Episode Summary
Follow Two Quants and a Financial Planner on SpotifyFollow Two Quants and a Financial Planner on AppleIn this new weekly Excess Returns recap, Jack Forehand and Matt Zeigler highlight the most important investing insights from recent conversations across the Excess Returns podcast network. Drawing on discussions with Andy Constan, Rob Arnott, Kai Wu, Ben Hunt, Rupert Mitchell, Meb Faber and others, the episode connects ideas across macro, markets, AI, credit cycles and valuation. The conversation focuses on timeless investing principles investors can apply today, including how to evaluate expert opinions, how AI may reshape markets and jobs, what defines a true market bubble, why international stocks may be benefiting from global fiscal spending, and why the best opportunities in markets often come after long periods of underperformance.Topics covered in this episodeHow to evaluate expert opinions during major market events and filter signal from noiseAndy Constan’s framework for judging credibility based on experience and confidenceWhy charts showing markets rising after wars are often misleading data miningThe difference between believing in AI technology and believing AI stocks are good investmentsHow AI could both replace and augment human work through the task based structure of jobsRob Arnott’s definition of a market bubble using implausible growth assumptionsWhy many technology leaders ultimately fail to justify the expectations priced into their stocksThe difference between software companies whose moat is code and those with durable intangible advantagesHow brand, switching costs, distribution and network effects protect enterprise software companiesWhy AI may be one of the most disruptive technologies in history and what that means for marketsMeb Faber on the myth that the easy money has already been made in international and value stocksThe behavioral challenge of holding unpopular strategies through long periods of underperformanceRob Arnott on why small cap value could outperform large cap growth over the next decadeBen Hunt on the point in every credit cycle when lenders say no moreHow rising costs of capital can trigger boom bust credit cyclesRupert Mitchell on why global equity markets often follow government fiscal spendingThe growing role of international fiscal policy and capital flows in global market leadershipTimestamps00:00 Introduction and the idea behind the weekly Excess Returns recap show03:00 Andy Constan on how to evaluate experts and filter market commentary11:40 Why charts showing markets rising after wars can be misleading17:00 Kai Wu on AI technology versus AI investments and the future of work25:37 Rob Arnott on how to define a market bubble using valuation assumptions29:35 Kai Wu on software moats, intangible assets and enterprise software durability35:31 Rob Arnott on how disruptive AI could be for the global economy39:54 Meb Faber on why the easy money has never been made in markets43:57 Rob Arnott on small cap value versus large cap growth opportunities48:39 Ben Hunt on credit cycles and the moment lenders pull back55:56 Rupert Mitchell on fiscal spending and global equity market performance
