Psychology of Building Wealth and Investing

“A mindset that can be paranoid and optimistic at the same time is hard to maintain, because seeing things as black or white takes less effort than accepting nuance. But you need short-term paranoia to keep you alive long enough to exploit long-term optimism. Jesse Livermore figured this out the hard way.” ― Morgan Housel, The Psychology of Money

There are several mental and emotional traits that are important for being a successful long-term investor, according to the Ethical Entrepreneur. The factors are:

  1. Being calm and unemotional. Keep away from and ignore the over-hyped financial and headline news when it comes to investing. Avoid excitement and speculation – if your personality craves these then you may not be well suited to investing. One way to combat the adrenaline cravings is to invest using a process – develop some rules and stick to them.
  2. Not being greedy. You will never, ever sell at the top and buy at the bottom with every investment you make. It’s impossible. The sooner you accept this and move on with developing your strategy, the better off you will be. If you feel yourself starting to get greedy “just another 10%”, sell and move on.
  3. Not being overly fearful. Listening to daily (or hourly basis) financial and headline news is only guaranteed to stoke needless anxieties and panic, neither of which are conducive towards building wealth and investing.
  4. Being focused, patient and discipline. Have a plan and strategy. Avoid making quick and rash decisions. Have the facts to make an informed decision. If you need to rush to make an investment then you’re probably sticking your leg straight into a bear trap. Stop, calm down and think about it. If it’s really a great opportunity then it will still be here tomorrow.
  5. Understanding your strengths and limitations. There’s a tendency today for people to act like a guru and ‘fake it until they make it’. In some ways, a bit of confidence is a good thing, but don’t fall for your own hype. What makes you so different from the thousands of other investors in the market? What are your weak spots and what have you done to guard against them? Are you playing to your advantages and how do you know they’re better than the competition? Are you in possession of all the relevant and accurate facts and if so, can you make sense of them?
  6. Being realistic. You might read about Warren Buffet and think “I could do that” but the truth is that Warren is the outlier, not the rule. You’re not going to double your money every year and you’re not going to pick winners every week. Accept it and move on. Aim for an annual compounding rate of 10-15% and consider that an almighty challenge at the best of times. If you can compound your money at 10% a year for 20 years, that will build wealth.
  7. Control what you can and don’t worry about the rest. You can’t do anything about what the market thinks or feels about a position hour to hour or day to day. It might feel frustrating to watch your stock sliding backward but if you’ve done your due diligence then have faith that it will be rewarded in time. Focus on your buy price, your position size, portfolio construction and how to bank profits – clear your mind of the noise.
  8. Always seek new knowledge and how to apply them. Never stop learning! There is more knowledge and understanding about the world than anyone before us; make use of it!

Writing about and discussing the psychology of investing are much easier than actually living and following them. Enjoy your life as much as you can – you only have one! If you’re not happy with something in your life, then decide what you truly want, make a plan to achieve it and set a deadline – then make it happen. Life is far, far too short for missing daily joy, peace and abundance!

You must spend some time each day considering investing rules and tactics. Consider how you will overcome the investing challenges and focus on implementing your plan. You will inevitably slip backwards at times, but discipline, patience, persistence and perseverance will help to embed them in your behavior.


References:

  1. https://www.theethicalentrepreneur.com/the-psychology-of-investing/
  2. https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/65374007-the-psychology-of-money

“Money’s greatest intrinsic value—and this can’t be overstated—is its ability to give you control over your time.” ~ Morgan Housel, The Psychology of Money

“Spending money to show people how much money you have is the fastest way to have less money.” ~ Morgan Housel, The Psychology of Money

Best Investment Advice by Brian Feroldi

  1. Don’t sell too early. Let your winner run and experience the magic compound growth over the long term.
  2. Capital is precious and limited, buy high-quality, avoid garbage. Doing nothing is almost always the best investing strategy and tactic. Valuing and researching great companies is also extremely important.
  3. Sometimes, the best stock you can buy is the one you already own. Add to your winners and not your losers. Winners tend to keep on winning.
  4. Your biggest edges as a retail investor are focus, discipline and patience, don’t waste it.
  5. Get comfortable doing nothing. Doing nothing is almost always the best investing strategy and tactic. It’s really hard to get comfortable doing nothing, but you have to get comfortable doing nothing. Valuing and researching great companies is also extremely important.
  6. Know what metrics to look at, and when to look at them, and when to ignore them. Study the business cycle. Know what valuation metrics matter, when they matter and when they don’t.
  7. Personal finances come first. Make sure you have an emergency fund, because life happens.
  8. You’re going to be wrong a lot. Get comfortable with that. If you buy ten stocks, six will be losers, three will be market beaters and one will perform extraordinarily.
  9. Find an investing buddy, or rather don’t invest alone. Get involved in a good community of investors. Find like-minded people. The Internet makes that so much easier.
  10. Watch the business and not the market price of the stock. What really matter in the long-term is the company’s fundamentals.

References:

  1. https://www.fool.com/investing/2021/03/20/top-10-investing-lessons-for-our-younger-selves/

20 Investment Lessons from the 2008 Financial Crisis

“Attention to risk must be a 24/7/365 obsession, with people – not computers – assessing and reassessing the risk environment in real time.” ~ Seth Klarman

At an early age, Billionaire and Baupost Capital CEO Seth Klarman was fascinated with business and making money.  By the age of ten he was investing in the stock market. 

During Klarman’s time in the investing world, he’s been able to compound capital at a 20% annual return. 

In 1991 Klarman wrote his book, Margin of Safety, and there have only been 5,000 copies printed.  As a result of such a small supply and enormous demand, Klarman’s book is very expensive reselling for $1,500 to $2,500.

James Clear — who writes about habits, decision making, and is the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller, Atomic Habits — summarizes the book, Margin of Safety, as follows:

“Avoiding loss should be the primary goal of every investor. The way to avoid loss is by investing with a significant margin of safety. A margin of safety is necessary because valuation is an imprecise art, the future is unpredictable, and investors are human and make mistakes.”

2010 Baupost Capital’s annual letter

Here is an excerpt from the 2010 annual letter of Baupost Capital written by Seth Klarman. He was shocked at how quickly investors have returned to the risky investing and financial behaviors that got them in trouble during the 2008 Financial Crisis;

1. Things that have never happened before are bound to occur with some regularity. You must always be prepared for the unexpected (the Black Swan) event, including sudden, sharp downward swings in markets and the economy. Whatever adverse scenario you can contemplate, reality can and will be far worse.

2. When excesses such as lax lending standards become widespread and persist for some time (e.g., ninja (no income, no job and no assets) loans), people are lulled into a false sense of security, creating an even more dangerous situation. In some cases, excesses migrate beyond regional or national borders, raising the ante for investors and governments. These excesses will eventually end, triggering a crisis at least in proportion to the degree of the excesses. Correlations between asset classes may be surprisingly high when leverage rapidly unwinds.

3. Nowhere does it say that investors should strive to make every last dollar of potential profit; consideration of risk must never take a backseat to return. Conservative positioning entering a crisis is crucial: it enables one to maintain long-term oriented, clear thinking, and to focus on new opportunities while others are distracted or even forced to sell. Portfolio hedges must be in place before a crisis hits. One cannot reliably or affordably increase or replace hedges that are rolling off during a financial crisis.

4. Risk is not inherent in an investment; it is always relative to the price paid. Uncertainty is not the same as risk. Indeed, when great uncertainty – such as in the fall of 2008 – drives securities prices to especially low levels, they often become less risky investments.

5. Do not trust financial market risk models. Reality is always too complex to be accurately modeled. Attention to risk must be a 24/7/365 obsession, with people – not computers – assessing and reassessing the risk environment in real time. Despite the predilection of some analysts to model the financial markets using sophisticated mathematics, the markets are governed by behavioral science, not physical science.

6. Do not accept principal risk while investing short-term cash: the greedy effort to earn a few extra basis points of yield inevitably leads to the incurrence of greater risk, which increases the likelihood of losses and severe illiquidity at precisely the moment when cash is needed to cover expenses, to meet commitments, or to make compelling long-term investments.

7. The latest trade of a security creates a dangerous illusion that its market price approximates its true value. This mirage is especially dangerous during periods of market exuberance. The concept of “private market value” as an anchor to the proper valuation of a business can also be greatly skewed during ebullient times and should always be considered with a healthy degree of skepticism.

8. A broad and flexible investment approach is essential during a crisis. Opportunities can be vast, ephemeral, and dispersed through various sectors and markets. Rigid silos can be an enormous disadvantage at such times.

9. You must buy on the way down. There is far more volume on the way down than on the way back up, and far less competition among buyers. It is almost always better to be too early than too late, but you must be prepared for price markdowns on what you buy.

10. Financial innovation can be highly dangerous, (think cryptocurrency) though almost no one will tell you this. New financial products are typically created for sunny days and are almost never stress-tested for stormy weather. Securitization is an area that almost perfectly fits this description; markets for securitized assets such as subprime mortgages completely collapsed in 2008 and have not fully recovered. Ironically, the government is eager to restore the securitization markets back to their pre-collapse stature.

11. Ratings agencies are highly conflicted, unimaginative dupes. They are blissfully unaware of adverse selection and moral hazard. Investors should never trust them.

12. Be sure that you are well compensated for illiquidity – especially illiquidity without control – because it can create particularly high opportunity costs.

13. At equal returns, public investments are generally superior to private investments not only because they are more liquid but also because amidst distress, public markets are more likely than private ones to offer attractive opportunities to average down.

14. Beware leverage in all its forms. Borrowers – individual, corporate, or government – should always match fund their liabilities against the duration of their assets. Borrowers must always remember that capital markets can be extremely fickle, and that it is never safe to assume a maturing loan can be rolled over. Even if you are unleveraged, the leverage employed by others can drive dramatic price and valuation swings; sudden unavailability of leverage in the economy may trigger an economic downturn.

15. Many leveraged buyouts (LBOs) are man-made disasters. When the price paid is excessive, the equity portion of an LBO is really an out-of-the-money call option. Many fiduciaries placed large amounts of the capital under their stewardship into such options in 2006 and 2007.

16. Financial stocks are particularly risky. Banking, in particular, is a highly leveraged, extremely competitive, and challenging business. A major European bank recently announced the goal of achieving a 20% return on equity (ROE) within several years. Unfortunately, ROE is highly dependent on absolute yields, yield spreads, maintaining adequate loan loss reserves, and the amount of leverage used. What is the bank’s management to do if it cannot readily get to 20%? Leverage up? Hold riskier assets? Ignore the risk of loss? In some ways, for a major financial institution even to have a ROE goal is to court disaster.

17. Having clients with a long-term orientation is crucial. Nothing else is as important to the success of an investment firm.

18. When a government official says a problem has been “contained,” pay no attention.

19. The government – the ultimate short-term-oriented player – cannot withstand much pain in the economy or the financial markets. Bailouts and rescues are likely to occur, though not with sufficient predictability for investors to comfortably take advantage. The government will take enormous risks in such interventions, especially if the expenses can be conveniently deferred to the future. Some of the price-tag is in the form of back- stops and guarantees, whose cost is almost impossible to determine.

20. Almost no one will accept responsibility for his or her role in precipitating a crisis: not leveraged speculators, not willfully blind leaders of financial institutions, and certainly not regulators, government officials, ratings agencies or politicians.


References:

  1. https://jamesclear.com/book-summaries/margin-of-safety-risk-averse-value-investing-strategies-for-the-thoughtful-investor
  2. https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/seth-klarman-twenty-investment-lessons-should-have-been-learned-2008-crash-2013-04-13
  3. https://www.theinvestorspodcast.com/episodes/margin-of-safety-summary/

FTX Debacle and Lessons Learned

The lessons investors can learn from the FTX debacle are not all that new or even groundbreaking. But, the lessons are important ones for investors to learn who desire to build long-term wealth and achieve financial freedom.

The significant lessons are the importance of investors understanding an asset and doing thorough research on companies in which they intend to invest.

In FTX’s case, here is a company, led by it’s under thirty CEO Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), that in three years grew from relative nothing to $32B literally overnight. It’s meteoric rise attracted thousands of investors who were more than happy to invest their capital in a young company and its brash CEO.

Yet, by performing just basic research on how the company made its money, on the experience and acumen of the CEO, and on the executive management team, and on the company’s financial profitability would have raised red flag to cause serious investor to pause before investing their capital in the company.

Additionally, SBF, FTX’s thirty-something CEO was consider a “wunder-kid” of sorts and featured by Forbes as its #2 “The Forbes 400” in 2022.

In a relatively short time, SBF took FTX from near zero is capitalization to $32B. His feats caused both seasoned and retail investors to flock to FTX.

Now, at the beginning of the week, FTX possessed a capitalization of $32. By Friday, FTX was at near zero capitalization, SBF had resigned, and the luster and shine of the once high flying company had been completely tarnished.

Thus, this is a classic and stark example why investors must understand and do thorough research, and remain disciplined before investing their capital.


References:

  1. https://www.forbes.com/sites/jemimamcevoy/2022/09/27/10-under-40-the-youngest-billionaires-on-the-2022-forbes-400/?sh=2455189c397e

Inflation Hits Disney’s Magic Kingdom…Ticket Prices Increase

Walt Disney World is raising the range of prices for some of its single-day, single-park tickets at Magic Kingdom, Epcot, and Hollywood Studios in Orlando, FL ~ Janet H. Cho

Families will have to splurge more for their Walt Disney World vacations starting December 8, 2022, because some single-day, single-park ticket prices at Disney’s Magic Kingdom, Epcot, and Hollywood Studios in Orlando could cost as much as $189 a person during the nine-day peak period around Christmas and New Year’s Day.

  • Single-day ticket prices to Disney’s Magic Kingdom Park are increasing to between $124 and $189 a person. The $189 ticket price is specifically for that peak holiday season around Christmas and the new year, and not all year, the Disney spokesperson told Barron’s.
  • Single-day tickets to Disney’s Animal Kingdom are staying at the current $109 to $159 range for visitors ages 10 and up.
  • Single-day tickets to Epcot are increasing to a range of $114 to $179; and
  • Single-day tickets to Hollywood Studios are increasing to $124 to $179.
  • Instead of the current system, which lets visitors make their theme park reservations only after buying their tickets, the new single-day tickets automatically include theme park reservations. The price of the Park Hopper option that lets people visit a second park the same day for $65 more is also changing.

What’s Next: Except for renewals by current annual pass holders, Disney has paused new sales of all but its Pixie Dust annual passes, available to FL residents only, which are staying at $399 a person. It is raising the price of its other annual passes, including the Incredi-Pass, which is going up to $1,399.

Under a separate program, discounted multiday tickets for active or retired members of the U.S. military, their families and friends, are increasing by $20 to $369 plus tax a person for the five-day ticket package plus Park Hopper, or $349 plus tax a person for the four-day package.

Disney also added more blackout dates when military tickets aren’t eligible, including around Christmas and New Year’s this year, and around spring break and Thanksgiving next year.


References:

  1. https://www.barrons.com/articles/disney-visits-will-cost-more-in-florida-51668627930

Basketball

#NBA and #collegebasketball should implement a triple bonus policy of 15+ team fouls.

Basketball games are difficult to watch and appreciate from a fan’s perspective when one team is constantly committing personal fouls in the final minutes of the game in a desperate attempt to erase a deficit and achieve a comeback.

Currently, losing teams are free to commit an unlimited number of personal fouls to put the opposing team on the foul line in attempts to slow the game and to try to stage a come back. During these periods of relentless fouls and slowing the pace of the game, the game becomes difficult and painful to watch from the fans perspective.

To disincentivize this practice of relentless fouling in the final minutes of a basketball game, professional and college basketball should implement a triple bonus team foul policy of two free throw attempts and the ball out for the foul shooting or victimized team. This would speed up the final minutes of the game and would increase the enjoyment of viewing the game for fans. Television networks broadcasting or streaming the game would offer audiences a much better product, especially in the final minutes.

This triple bonus team foul policy would also force basketball teams and their players to become more discipline in the manner they play the game.

Fifteen total personal fouls are more than an adequate number of fouls to permit in a game. Effectively, every foul above fifteen would be treated like a technical foul, two free throw shots and retain possession of the ball.

It’s well past time to fix this part of the game that is painful to watch for fans.

Value Investing

Value investing involves determining the intrinsic value — the true, inherent worth of an asset — and buying it at a level that represents a substantial discount to that price.

The gap between a stock’s intrinsic value and the price it is currently selling for is known as the margin of safety.

The greater the margin of safety, the more an investor’s projections can be off while still profitably gaining from an investment in the shares of the company being evaluated.

It can be helpful to ensure you understand what value investing is and is not. It is not searching for stocks with low price-to-earnings ratios and blindly buying the stocks that make that first cut. Instead, value investors employ a series of metrics and ratios to help them determine a stock’s intrinsic value and a sufficient margin of safety.

Value investing in stocks often means looking for mispriced shares in out-of-the-way places. This can include looking at companies in out-of-favor sectors, businesses in frowned-upon industries, companies that are going through some type of scandal, or stocks currently enduring a bear market. Unpopular sectors and companies are often treasure troves for the successful value investor, requiring the possession of both a long-term approach and a contrarian mindset. Regardless of where the investments come from, though, value investing is the art and science of identifying stocks priced below their actual worth.

Successful value investing exercise patience and hold during lean times. Taking just one example, in early 2015, American Express shareholders learned that AmEx lost its exclusive credit-card deal with Costco Wholesale locations. In the following months, Amex lost almost 50% of its market-cap value. Yet far from being a moment to panic, savvy investors might have seen an opportunity to buy AmEx for outsized gains. Within three years of its lowest point, American Express had almost doubled and reached new all-time highs.

Selling at lows while negative sentiment is at its highest will guarantee frustration and permanent loss of capital. It can be hard to wait while your thesis plays out, but patience is absolutely necessary for value investors who want to beat the market.

Of course, value investing is more than a waiting game. Investors must remain diligent in staying up to date on a company to ensure their thesis is proceeding as planned. This means paying attention to the company’s business performance — not its stock price.

The Big 5 Numbers 

Phil Town, founder and CEO of Rule #1 Investing, says there are “the big 5 numbers” in value investing.

The Big 5 numbers are:

  1. Return on Invested Capital (ROIC)
  2. Equity (Book Value) Growth
  3. Earnings per Share (EPS) Growth 
  4. Sales (Revenue) Growth
  5. Cash Growth

All the big 5 numbers will be 10% or greater if the company, and he numbers should be stable or growing over the past 10 years. 

The big takeaway

Value investing is not easy. It requires time, focus, discipline, patience and dedication to the craft. It will often mean looking and feeling foolish while you wait for an investment thesis to play out. If this doesn’t sound like it’s for you, investing in passive index funds is a perfectly suitable alternative.

For investors who enjoy the hunt of looking for undervalued assets — and beating the market at its own game — value investing can be richly rewarding in more ways than one. By following this simple guide, investors can be well on their way to understanding how value investing can beat the market.


References:

  1. https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/how-to-be-a-successful-value-investor
  2. https://wp.ruleoneinvesting.com/blog/how-to-invest/value-investing/
  3. https://valueinvestoracademy.com/i-read-rule-1-by-phil-town-heres-what-i-learned/

FTX Fraud, Political Donations and False Altruism

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) admits masquerading as ‘woke Westerner’.

Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), the founder and CEO of collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX, revealed that ‘the woke appearance’ that he personified and his company displayed was all a “dumb game.”

In an interview, Bankman-Fried confessed that the fake window dressing of altruism was mostly a front and that the performance was done “so everyone likes us.”

Until last week, FTX was the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency exchange and was valued at $32 billion. However, the digital coin exchange collapsed and filed for bankruptcy.

In addition, between $1 billion and $2 billion in customer funds reportedly vanished from the FTX cryptocurrency exchange via corporate fraud, via an apparent hack and/or via an “unauthorized access” by Bankman-Fried.

In an emergency court filing, evidence suggests Bahamian regulators directed former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried to gain “unauthorized access” to FTX systems to obtain digital assets belonging to the company and to transfer those assets to the custody of the Bahamian government.

Bankman-Fried was a Democrat megadonor.

  • He reportedly contributed more than $5 million to Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential campaign.
  • He was the second-biggest individual donor behind George Soros to Democrats in the 2021-2022 election cycle – donating $37 million.
  • He planned to donate “north of $100 million” to Democrats in the 2024 presidential election, but pledged to have a “soft ceiling” of $1 billion in donations to Democrats if former President Donald Trump ran again.

The concern now is whether Democrats will be obliged morally to ‘give back’ the apparent illicit political donations from Bankman-Fried.

A liberal darling

Bankman-Fried, a self-proclaimed “effective altruist,” was promoted by Democrats and hyped up by the media. However, in a new interview, Bankman-Fried confessed that he used his virtuous stances as a front to win the game.

SBF was one of the featured speakers at World Economic Forum 2022 in Davos, Switzerland.

In September, SBF was a featured speaker at the annual meeting for the Clinton Global Initiative.

SBF was slated to be a featured speaker at a summit hosted by the New York Times on Nov. 30, along with BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D), and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Bankman-Fried said it was “never the intention” to squander away investors’ money, but “sometimes life creeps up on you.”


References:

  1. https://www.theblaze.com/news/ftx-sam-bankman-fried-woke-esg
  2. https://www.cnbc.com/2022/11/17/ftx-suggests-sam-bankman-fried-transferred-assets-to-bahamas-government-custody-after-bankruptcy-filing.html

Mental Illness and Awareness

“An overwhelming majority (90%) of people in the United States think the country is experiencing a mental health crisis,” according to a new survey from CNN in partnership with the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF).

According to the CNN and Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) poll, about half of adults say they have had a severe mental health crisis in their family, including in-person treatment for family members who were a threat to themselves or others, or family members who engaged in self-harming behaviors.

More than 1 in 5 adults describe their own mental health as only “fair” or “poor,” including extra-large shares of adults under the age of 30, adults who identify as LGBT and those with an annual income of less than $40,000.

A third of all adults said they felt anxious always or often over the course of the past year, including more than half of LGBT adults and those under 30. About 1 in 5 adults said they were often or always depressed or lonely over the past year, too.

Major sources of stress for a third or more of adults include personal finances and current and political events. About 1 in 4 adults also identified personal relationships and work, respectively, as major sources of stress.

Each year millions of Americans face the reality of living with a mental illness. And, each year it’s important to fight the stigma, provide support, educate the ourselves and the public, and advocate for policies that support people with mental illness and their families.

It’s imperative to understand that mental health illness and conditions do not discriminate based on socioeconomic status, race, color, gender or identity. Anyone can experience the challenges of mental illness regardless of their background.

However, socioeconomic status, background and identity can make access to mental health treatment much more difficult. Each year millions of Americans face the reality of living with a mental health condition and not receiving adequate treatment or care.

Know The Warning Signs

Distinguishing “normal” behaviors from possible signs of a mental illness isn’t always easy. There’s no simple test to label one’s actions and thoughts as mental illness, typical behavior or the result of a physical ailment, according to National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI).

Each illness has its own symptoms according to NAMI, but common signs of mental illness in adults and adolescents can include the following:

  • Excessive worrying or fear
  • Feeling excessively sad or low
  • Confused thinking or problems concentrating and learning
  • Extreme mood changes,including uncontrollable “highs” or feelings of euphoria
  • Prolongedorstrongfeelingsofirritability or anger
  • Avoiding friends and social activities
  • Difficulties understanding or relating to other people
  • Changes in sleeping habits or feeling tired and low energy
  • Changes in eating habits such as increased hunger or lack of appetite
  • Changes in sex drive
  • Difficulty perceiving reality (delusions or hallucinations, in which a person experiences and senses things that don’t exist in objective reality)
  • Inability to perceive changes in one’s own feelings, behavior or personality (“lack of insight” or anosognosia)
  • Over use of substances like alcohol or drugs
  • Multiple physical ailments without obvious causes (such as headaches, stomach aches, vague and ongoing “aches and pains”)
  • Thinking about suicide
  • Inability to carry out daily activities or handle daily problems and stress An intense fear of weight gain or concern with appearance

Mental health conditions can also begin to develop in young children, according to NAMI. Because they’re still learning how to identify and talk about thoughts and emotions, children’s most obvious symptoms are behavioral. Symptoms in children may include the following:

  • Changes in school performance
  • Excessive worry or anxiety; for instance, fighting to avoid bed or school
  • Hyperactive behavior
  • Frequent nightmares
  • Frequent disobedience or aggression
  • Frequent temper tantrums

It’s vitally important to promote awareness regarding the mental health challenges facing Americans. Here are a few facts (Source: NAMI):

  • 1 in 5 U.S. adults experience mental illness each year
  • 1 in 20 U.S. adults experience serious mental illness each year
  • 1 in 6 U.S. youth aged 6-17 experience a mental health disorder each year
  • Annual prevalence of mental illness among U.S. adults, by demographic group:
    • Non-Hispanic Asian: 13.9%
    • Non-Hispanic white: 22.6%
    • Non-Hispanic Black or African American: 17.3%
    • Non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native: 18.7%
    • Non-Hispanic mixed/multiracial: 35.8%
    • Non-Hispanic Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander: 16.6%
    • Hispanic or Latino: 18.4%
    • Lesbian, Gay or Bisexual: 47.4%
  • Annual prevalence among U.S. adults, by condition:
    • Major Depressive Episode: 8.4% (21 million people)
    • Schizophrenia: <1% (estimated 1.5 million people)
    • Bipolar Disorder: 2.8% (estimated 7 million people)
    • Anxiety Disorders: 19.1% (estimated 48 million people)
    • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: 3.6% (estimated 9 million people)
    • Obsessive Compulsive Disorder: 1.2% (estimated 3 million people)
    • Borderline Personality Disorder: 1.4% (estimated 3.5 million people)
    • 46.2% of U.S. adults with mental illness received treatment in 2020
    • 64.5% of U.S. adults with serious mental illness received treatment in 2020

Getting Help

When mental illness is present, the potential for crisis is never far from mind. Crisis episodes related to mental illness can feel incredibly overwhelming. There’s the initial shock, followed by a flood of questions — the most prominent of which is: “What can we do?”

Like any other health crisis, it’s important to address a mental health emergency quickly and effectively. With mental health conditions, crises can be difficult to predict because, often, there are no warning signs. Crises can occur even when treatment plans have been followed and mental health professionals are involved. Unfortunately, unpredictability is the nature of mental illness.

There are a variety of treatment options available for people with mental illness and the best combination of treatment and other services will be different for each person. Recommendations are made by health care professionals based on the type of illness, the severity of symptoms and the availability of services. Treatment decisions should be made by the individual in collaboration with the treatment team and their family when possible.

If the situation is life-threatening, call 911 and ask for someone with mental health experience to respond.


References:

  1. https://nami.org/Get-Involved/Awareness-Events/Mental-Health-Awareness-Month
  2. https://nami.org/NAMI/media/NAMI-Media/PDFs/2022-SPAM-Partner-Guide.pdf
  3. https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/05/health/cnn-kff-mental-health-poll-wellness/index.html

The Impact of FTX’s Collapse

“Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information as occurred here.” ~ John Ray, new FTX CEO

Crypto exchange FTX filed for bankruptcy after a stunning five-day collapse of the once-$32 billion dollar crypto company as concerns over its financial health led to a surge in withdrawals and a plunge in the value of its native FTT token. FTX’s founder, Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), resigned as CEO.

As a result of the collapse, the company and its leadership are facing investigations and potential criminal charges in both the Bahamas and the U.S. for its misappropriation of users’ assets and allegations of fraud. 

Before its collapse, FTX offered retail and professional traders spot crypto investing as well as more complex derivatives trades. At its peak, the platform was valued by investors at $32 billion and had more than 1 million users.

FTX’s books revealed the exchange had more than $9 billion in liabilities, but less than $1 billion in liquid assets the day before its bankruptcy filing. And, after an apparent hack (or “unauthorized access” via a backdoor by SBF) drained $477 million of the company’s remaining assets, customers are facing long odds of ever recovering much of their deposits.

After FTX collapse, at least $1 billion in customer funds are unaccounted for, and FTX may owe as many as one million creditors. Additionally, FTX’s collapse has resulted in:

  • Crypto’s total market cap has dropped below the $1 trillion mark since FTX’s trouble started early last week, and sits near $826 billion as of Wednesday morning, November 9. 2022.
  • After the firm’s bankruptcy filing, BTC price sank nearly 25%, dropping below $16,000, before slightly recovering; ETH fell by more than 30% in the same span.
  • Market contagion and liquidity issues have spread to a growing number of crypto businesses that have suspended redemptions, citing “extreme market dislocation … caused by the FTX implosion.”
  • Several major players have halted customer withdrawals and cited “significant exposure to FTX.” Others are planning to file for bankruptcy.

CNBC reported that Alameda Research, FTX’s sister company, had borrowed billions in customer funds from the exchange to make risky leveraged trades, leaving FTX caught short when users wanted to withdraw their money.

In general, mixing customer funds with counterparties and trading them without explicit consent is illegal, according to U.S. securities law. It also violates FTX’s terms of service. “Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information as occurred here,” said newly appointed FTX CEO John Jay Ray III – a bankruptcy expert with more than 40 years of restructuring experience who liquidated Enron.

Former CEO Bankman-Fried declined to comment on allegations but said the company’s recent bankruptcy filing was the result of fraud, misappropriation and issues with a leveraged trading position placed by Alameda Research.

“In the Bahamas, I understand that corporate funds of the FTX group were used to purchase homes and other personal items for employees and advisors,” Ray wrote. “I understand that there does not appear to be documentation for certain of these transactions as loans, and that certain real estate was recorded in the personal name of these employees and advisors on the records of the Bahamas.”

Moreover, larger investors and traditional firms been impacted

  • Since its founding in 2019, FTX raised nearly $2 billion in capital from sources like venture capital firms and pension funds, and its bankruptcy means that many of its investors will likely need to write their investments off as losses. 
  • SoftBank, Tiger Global, and Sequoia Capital are among the many well-known firms who made now-worthless bets on FTX. Sequoia was marking its $213 million stake down to $0. 
  • The impact isn’t limited to venture capital firms either — the Ontario Teachers Pension Fund lost $95 million investing in FTX’s funding rounds and professional athletes celebrities like TV producer Larry David and NFL quarterback Tom Brady are among the individuals who had equity stakes in and promoted the company. 
  • In an emergency court filing, evidence suggests Bahamian regulators directed former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried to gain “unauthorized access” to FTX systems to obtain digital assets belonging to the company and to transfer those assets to the custody of the Bahamian government.

In the wake of the FTX exchange’s collapse, there has been calls from financial business leaders and lawmakers regarding the need for greater oversight and regulation of the crypto industry.

U.S. Congressman Patrick McHenry, the top Republican on the House Financial Services Committee, said: “It’s imperative that Congress establish a framework that ensures Americans have adequate protections while also allowing innovation to thrive here in the U.S.”

Source: Coinbase Bytes


References:

  1. https://www.cnbc.com/2022/11/15/ftx-says-could-have-over-1-million-creditors-in-new-bankruptcy-filing.html
  2. https://www.businessinsider.com/ftx-managers-used-online-chat-emojis-approve-official-expenses-ceo-2022-11
  3. https://www.cnbc.com/2022/11/17/ftx-suggests-sam-bankman-fried-transferred-assets-to-bahamas-government-custody-after-bankruptcy-filing.html