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Survival of the Least Fit

by theadvisertimes.com
5 months ago
in Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Survival of the Least Fit
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“People think about evolution as progress. Evolution’s not progress. Evolution is fitness within an environment. And it actually breeds its own fragility, right? If I’m a finch who happens to inhabit the Galapagos Islands and nobody has a beak that’s seven inches long that can reach into a particular pine cone, then I can grow a beak that is first 1 ½”, then 2”, then 3”, and eventually it’s 7”; it provides a huge advantage. But if that environment changes, a 7” beak becomes an extraordinary disadvantage and I go extinct almost immediately.”—Michael Green, Simplify Asset Management

Nassim Taleb, in his 2004 classic, Fooled by Randomness, included a chapter titled “Survival of the Least Fit – Can Evolution Be Fooled by Randomness?” In it, he explains how the most successful operators in one environment can be disastrous if it changes radically:

Recall that someone with only casual knowledge about the problem of randomness would believe that an animal is at the maximum fitness for the conditions of its time. This is not what evolution means; on average, animals will be fit, but not every single one of them, and not at all times. Just as an animal could have survived because its sample path was lucky, the “best” operators in a given business can come from a subset of operators who survived because of over-fitness to a sample path – a sample path that was free of the evolutionary rare event. One vicious attribute is that the longer these animals can go without encountering the rare event, the more vulnerable they will be to it.

In my opinion, the benign environment of the past 17 years—zero interest rates, US tech dominance, S&P 500 index funds spitting out double-digit returns like a broken candy machine—is over. Interest rates one can actually see, the emergence of Chinese innovation, decline of the US dollar, and soaring precious metals prices have changed the investment game permanently. There is no going back. Yet most investors long for the past. Can you blame them? As a result, the current landscape is full of finches with abnormally long beaks. Among them:

The Plain Vanilla Advisor

The stereotypical financial planner treats investing as straightforward and overly simplistic, defaulting to a basic 60/40 portfolio (e.g., 60 percent in SPY for stocks and 40 percent in AGG for bonds). This worked like a charm during the 39-year bull market in bonds. Unfortunately, that party ended in 2020. Over the past five years (2021-2025), AGG (iShares Core US Aggregate Bond ETF) lost 2.0 percent in nominal terms and 21.2 percent versus CPI (itself a flawed and understated measure of cost-of-living increases).

The Buffett Acolyte

Warren Buffett and his late alter ego, Charlie Munger, are unquestionably two of the greatest investors of all time, consistently sharing their lucid, common-sense wisdom. Yet their lack of a sound economic framework, belief that “macro doesn’t matter,” and advice to “never bet against the US” could come back to bite their value investing followers. In a 1998 speech, Buffett said of gold, “It has no utility. Anyone watching from Mars would be scratching their head.” Since then, the yellow dog has outperformed Berkshire Hathaway stock by 1.86 percent per year (up 16.4x vs. 10.2x).

The Bull Market Genius

The last bear market that persisted beyond a nanosecond was the 2008-09 Global Financial Crisis. According to the CFA Institute, the average age of portfolio managers is 42 years old. In other words, the typical investing hired gun has never experienced real pain.

The Tech Maximalist

The stereotypical millennial/Gen Z investor has an unshakeable, almost blind faith in technology stocks, especially the Magnificent 7 (Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet/Google, and Tesla) plus Broadcom and Palantir. He is convinced that tech born in the US will dominate forever, growth is inevitable and every dip is a buying opportunity.

The ESG Crusader

The young investor/speculator is often ideologically motivated, chasing “ethical/ESG” stocks, and boycotting “problematic” companies like oil and gas producers and gun manufacturers. Impact over profits, virtue signaling over economic efficiency.

The Master of the Universe

The archetypical Wall Street professional does not lack intelligence, confidence, or access to resources. Those who lack his pedigree should never question his prognostications. He suffers from “Not Invented Here” syndrome and feels right at home at the World Economic Forum in Davos. He is an interventionist at his core, aggressively riding the wave, but prone to spectacular wipeouts. When the bust inevitably appears, he has friends in high places on speed dial ready to bail him out.

Conclusion

We now live in a fundamentally altered landscape where old certainties no longer confer fitness. In this new reality, survival belongs not to the most over-optimized for yesterday’s tailwinds, but to the anti-fragile—those diversified, adaptable, and skeptical of narratives that assume perpetual continuity. The plain vanilla 60/40 portfolios, Buffett-style purists dismissive of macro shifts, tech maximalists betting on eternal US dominance, ESG ideologues prioritizing virtue over resilience, and Wall Street interventionists reliant on bailouts all risk rapid extinction unless they evolve.

The lesson is stark yet liberating: natural selection rewards neither the strongest nor the smartest in absolute terms, but those least wedded to a single, fragile niche. Investors who recognize the beak they grew in the old world may now be a liability—and who ruthlessly prune it for broader, more robust capabilities—stand the best chance not just to survive, but to thrive amid the randomness that Taleb reminds us is the true constant.



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