🐺 Contrarian Investing: The Sheep Masquerading as a Lone Wolf
Jason Zweig’s Devilish Reminder That Almost Everyone Claims to Be Contrarian — Until It’s Time to Actually Stand Alone
CONTRARIAN, n. A sheep masquerading as a lone wolf. To be a contrarian, you must buy when most others are selling and sell when most are buying—an act that sounds easy but requires almost superhuman emotional toughness. Most professional money managers would destroy their businesses if they thought independently, since most clients just want them to chase whatever is hot until it is not. Much like the Judean crowd chanting “We are all individuals!” in Monty Python’s Life of Brian, every single professional investor believes he is a contrarian. Almost none are.
Tags:
Carpe Diem,
contrarian investing,
financial dictionary,
FUNanc1al,
herd mentality,
independent thinking,
investing psychology,
investor behavior,
Jason Zweig,
market humor,
market psychology,
Monty Python,
professional investors,
stock market wisdom,
The Devil’s Financial Dictionary,
value investing
Other articles:
Quick links
Search
About/Leadership
Editorial Process
Privacy Policy
Refund Policy
Shipping Policy
Terms of Service
Contact us
About us
FUNanc!al distills the fun in finance and the finance in fun, makes news personal, and helps all reach happiness.
