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  • The Dao of Capital: Austrian Investing in a Distorted World
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4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
418 global ratings
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The Dao of Capital: Austrian Investing in a Distorted World

The Dao of Capital: Austrian Investing in a Distorted World

byMark Spitznagel
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Patrick Sullivan
4.0 out of 5 starsA Good Introduction To Austrian Economics
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on October 23, 2013
I will start off, by saying this book is about changing perspectives. It is not, a one two three investment cookbook. Spitznagel attempts to explain his approach to investing. The author has immersed himself, in the school of Austrian economics. Spitznagel`s investment strategies, are all based on the lessons of Austrian economics.

The reader will be introduced, to all the leading proponents of Austrian economics. The list includes; Mises, Hazlitt, Carl Menger, Bohm-Bawerk, Bastiat, and Hayek. Austrian economics is based on human behavior. This is in complete contrast, to most modern economic models. The current models are based on mathematical principles. Spitznagel wants to be clear, that human behavior can not be graphed into a math equation. Spitznagel then compares and contrasts the two methods of economic thinking.

Spitznagel`s conclusion, is to invest in a round about fashion. Here is a straight forward example; avoid investing during euphoric periods.This sounds very simple. However, the human tendency is to get caught up in the euphoria. The round about approach, fights against our natural human instincts. The investor must understand the entire business cycle, in order to profit from human folly.

Spitznagel also dwells into other examples, to help understand the cyclical nature of the world. He lays out various military strategies. He sights lessons from Clausewitz and Sun Tzu. There is also a dendrology lesson, involving the life cycle of conifers. Spitznagel also explains how, forest fires play a role in the boreal forest ecosystem. The effect of forest fires, is also an analogy to the downturns in the business cycle.

Over all, this was a rather interesting read. There were times, when things got a little on the slow side. This is a great book, for anyone interested in understanding Austrian economics/investing.
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MIKALYN
3.0 out of 5 starsNot sure yet
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on November 18, 2013
I am about 20% of the way through the book and I have to say I am underwhelmed. Many books give you the straight goods early on and then reinforce the key points as the book progresses. Now I am reading the book to see if it eventually goes anywhere. The comparison between Austrian Investing and Coniferous trees is trite. As a formely practicing professional forester, I think that its ludicrous to contrast specieis that have adapted and survived over millions of years to modern capital markets and their behavior over a few hundred years. I will post again later if the book redeems itself in the coming pages.
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From Canada

Patrick Sullivan
4.0 out of 5 stars A Good Introduction To Austrian Economics
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on October 23, 2013
Verified Purchase
I will start off, by saying this book is about changing perspectives. It is not, a one two three investment cookbook. Spitznagel attempts to explain his approach to investing. The author has immersed himself, in the school of Austrian economics. Spitznagel`s investment strategies, are all based on the lessons of Austrian economics.

The reader will be introduced, to all the leading proponents of Austrian economics. The list includes; Mises, Hazlitt, Carl Menger, Bohm-Bawerk, Bastiat, and Hayek. Austrian economics is based on human behavior. This is in complete contrast, to most modern economic models. The current models are based on mathematical principles. Spitznagel wants to be clear, that human behavior can not be graphed into a math equation. Spitznagel then compares and contrasts the two methods of economic thinking.

Spitznagel`s conclusion, is to invest in a round about fashion. Here is a straight forward example; avoid investing during euphoric periods.This sounds very simple. However, the human tendency is to get caught up in the euphoria. The round about approach, fights against our natural human instincts. The investor must understand the entire business cycle, in order to profit from human folly.

Spitznagel also dwells into other examples, to help understand the cyclical nature of the world. He lays out various military strategies. He sights lessons from Clausewitz and Sun Tzu. There is also a dendrology lesson, involving the life cycle of conifers. Spitznagel also explains how, forest fires play a role in the boreal forest ecosystem. The effect of forest fires, is also an analogy to the downturns in the business cycle.

Over all, this was a rather interesting read. There were times, when things got a little on the slow side. This is a great book, for anyone interested in understanding Austrian economics/investing.
2 people found this helpful
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MIKALYN
3.0 out of 5 stars Not sure yet
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on November 18, 2013
Verified Purchase
I am about 20% of the way through the book and I have to say I am underwhelmed. Many books give you the straight goods early on and then reinforce the key points as the book progresses. Now I am reading the book to see if it eventually goes anywhere. The comparison between Austrian Investing and Coniferous trees is trite. As a formely practicing professional forester, I think that its ludicrous to contrast specieis that have adapted and survived over millions of years to modern capital markets and their behavior over a few hundred years. I will post again later if the book redeems itself in the coming pages.
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Brett Weese
5.0 out of 5 stars Thoroughly Enjoyable
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on September 15, 2020
Verified Purchase
Like the ultimate investing strategy, the author takes a roundabout way, not a direct path. The journey was interesting and thought provoking.
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James S.
1.0 out of 5 stars I fell off this roundabout
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on January 9, 2014
Verified Purchase
Spitznagel attempts to link some ancient Chinese theory from the Art of War to Austrian Economics and adds a couple of chapters on investing at the end. The Dao of Capital is rambling, repetative, meandering, annoying.

If I read the word "roundabout" again, I will scream. Any illumination of Austrian econmics is smothered by layer upon layer of psydo-academic piffle. Did I mention that the content is endlessly repetative? Roundabout. Roundabout. Roundabout. Where was the editor? A lumberjack with a chainsaw would have made great improvements. When Spitznagel gets around to investment thought, he comes up with two ideas: Return on invested capital and Price/Book. At least that's what I think he was trying to convey, but I'm not sure because he does not define his terms.

The ideas are not annoying, just the way they have been presented.

For my $20, I'd rather buy some conifer seedlings and plant them in an Austrian meadow. Yes, that is a reference to the book. A whole chapter on conifers!
5 people found this helpful
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Ramanathan Premachandran
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on April 7, 2017
Verified Purchase
I gave this book to my son and he enjoys reading this book.
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halo gt3
5.0 out of 5 stars Mark Spitznagel is an intelligent, thoughtful investor
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on May 5, 2015
Verified Purchase
Mark Spitznagel is an intelligent, thoughtful investor. Success is one thing, how one achieves it is another. A leader succeeds like Mark. Outstanding book. If you are a portfolio manager or private investor I would recommend this book for your library.
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Luc Gosselin
5.0 out of 5 stars Un livre de vision
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on June 22, 2014
Verified Purchase
Beaucoup, beaucoup plus qu'une vision de l'investissement. Pas trop difficile à comprendre pour quelqu'un qui n'a pas de connaissance de l'économie et du placement de capital.
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Brad Mills
5.0 out of 5 stars Must read for anyone who has only experienced the "stocks can only go up" market post 2008.
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on July 29, 2021
This book was a great history lesson of the Austrian school of investing via sound money philosophy of capital allocation, patience & delayed gratification.

The book uses examples from the author's experience as a youngster in the Chicago trading pits, as well as from history to build a framework for how Austrian economics evolved.

From concepts observed in nature with conifers taking outlier paths to survive, as well as ancient philosophies of war and lessons of patience from different cultures.

The book describes the rise of bubbles and how a money printing fiat mindset brought us to where Keynsian / Monetarist economics is the dominant logic used in our broken money system.

Unfortunately the book does not have a prescription for the broken system we find ourselves in, it's more of a philosophy lesson than it is an investing guideline.

I've found myself holding most of my net worth in Bitcoin because of the principles taught in this book.

Since dollars are manipulated and printed like flyers for a furniture store that's going out of business, they are losing their value.

Bitcoin is a perfect form of Austrian sound money that holds it's value over long time frames like the conifers who use unconventional strategy to survive forest fires better than fast growing hardwood trees.

Definitely recommend this book for anyone looking for conviction on why they should not be all-in on our broken stock market & fiat system.
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From other countries

Gravity's Gone
5.0 out of 5 stars A Billionaire’s Treatise on the Philosophy of Strategy Itself…but you should read it anyway
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 21, 2014
Verified Purchase
First and foremost, I highly recommend reading this book. The journey is admittedly round about, but the unique perspective is worth the time investment.

What to Expect
The Dao of Capital is not an investment manual, or a tactical handbook. Instead this is more of a treatise – see “The Art of War”, a paradigm from which to view strategy itself. The focus is strategy, and underlying philosophy, not tactics. Spitznagel’s perspective on life as a whole is unique and enlightening. Yes, he is (extremely) repetitive at times, and could have benefitted from an editor with a bit tighter fist, but please do not let that discourage what will most assuredly be a valuable investment of your time. The author has a gift for conceptual perspective, but at times his brilliance unnecessarily complicates his choice of metaphors - making the book a bit more difficult to continually comprehend than it necessarily needs to be. At times I found myself having to retreat in the book to go back and review a previous metaphor, so that I could keep up with the current concept being stressed. Now, while the retreating to advance strategy may fit well with the overall positional advantage theme of the book, there is still something to be said for concise simplicity when conveying your message.

Specific Tactics for Investing
My personal desire upon purchase of this book was to garner some insight on specific investments, in what I already knew was a distorted market. I already shared much of the author’s theoretical economic view (Austrian) and his political philosophies (liberty), and therefore already shared his belief of a Fed created distortion in the market. I wanted him to tell me how to simultaneously protect myself from inflationary policies (and the dangers of holding cash or T notes), while avoiding the impending artificially stimulated boom and bust cycle of the market. Although he touches on some methods for this, don’t expect any magic potion here. I can summarize the tactical portions of the book fairly quickly. His message to the average investor can be boiled down to the initial half of the concept he terms Austrian Investing I, which is staying out of the equities (stock) market when Central Bank induced artificial distortion is high, and patiently waiting on the inevitable bust to reenter the market to purchase equities at either highly discounted rates or at least at prices that have been adjusted by the bust to a level actually reflecting the natural levels. The latter half of his Austrian Investing I philosophy is a concept which is not feasibly accessible to the average investor (in my opinion). This second half of Austrian Investing I is tail-hedging, the investing tactic for which he is famous, and boils down to purchasing well “out of the money” puts on S&P 500 index options. Regardless of the complexity of tail hedging, dealing in the options market is simply out of reach for folks with full time jobs (assuming that job is not broker, banker, or fund manager). Austrian Investing II summarizes his concepts for valuation to utilize first in times of high distortion (i.e. building the bubble) to find equities to hold that have been less affected by interest rate manipulation, and more so once bubbles have burst and brought market prices closer to natural equilibrium. Austrian Investing II is a nuanced version of value investing with his own spin on how to evaluate companies’ susceptibility to Fed induced volatility; with a focus on companies with round about production processes and healthy (Henry Ford style) reinvestment of profits into continually greater efficiencies through further levels of round about production.
As I mentioned, this is not a tactical book, so he is a bit short on specifics, and what few are included reside at the very end of the book. I do not disparage the author for this, though, as he thoroughly explains throughout the book that tactics were not his intention and does a fairly thorough job of explaining why he did not write a “how-to” invest manual. I will caution, though, that for non-financiers (like myself) he was a bit short on explanations surrounding the financial concepts and terminology once he gets into the actual weeds of Austrian Investing. In a book that requires two weeks of reading just to get through the metaphor regarding conifers and the boreal forest, one would think that at least a brief description of financial concepts in layman’s terms would be included (instead of referring the uneducated reader to seek explanation of these terms and concepts in other materials).

Austrian Economics
Although I didn’t read this book for any reinforcement of Austrian Economic theory, and instead was looking for a heavier dose of finance and investment from someone with an Austrian mindset; I truly did enjoy Spitznagel’s perspectives on the Austrian tradition. I suspect that even professional economists in the Austrian tradition would enjoy his perspectives on the classic Austrian texts. For someone totally unfamiliar, or especially someone who has only been informed by the mainstream’s biased slander concerning Austrian Economics, this book would be a tremendous primer on the subject. Dao of Capital covers theories from Bastiat, Menger, Bohm-Bawerk, Hayek, Rothbard, and (of course) “the Master” Ludwig Von Mises. This book does not cover the full philosophical realm of liberty in the way that “Road to Serfdom” or Rothbard’s “Libertarian Manifesto” do, but this book covers a tremendous array of central themes in the more strict markets based theories of classical liberalism.

Summary
Reviewing this book is a bit difficult, because as much as I enjoyed Spitznagel’s brilliance and unique perspective on strategy itself; the book is extremely tedious at times. Overall, I cannot help but give this brilliant composition 5 stars. The engineer in me, though, would prefer a bit less repetition and a bit higher regard for brevity (although this review obviously suffers from the same infirmity), as well as a more robust coverage of the technical financial concepts.
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JOÃO LUIS
5.0 out of 5 stars Ótimo produto
Reviewed in Brazil 🇧🇷 on December 1, 2022
Verified Purchase
Ótimo produto. Chegou perfeitamente.
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