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To Thrive During the Global Currency Wars, Don't Believe Your Own Hype (Lessons Learned From Rousey v. Holm)
To thrive during the currency wars, we can't become a victim of believing our own hype. Today, markets demand flexibility and adaptability to cope with extremely volatile asset price behavior. Believing our own hype will lead to a rigid refusal to adapt and an unhealthy adherence to failing strategies. Today, I’d like to take an opportunity to incorporate one of my favorite topics, mixed martial arts and the recent “stunning” upset of Holly Holm over Ronda Rousey at UFC 193, into applicable lessons for the global currency wars. For those of you that don’t follow mixed martial arts, Ronda Rousey was widely considered to be the best pound for pound MMA fighter in the world, by far, before she recently lost to Holly Holm, a 19 time world boxing champion, this past weekend in a UFC sanctioned title match in Melbourne, Australia.
Before you tune out if you have zero interest in the fight game and mixed martial arts, even if this is the case for you, there are incredibly important lessons for an investor that can be extracted from analyzing why Rousey lost to Holm. In a subject as dry as global finance, many of you that have followed me for years know that I like to extract lessons from other areas of interest and relate them to investing strategies to turn typically dry subjects into a
more compelling and interesting read. In the past, along these lines of combining seemingly disparate topics, I’ve written articles titled, “7 lessons I learned from a Navy SEAL”, “7 More Lessons I Learned from a Navy SEAL”, and “How Bruce Lee Made Me a Better Investor”. Additionally, for those of you that are Rousey fans, don't tune out of the podcast in the first 5 minutes. My admiration and respect for Holly Holm does not mean that I disrespect Ronda Rousey, though I am sure that those that lack critical thinking skills (see the Problem with Education Today for further explanation) won't be able to understand that it is possible to respect and admire both Holly Holm and Ronda Rousey, and that these two opinions are not mutually exclusive eventrs. Furthermore, it is still very possible to point out flaws in Rousey's game plan against Holly Holm while still retaining the utmost respect for Rousey as a fighter. I have nothing but respect and admiration for Ronda Rousey as the female trailblazer in the UFC and as a champion, and I have no doubt that Rousey will return stronger and better than ever after her first defeat inside of the octagon. If this topic still has zero appeal for you, then perhaps try reading the articles above, or merely just skip this one as I only write these types of articles once in a blue moon.
In the below SmartKnowledgeU podcast, I discuss how Rousey’s coach, Edmund Tarverdyan, seemed to buy into the hype that surrounded Rousey. Instead of warning Rousey not to become a victim of her own hype, Tarverdyan inflated Rousey’s ego by feeding the hype with ridiculous statements that Rousey could win the gold medal in boxing right now. Rousey undoubtedly has the heart of a champion that would enable her to develop into an Olympic boxing champion if she devoted all her waking hours solely to boxing, but as she devotes many hours of her training to MMA striking that is not allowed in professional boxing, any logical person would understand that you cannot match the boxing skillset of Olympic boxers that have been training for 15 years since they were just 6-years old with just a few years of training in stand up boxing skills, no matter how skilled and talented a fighter you may be. Rousey is an unbelievable champion and still a great fighter, even though many have been quick to unjustifiably tear her down after her loss this past Saturday. It is my opinion that Rousey simply fell victim to believing her own hype that she was a terminator-like unbeatable opponent with no Achilles heel, and that this belief prevented her from strateging properly.
In the below podcast, I discuss how we, as investors, often display the same Achilles heel, in our refusal to learn from past mistakes and in our rigid adoption to many investment principles that are either outdated or inapplicable in the real world. This inflexibility, or belief in our own hype, often causes us to refuse adopting new knowledge that is presented to us that can greatly assist us in our wealth preservation strategies. In other words, as investors, many of us alarmingly reject new and incredibly helpful knowledge to continue embracing outdated and unhelpful strategies. This is the type of hubris that always precedes the fall. In other words, if only we would stop believing our own hype, we would stop being our own worst enemy when it comes to adopting intelligent investment strategies that actually work.
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About the author: JS Kim is the founder and managing director of SmartKnowledgeU, a fiercely independent research, consulting and education firm that focuses on providing low-risk, high-reward wealth preservation and wealth building strategies to clients in 30 different countries around the world. He eschews his Ivy League and traditional brick and morter classroom education for the much more practical learning environment of the real world, including lessons learned from his martial arts training, to develop his wealth preservation strategies. JS's Crisis Investment Opportunties newsletter has outperformed all major global markets in the US, the UK and Australia by very significant margins since its launch in 2007, including positive yields ytd this year. Please come by smartknowledgeu.com for more information and to sign up for our free newsletter.
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Respect for the training and dedication to a sport aside for a moment (I was once an amateur athlete), when as a nation, did we descend to the level of women grounding & pounding each other for public amusement...?
It's a big step forward for feminism. Women beating each other up while men cheer them on is an unnatural act. Only a soft minded, feminized man would partake.
lets take another sports analogy the womens 2015 FIFA championship. here was a team assembled of women with superior athletic size and ability but not necessarily a lot of soccer experience. when you suggest that specializing in anything is what produces winners i disagree. the fundamentals are what matters. Ronda only lost a fight. sometimes you have to push the limits to find out what you can do, what your limits are. better here than in a much bigger event. just like sometimes in gambling as well as investing you have to go all in, you might lose, but you survive, and you are better for it.
america??? where women fight to entertain the retard nation
Speaks quite well for these women that most of the comments I've read regarding them are extremely deferential. Women's sports have come a long way. Kudos.
Boooor-ring.
Ronda is a young, talented fighter, and still has a lot to learn. However, even in her post-fight degraded condition, she could doubtless kick the living shit out of every know-it-all mealy-mouth poster in this column, in the same round.
Respectfully,
I don't think so...
Visiting my parents (87 and 88 years old) we "watched" the movies "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" on Fx Friday night.
They took a 120 minute movie and strecthed it to 210 minutes with a 1-2 minute hype of Ronda Rousey at every commercial break. I am not ,nor will I become, a fan of UFC, but after being force fed all that trash I am glad to hear she lost.
After reading this article I looked for highlights and found a lot already taken down.
Every time they showed Holly Holm they made her look smaller than Ronda. I saw a clip of the weigh in ceremony and was surprised first to see that Holly was bigger which then made it (to me) not surprising that Ronda got KO'd.
Here is where I found it: http://bestinmma.blogspot.com/2015/11/ronda-rousey-vs-holly-holm-ufc-193.html
I agree with giraffe, she did deserve it.
not bigger...at scales both 134
Rousey's knees are ruined from judo...and limited skills
she can't move,except her mouth
holm can move and more skills and much better trainers
good to see holm throw the judo mouth...
She wasn't a victim of her own hype, she was the victim of a solid roundhouse to the face. And she deserved it.
I dont understand the 'Rousey lost to Boxing' meme either. She took a nasty ass elbow to the face in round one that undoubtedly rocked her world and a roundhouse in round two that put the lights out. What 'boxing'?
Holm looked like Rocky in his 2nd bout with Clubber: lean, muscular, strong and hungry. Rousey was pudgy and dumpy looking and obviously didn't train or prepare at all for the fight thinking it would be a joke. She was wrong.
Yep, she got too cocky. She claimed that she could beat every girl in her division with one hand. Hubris much?
http://www.mmaweekly.com/ronda-rousey-video-i-think-i-can-beat-every-gir...
Success got into her head and she started levitating. Holm brought her down to the ground, pun intended. She was Ronda Drowsy after the fight.
My feces is the magically non-odorous type, or as we say in Texas, "not a horse that can't be rode and not a rider that can't be throwed"......
Yellen? Come on man it was just a silly bitch fight.
Could time of the month favor one fighter over another? Women only.