Inflation Tracker

  • Vanguard produces a useful inflation tracker – highlighting key drivers.
  • It is currently flashing mixed – growth and stimulative policy are pulling against deflationary technology and high unemployment.
  • Interestingly, fiscal policy could continue to run strong driving 2022 inflation above 3%, an outcome not currently predicted by markets.

Dying Wells

  • Interesting article about a company you probably haven’t heard of, but one that owns far more onshore oil and gas wells than Exxon.
  • The strategy is one of buying old “dying” wells to squeeze more life out of them.
  • The company isn’t short on controversy – the environmental cost of such wells is high (they leak gas) and once done they need to be plugged, which the company seems to do at a fraction of the cost of others.
  • Interesting contrast in a world of rising energy costs.

Wang Huning

  • Must read profile of Wang Huning.
  • A member of the CCP’s seven-man Politburo Standing Committee, he is China’s top ideological theorist, quietly credited as being the “ideas man” behind each of Xi’s signature political concepts, including the “China Dream,” the anti-corruption campaign, the Belt and Road Initiative, a more assertive foreign policy, and even “Xi Jinping Thought.”
  • Wang Huning is arguably the single most influential “public intellectual” alive today.

The Monty Hall Problem

  • 🚪🚪🚪Three doors.
  • Behind one is a car 🚗. Behind the other two are goats 🐐.
  • You pick a door. The gameshow host opens another, revealing a goat.
  • You can choose to stay with your original choice or switch. What should you do? [Give it a try!].
  • The Monty Hall problem became famous when a columnist, Marilyn vos Savant, known as the world’s smartest woman, said you should switch, resulting in hundreds of letters, including from the brightest minds in mathematics, arguing she was wrong.
  • This engrossing article by Steven Pinker shines a bright light on this dilemma.
  • People’s insensitivity to this lucrative but esoteric information pinpoints the cognitive weakness at the heart of the puzzle: we confuse probability with propensity.
  • A propensity is the disposition of an object to act in certain ways. Intuitions about propensities are a major part of our mental models of the world.
  • Probability is “the strength of one’s belief in an unknown state of affairs
  • The dependence of probability on ethereal knowledge rather than just physical makeup helps explain why people fail at the dilemma.
  • They intuit the propensities for the car to have ended up behind the different doors, and they know that opening a door could not have changed those propensities. But probabilities are not about the world; they’re about our ignorance of the world. New information reduces our ignorance and changes the probability.
  • Surely there is an analogy here to investing.

Net Migration EU to UK

  • Since 2016 net migration from the EU to the UK has fallen.
  • The pandemic has likely pushed it into negative territory.
  • Certain sectors – like hospitality, transport, manufacturing, administration and construction – will be hit the hardest as they rely on EU labour for 10-15% of their work force.
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