Saturday, February 21, 2026

It All Comes Back To Optionality

The daily New York Times email led off with a bit about self improvement related to people "doing favors for their future selves." We have been using that exact phrase here for ages. There are big picture applications that we talk about in terms physical and financial benefits but also very immediate but mundane things like backing into a parking spot so it is easier to get out and doing the dishes tonight instead of letting everything sit in the sink overnight. 

Doing stuff now versus having it sitting there waiting for you, more the dishes and pots than the parking spot example, resonates with me. I really dislike having a bunch of work that I need to get done just accumulating, waiting for me for when I probably won't feel like doing it. Note that I don't know if the link will work, it's what came up when I clicked view in browser. 

The writeup was pretty superficial looking first at the emotional tradeoff of making sacrifices now for an uncertain future and then wonder when the payoff comes for doing favors for your future self. 

I figured this out early. Where I think it came from is my grandmother was a great baker. My favorite thing she made was mint chocolate cake with mint frosting. The frosting was the best part and my older siblings always told me to save the frosting for last, save the best for last. I started hearing that at a very young age and so it stuck. Save the best for last made it easier for me to think about favors for my future self along with a few other examples that I won't bore you with. 

It's also akin to playing the long game which has worked out well. From the fire department, I coveted one of these trucks from when the Forest Service first started buying them.

Financially, this was nowhere close to possible, not even a remote possibility for us. It took about 15 years but it finally happened in 2023 and I'm still young enough physically that I'll be operating it for years to come. Then we got another one.


One form of payoff, from this point I will call it optionality, is getting what you want and still being able to use it or do it or benefit from it. This is probably physical optionality.

Another form of self created optionality is either wanting to do something different (work related) or having your hand forced at work without being left desperate and scrambling, forced to do work you don't want to do which is probably financial optionality.

Physical optionality is created by regular vigorous exercise and financial optionality is created by making good decisions related to saving and spending. When I turned 50, I said being that age which implies having some experience, with a little money in the bank while still being able to get it done physically is a great spot to be in and that I imagined the 60's would be the same. I'll be 60 in April and that appears to be panning out which is not surprising. I already pack tested for the 2026 fire season which is the annual physical requirement of hiking three miles with a 45 pound pack in 45 minutes or less. Sixty is old for this but not elite, like many things, success on this front comes from understanding the task and marrying that with your capabilities. 

As far as the time tradeoff, the physical optionality doesn't seem like much of a tradeoff. Go find @mangan150 on Twitter. He preaches only lifting twice a week for about 30 minutes each session and then walking regularly. He also includes HIIT in his lifting sessions too. And for the little time actually needed when done with the right intensity, you're healthier and feel better now, not just in the future. I lift twice a week for closer to 50 minutes and I jump rope almost every day (less than ten minutes). Our dogs don't like to go on real hikes too often but we take them on a mile and half loop around our house that climbs a total 400 feet or 600 feet depending on how we go, we do that pretty regularly. It all takes very little time

Financially I would say living in less house than you can afford and not replacing cars every three years, I've been driving my Tundra since 2007. There is emotional benefit to going through with a little bit of a financial cushion which is a benefit now and in the future. The house angle may not stand up anymore. I perceive buying a house has become more difficult. Beyond the headlines, which I don't know what to make of, I know that were I live there are no more starter house in terms of cost. In terms of size, yes, but not dollars. Tucson has plenty of houses in the $300,000-$400,000 range which is much more accessible for younger people who make a pretty good living even if they're not killing it. 

All of these concepts serve to make life easier. If life is easier, it stands to reason that life would have less negative types of stress like worrying about money which makes life easier (yes that is circular).

Speaking of fire department stuff, we replaced our old brush truck with a new one. 


I may have told this story already but short version, we had to replace the truck. One of our guys had the idea of lifting the pump, water tank and all the rest off the back of the old brush truck and putting it on the new Dodge. This idea probably saved us $150,000. That's the truck, being picked up from getting the graphics applied this week. 

The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.

Friday, February 20, 2026

Post 1000 & Risk Management

This is post number 1000 for this URL. My first blog address disappeared (short version) when all of that content, about 4900 posts, was moved over to a site hosted by AdvisorShares when I had my side gig there a while back. I wrote at The Maven for a bit but that sort of sputtered and however many hundred articles I wrote for thestreet.com are all still up.

First up, Corey Hoffstein posted this picture with the caption "as predictable as the daybreak." I think he was referring to a good fund having a long struggle and then doing well again. 


BLNDX is of course a client and personal holding. Yep, it struggled for a while. Any valid strategy will have periods where it languishes. Speaking of AdvisorShares, when I worked there, the CEO was fond of saying that when a manager struggles for an extended period, you should double down. I don't know about doubling down but certainly throwing in the towel runs the risk of being a bad decision. Probably.

The caveat might be a stock picking fund that is always trying to beat the market. The Fairholme Fund (FAIRX) might be a good example here. 


The manager, Bruce Berkowitz, a smartest guy in the room type but this has been a very difficult hold. If you play around with the time periods though yourself, you'll see there have been different runs where it has been closer or even ahead of the index but I'm not sure how you settle in and buy this one. BLNDX is systematic though. The equity sleeve uses index funds and the managed futures sleeve, like I said is systematic and if you've ever seen fund manager Eric Crittenden interviewed, he never second guesses it. 

Here's an interesting idea. 50% BLNDX and 50% gold.


Ok, that's interesting. If you simulate it though by replacing BLNDX which only goes back six years, with a mix of ACWI and AQMIX, you get a much longer backtest that is very unimpressive. Managed futures and gold had rough run for much of the 2010's. Managed futures is great. Gold is great. But don't get carried away.

And in a related article, Bloomberg said At Long Last Being Underweight Tech Is A Winning Strategy. I don't think this is the right thought process here for what has been kind of a sneaky rolling over for big tech. Not so sneaky? I don't know actually but either way, as we've said countless times, history has not been kind to sectors that grow to be larger than 30% of the index. Where most of the revamped communications sector came out of tech, you could argue that instead of tech being 34%, it's closer to 40%.

The risk from a huge sector weighting either resonates with you or it doesn't and this pullback is either the start of something or it isn't, I don't know but I do know that I don't want to chase this sort of thing. I've been underweight tech for a while. Said differently, excesses, like 35-40% in one sector, are prone to real pain. 

I think the most important part of risk management is recognizing it before the consequences hit. That much in tech is an obvious risk factor. Maybe it will never matter, I don't know but it is obvious and one that matters to me. There is no reason you need to be overexposed to the risks that matter to you. 

The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Halting Redemptions...Permanently?

A couple of weeks ago I got an email promoting the Denali Structured Return Strategy Fund (DNLIX). It's more fixed income-ish, not an equity strategy.


It's a newer fund. We took a look at a few months ago. MERIX is a client and personal holding and I used CBYYX as a proxy for catastrophe bonds because testfol.io didn't have the right data for SHRIX or client/personal holding EMPIX. The general interest here for me is finding more strategies that have the above type of volatility and return profiles but with risk factors that differentiate from other funds I use. 

Related pivot, on Wednesday I sat in on a webinar put on by Nuveen about farmland investing. Similar to timberland, farmland is a fantastic diversifier. Equities/REITs in either category don't capture the effect very well. My belief in farmland (and timberland too) is great enough that I will listen to any presentation that comes my way. Nuveen has a non-traded farmland REIT which is probably surprising, at least to me anyway, and sure enough it does well.

Now this from the FT (everyone else covered it too), Blue Owl has "permanently" halted redemptions from some of its credit funds. Basically, Blue Owl is going to sell down holdings as it can and then return the money in drips and drabs. The implication is it will take a long time.

DNLIX is an interval fund. I already said the farmland fund is non-trade so no daily liquidity there either. 

I have been very consistent in saying I'm not going to go down this road for clients, and that is still the case but as we talk about frequently, all of these things will evolve and maybe farmland or timberland will make it into some sort of wrapper with daily liquidity that captures the effect. Or not, but there is no reason not to follow along for the things that interest you as much as timberland and farmland interest me. 

In the meantime, taking on the complexity, fees and illiquidity of the current wrapper makes no sense to me. Chances are you can find proxies that get 90% of the effect without the complexity, fees and illiquidity. 

The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Selling Volatility Can Be Painful

It's been a rough go for the Tuttle Capital MSTR 0DTE Covered Call ETF (MSTK) since in listed last fall. It hasn't been much better for the older YieldMax version (MSTY).

If you add the distributions back in on testfol.io, MSTK is down 59% while MSTY is down 46%. The total return declines aren't that bad compared to Strategy's common stock which Yahoo shows down 52%.

Learning how to harness volatility as well as how not to do it has become pretty important to how I view things which is why we spend so much time looking at it here. Frequently, I talk about sifting through a lot to find something useful. That's what looking at funds like this is, sifting through things that would pretty clearly be very difficult to hold but there is information in watching how the crazy high yielders behave. 

Kind of related. Interesting idea, not being sarcastic, but getting hit in not quite a month of trading.


They filed for a whole suite of these but so far just this one and a gold/Bitcoin fund that has symbol ISBG which is down 25% in the same number of days. 

I sat in on a Webinar from WisdomTree about capital efficiency. They included this slide which we looked at a very similar slide a few weeks ago.


If you're interest in looking at that again, there it is but I had a another thought. Meb Faber Tweeted something about 60% S&P 500/40% gold looking an awful lot like plain vanilla 60/40. I couldn't recreate that but this is interesting.


Testfol.io can simulate certain things before when the respective fund actually started including DBMF which is a managed futures ETF. Backtesting managed futures this far back is pretty helpful. 

Managed futures looks more like intermediate treasuries (there is no simulation for AGG) than gold does until we get to late 2021. You can kind of see in the drawdown chart where managed futures worked relatively well when the internet bubble popped and the financial crisis which were both slow moving events, it got hit in the covid crash because that was a fast event and of course 2022 when it did fantastically well.

The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.

Monday, February 16, 2026

The Pursuit Of Robustness

Bob Elliott from Unlimited Funds got interviewed by Brad Roth from Thor Financial which was posted at ETF.com. Bob has a fascinating background, he worked at Bridgewater for a long time and then started Unlimited a few years ago. Unlimited is up to four funds now and all of them offer some version of hedge fund replication. HFND is the original, HFMF is 2x managed futures, HFGM is 2x global macro and HFEQ is 2x long/short. What 2x means in this case is twice the volatility which might equate to twice the return but not necessarily. Part of the idea with these is that many liquid alts aren't volatile enough. 

With his background, Bob should be a great must listen but this interview was the best one I've heard for extracting useful tidbits. 

First, lets test drive 2x managed futures. In the interview, they talked about an allocation of 50/30/20 to replace 60/40 where the 20 goes into alts. 


For quite a while, the managed futures didn't really help much as the teens was a bad decade for managed futures. That struggle didn't really hold back relative returns though. Then in 2022, the managed futures did help both Portfolios 1 and 2. The early lag for Portfolio 1 is from having only 50% in the S&P 500 versus the other two having 60%. If you like the idea of 50/30/20, saying the obvious, you have less in stocks than in a 60/40 portfolio and stocks are the thing that go up the most, most of the time. 

They talked about HFND, Bob's first fund, being something of a fixed income proxy (my words).


Some clients own BALT as a fixed income substitute. The chart is interesting. Going back to QAI's inception, that fund has not done well but that might be a function of rates that were at 0%-1% for a long time. Now that rates are higher, that fund is doing better. I am surprised to see QAI ahead of HFND.

The motivation to use these liquid alts is to make portfolios more robust, the pursuit of robustness. Robustness does not mean perfection which I think is a great point.

The most interesting idea they talked about was that once you find robustness, you're not going to improve much from there. Basically don't mess with it because you'll get either diminishing returns or end up with something that's not as good. 

Interesting, what do you think about that idea? I disagree in terms of there are countless defensive tools available today that were not available when the Financial Crisis started in 2007 for example. Then fast forward to the crisis (small c for this one) for bonds with duration starting in late 2021. If the multi-decade, one way trade in bonds had ended in 2010 instead of 2021, there would have been far fewer fixed income substitutes to use instead of TLT and AGG. 

From my time at Fisher in 2002, they used the term capital markets technology which is what we're talking about. Buffer funds (no matter what anyone thinks of them) are an innovation, a new form of portfolio technology. When I bought RYMFX in 2007, it was literally the only managed futures fund. How often to I mention client/personal holding BTAL? BTAL didn't start until 2012. A few days ago we quoted Shana Sissel from Banrion saying that BTAL and managed futures are the most important diversifiers. 

All of this innovation has meant needing to sell less for defense than I did in 2007/2008. In terms of process evolving, I would rather offset downside with diversifiers than just straight up sell. It's much easier to get it wrong by reducing exposure selling down equities versus adding more negatively correlated funds. 

The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Philosophy From Marshall Mathers

Let's start with this graphic from Gallup;


The trend probably isn't surprising, we are more divided and dysfunctional than we've ever been or certainly more 
divided and dysfunctional than we've been in a very long time. There are problems for which there is no visibility for solutions. I'm not sure solutions are even being worked on. This sentiment is a big driver for my harping the need to solve our own problems. 

Look, if you had one shot or one opportunity to seize everything you ever wanted in one moment, would you capture it or just let it slip? 

You probably recognize that from Lose Yourself by Eminem. This is our shot, our opportunity, we have to fix our own problems to get the most from our time here. To me, this means minimizing wasted time, worrying over things beyond our control, being unhealthy, sitting in rush hour traffic, really this is about living life on my own terms. So ok, if you agree with the polling in the graphic from the top down, that doesn't mean your life needs to follow that trajectory. Not following that trajectory may mean making a conscious decision, that "nope, that is not how I am going to spend my time." 

One way to waste time, is worrying to the point of panic over an investment portfolio which of course is a problem we focus on here. The stock market is going to go up long term whether you worry or not so might as well stop worrying. This is something that can be dialed in to avoid ever panicking. A validly constructed portfolio, combined with an adequate savings rate and avoiding panic will get the job done. That has nothing to do with beating the market. This puts an emphasis on constructing a portfolio that will allow you to not panic during events where others are panicking. 

Here's a fantastic passage from Steve Sears in Barron's;

While taking no action is always an option for true long-term investors, many others feel they must be in perpetual motion. This reflects how brokerage firms make clients feel with their marketing. Other people are under dire financial pressure and feel they must invest to offset expenses.

Whatever your motivation, let this column remind you of the importance of having a plan to handle volatility. You don't want to panic out of, or greed into, positions. You want to have a plan, and you want to be disciplined. If you do that, volatility becomes an important tool that helps, rather than harms, your interests.

Something else important will happen, too. You will develop a deeper understanding of how markets function, of normal and abnormal investor behavior, and you will arm yourself with a decision-making framework that is so critical to living a successful life—in and out of the markets.

The way we handle volatility is to build in things that pretty reliably smooth out normal equity volatility. I keep some things in place perpetually because "risk happens fast" and I also don't want clients to be overly leveraged to my reading every event correctly. Keeping BTAL and a couple of others means the portfolio is already at least somewhat prepared in case risk happens fast. If I can do a little more to spare some downside, great but I would count on nailing every single adverse event correctly.

The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Problems That Will Never Be Solved

Yahoo hit on a subject that has been happening more frequently lately and that we looked at just once, the extent to which increases in Medicare more than offset the COLA bump to Social Security. As a made up example, maybe the COLA for Social Security is $50/mo but costs for the various Medicares go up by $70/mo.

The way things have gone, there is visibility in subsequent years for this to become a bigger issue meaning that in my example of a $50 COLA, Medicare goes up by $80 in the next year and then $90 the year after. 

My own take is that Obamacare accelerated the implosion of the healthcare system and we've made no progress in all these years to actually fix it. When Obamacare was first rolling out, one of the big arguments against it was that what they really wanted was single payer like other countries. Regardless of whether you think that would be a good thing or a bad thing, it is now so fouled up that single payer might be the only option. 

I don't know whether there is any will amongst politicians or voters (in terms of majorities) for such a thing and I don't know how I feel about it, I am simply saying we may have painted ourselves into a corner on the issue. 

The article said that premiums plus out of pocket costs total 1/3 of Social Security income and 1/4 of all income. “Retirees get this because they’re writing the checks now, but those nearing retirement need to realize that this is coming up,” That's a useful quote. Gen-X needs to start to understand this. 

What happens to your financial plan if half of your Social Security goes to Medicare premiums? Maybe that sounds ludicrous, but what if that happens? Is that a big problem, little problem or no problem? For readers of this blog, maybe this threatens margin of safety. If you're reading this, you probably have some sort of investment portfolio that will kick out an income stream plus whatever you are due to get from Social Security. 

Someone counting on $5000/mo in today's dollars from their portfolio and $4000/mo from SS might have to figure some things out if Social Security actually gets cut (don't forget about that threat) and then Medicare inflation continues at a higher rate than the SS COLA. Expecting $4000 might turn into getting only $2000. 

Here's a clip on Twitter of Dr Oz saying how much the country would be helped if people work one more year. The comments were generally pretty angry in terms of saying the middle and lower classes work longer to benefit the wealthy (read them yourself and see if you take a different message). The Yahoo article talked about delaying Social Security to get a bigger benefit which is always met with angry responses on these articles. 

What is your situation? How comfortable are you about your Plan A working out the way you want it to? Do you want or think you need a Plan B or Plan C? Forget the injustices and unfairness of the system because chances are we are all going to (hopefully) grow very old and then die without any of these problems ever having been fixed. 

So if the system won't get fixed, then we need to solve our own problem and we probably need to start working on that now if you haven't started already.

Part of the solution for everyone should be health. I try to avoid broad everyone should types of comments but is there anyone who thinks they should let their health go? People do let their health go of course but I don't think anyone would say that's a good idea. 

Copilot found studies that say the average 70 year old takes 4-5 concurrent prescriptions and goes to the doctor 4-7 times per year. A few good habits can push those numbers back to 80 or maybe even older which would make the decade of 70-80 much easier and much cheaper. 

Are you going to work? If yes, what will you do, stay at your job or find something new? Will you take Social Security early or will you wait? Do you have flexibility on spending needs/wants? Should you downsize? How much are you likely to have accumulated in your accounts when you retire? It that amount just enough, more than enough, not enough? 

Those are some of the questions to consider. This will not be a fun exercise. It involves exploring what maybe has gone wrong in the past or might go wrong in the future. Confronting those sort of things doesn't sound fun but is important. 

Let's finish on a lighter note, the documentary about the ABA called Soul Power came out on Thursday.

If you're a basketball fan and don't know about the ABA, I'm halfway through the second episode and it is fantastic. It's on Prime. Then after the documentary, get the book Loose Balls by Terry Pluto. The stories are fantastic. Marvin Barnes and the time machine, the Baltimore Claws, the story behind Julius Erving going to the Nets, the Lew Alcindor story, the Silna Brothers, Connie Hawkins, Darnell Hillman, I can't tell you how much fun this is. 

The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.

It All Comes Back To Optionality

The daily New York Times email led off with a bit about self improvement related to people " d oing favors for their future selves ....