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t1_iru8lob wrote

A static chart would be so much better than a looping gif.

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t1_irx286p wrote

From a data story telling perspective, I feel like having a static graph would have ruined hare racing ahead aspect. The animation would have seemed much less dramatic.

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t1_irudarx wrote

Slow and steady win the race

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t1_irw5ocx wrote

“I’ll measure my returns against anyones; as long as you let me pick the start/end date of the period we measure”

-Warren Buffet (paraphrased)

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t1_iru8eqk wrote

OP, can you please explain what both of those things are?

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t1_irucrrr wrote

Looks like the return percentages if you bought Berkshire Hathaway stock (grey) and the ARK ETF (red) at the beginning of 2020.

Warren Buffet (Berkshire Hathaway) has a certain investment strategy that he has shown returns slow and steady growth. On the other hand, Cathie Wood (ARK Innovation) has a different strategy that gave her ton of attention mid-pandemic for its super high returns, but is now showing that it isn’t as stable of returns.

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t1_irun5cx wrote

What about including the S&P500 into the mix?

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t1_iruvk3p wrote

Berkshire Hathaway moves very similar to the S&P 500, but iirc has slightly better returns over multiple decades.

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t1_iruxbx4 wrote

I guess that's my point of bringing up the S&P. There are plenty of funds that beat the S&P for any given year. Almost none can do it consistently. That's what made Buffet and Berkshire notable-- the long term performance.

I would imagine that if you plot the distribution of returns for all the funds, it would approach a normal distribution. For the top performers (eg >3 sigma), what is their performance the next year? My gut feeling us that risky investments will increase the variance in returns-- those in the highest returns and highest losses will have risky strategies. So does past performance inform future performance? Maybe? All the commercials for investments want you to think so but explicitly say they don't.

So during the period in question, did Berkshire do better than the S&P?

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t1_iry83lo wrote

Better than slightly better returns. Berkshire Hathaway has an annualized return of 20.1% since 1965. The S&P500 has been 10.5% annualized.

Total BRK return since 1965: 3,641,613%

Total SPX return since 1965: 30,209%

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t1_irvgu3w wrote

Not only is it not stable, it appears to have lost everything.

Anyone who timed the market got lucky

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t1_irw31e2 wrote

Can you guess when Cathie Woods came under short attack.

You should actually send this to the SEC.

And by short attack, of course, I mean: 'naked short' attack. The preferred method of the short community.

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t1_irumv4n wrote

Anyone could've made huge gains during the pandemic. I was seeing over 40% returns on my returns.

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OP t1_irup69j wrote

Berkshire Hathaway is Warren Buffett's company that he uses to invest in businesses like Apple, Occidental Petroleum, Coca-Cola etc.

ARKK is fund manager Cathie Wood's Innovation ETF. This ETF invests in a selection of companies that ARK believes are the 'future'. However, the ARKK ETF has been criticised for investing in unprofitable businesses which have tanked since the pandemic.

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t1_irv224v wrote

the thing I dont like about these charts is they are very start and end specific & results can vary greatly for somewhat different intervals. Supposedly you could fix that by using moving averages over say 30 or 60 days but I have almost never seen anybody do it.

Also regarding the comparison itself, IIRC there was a good buffet quote .."In short term markets are voting machine but in long term they behave as weighing machine". definitely applies in this case.

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t1_irufmzf wrote

Yeah- but since 2020, BRK.B has been around since 1996. Slow and steady isn’t too much a surprise.

ARKK hit the market at full hype all time high, and went with a bunch of ATH hyped tickers like Zoom and Coinbase

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t1_irvdxbi wrote

The animation adds negative value to trying to understand what you're presenting

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t1_iruhikk wrote

Wish I could comment gifs on mobile. The Palpatine “Ironic, isn’t it?” seems very fitting here.

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t1_iruyb4p wrote

It's like Jeff Goldblum said, "Berkshire... uh... Hathaway".

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t1_irxy8bx wrote

Berkshire Hathaway, S&P 500, VTI and most other broad market funds are all very tightly correlated, so this chart is really ARKK vs the overall stock market.

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