ve ever faced in 45 years, so please be open minded, because this not a story we have seen before so the outcome is not predictable”.

He is doing his best to listen to the voices on both shoulders.

We might see inflation, we might see deflation, it could be no growth like 1966-1982 or something much worse like the 1930s.

I’d like to know what he thinks about gold.

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Here is the interview in full:

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