Brandon Langley, Blueprint Investment Partners President & Co-Founder
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Hope Is a Strategy (Just Not a Good One)

Hope Is a Strategy (Just Not a Good One)

“Hope is a dangerous thing. Hope can drive a man insane.” –Red, “The Shawshank Redemption”

If you ask my wife what puzzles her most about me, I imagine the short list would include my near-compulsion to stop on certain movies while channel surfing. I mean, I get it. How many times does one person really need to watch “The Martian” or “Tommy Boy”?

In my book, no movie is more re-watchable than “The Shawshank Redemption.” The 1995 Academy Award Nominee for Best Picture has it all: tragedy, comedy, and a great comeback story. Throughout it, a central theme is hope. For most of the movie, hope is characterized as a verb and a threat to the prisoner’s ability to cope with a life behind bars. In a key scene of the movie, the main character Red bristles at a notion put forward by Andy Dufresne that hope is a good thing, which makes way for the opening quote above.

I’m not trying to characterize investing as serving a prison sentence (though it can sometimes feel like it), nor am I saying that hope is a bad thing. However, the idea of NOT relying on hope as a strategy does resonate with me as a portfolio manager and trend follower.

Hope Is a Strategy (Just Not a Good One)

Category: Behavioral Finance
Still image from “The Shawshank Redemption” movie

Hope Is a Strategy (Just Not a Good One)

Person holding a dandelion at sunset

Trend Following: Weed Control for Portfolios

Trend following can be a natural weed killer for portfolios. While weeding isn’t always the most fun activity, it’s generally helpful to weed early – and often.
Person holding a dandelion at sunset

Trend Following: Weed Control for Portfolios

Trend following can be a natural weed killer for portfolios. While weeding isn’t always the most fun activity, it’s generally helpful to weed early – and often.
Court jester clown

Meteorologists with 8% Accuracy Would Be Fired

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