Thoughts on Investing from Jeremy
Grantham
2. “Neither a lender nor a borrower be.” If you borrow to invest, it will
interfere with your survivability. Unleveraged portfolios cannot be stopped
out, leveraged portfolios can. Leverage reduces the investor’s critical asset:
patience. (To digress, excessive borrowing has turned out to be an even bigger
curse than Polonius could have known. It encourages financial aggressiveness,
recklessness, and greed. It increases your returns over and over until,
suddenly, it ruins you. For individuals, it allows you to have today what you
really can’t afford until tomorrow. It has proven to be so seductive that
individuals en masse have shown themselves incapable of resisting it, as if it
were a drug. Governments also, from the Middle Ages onwards and especially now,
it seems, have proven themselves equally incapable of resistance. Any sane
society must recognize the lure of debt and pass laws accordingly. Interest
payments must absolutely not be tax deductible or preferred in any way.
Governments must apparently be treated like Polonius’s children and given
limits. By law, cumulative government debt should be given a sensible limit of,
say, 50% of
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