On Mathematical Beethovens, Decentralized Education & the Voyage to the Human Brain (Ep. 243)
In conversation with Professor Luis Seco
Professor Luis Seco is a mathematician, educator, and investor.
Among many other titles and achievements, he is the Professor of Mathematics at the University of Toronto, Director of the quant research hub Risklab, Chair of the Centre for Sustainable Development at the Fields Institute, and co-founder of the asset management firm Sigma Analysis & Management Ltd.
Got all that?!
This one was really fun, and not just because Luis is a fellow quant. We discuss how maths resembles Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, the future of the ‘metaversity,’ the most important lesson Luis gives his students, why investing isn’t what it used to be, and much more.
We’ve shared some edited highlights below, or if you prefer to dive straight in, just scroll down for links & a full transcript.
I hope you enjoy this conversation as much as I did. As always, if you like what you hear/read, please leave a comment or drop us a review on your provider of choice.
Edited Highlights
If you’ve only got five minutes to spare, here are a few edited highlights for you:
Humans Are Born to Teach
Luis: “As humans, we are rewarded for teaching. It actually gives us pleasure. And we have chemicals that reward us when we teach. Everybody is a teacher. This is very important. Everybody, we enjoy teaching other humans something. We are rewarded with that. So that gives me hope. It gives me hope and perhaps is the reason why you do your podcast, which is fantastic. That's why you do it, and that's why I have my YouTube channel, we want to explain people, because as humans, we are programmed to do that. So I have hope, I'm an optimist because I know that in the end, we have close to seven billion people who are rewarded for passing that message across. No one is going to give you a dollar bill because you say this to this other person, you do it because this is who we are, this is what we do.”
Why Communication is More Important Than Content
Luis: “When you're doing any act of communication, say a job interview, being a parent, being a teacher, 15% of the result of that is due to the content. The 85% is these intangibles that are hard to measure.
I use an example when I teach this to my students: ‘how do you fall in love?’ ‘How do you date someone?’ You don't go around with a CV, right? No one falls in love to a CV. So when you're going to be hired, when you go to a job interview, the CV is there, the CV takes you to the interview, but then it's just you. They're going to hire you as a person. They're going to spend eight if not more hours per day with you. That is like a marriage. Right? So they're going to look for all the other stuff that you're going to be doing.
I mean, I've hired people in my company, you've hired people in your companies. And yes, you want people who can do the job, but you also want people that you're going to be working with. When something bad happens, right? And you have an emergency and you need to fix something, something happened, you need people around you, you need the humans around you that not only can get to the answer to that question, you need people that you can rely on. You need people that you can work with.
That's a community that you're building. A company is a community, and if you're hired to be part of that community, they're not going to hire you for skills only. They're going to hire you for everything else. They're going to hire you for how well you sing, how well you speak, how well you dance.”
Humanism & the Journey to the Human Brain
Luis: “I'm a mathematician, I'm a scientist, I've written papers on physics, and very often I am expected to think that science is all important and everything is about science and this and that.
I say no.
What is called humanities, art, literature, that always was important and perhaps today is more important than ever because, I like to exaggerate to make my points very often, so I like to say that if the 20th century was the center of engineering and that helped us go to the moon, the 21st century is going to be the center of the social science where the voyage we're taking is to the human brain. That's what we want to understand. And what makes us humans is actually not the bridges we build. It's more closely like the music we listen to. And that humanism is going to become very, very important.”
Why Investing is Becoming a Different Game
Luis: “I’ve managed money. I run an investment company for 20 years. We manage about a billion dollars. And the way you manage money has been based on numbers. Now, the way you manage money is based on words.
And I use an example, it may sound very cheesy, I may not have time to explain myself, but for example, if you want to understand what happened to GameStop, Bloomberg is behind, you can't use Bloomberg, right? You have to go to Reddit. So if you're going to understand the realities, the complex realities of what's happening, that information is not accounted for. Companies don't account for the value of their data. Companies don't account for the value of their community, and lots of other intangibles. Investment decisions are going to be driven by variables that we don't know, right?
And analysts, have to rely more and more on these expert systems, which are really just based on fantastic data that we don't have or that someone is going to produce. And one example is all the focus on sustainability, which is what I do now. Sustainability is just something that is worth so much money and so much lives that... But it's not accounted for. Accounting standards don't go there. If you develop a system to create concrete that does not have the emission and the heat consumption that you have, well, what is that accounted for? I don't know. If you have a way of accounting for these transformational changes that are happening. The new companies that will be created is great.
Private equity, the way that's going to be done... Private equity is it's considered to be the investing without data because you're not publicly traded.Well, there's so much data out there, but it's all in disclosure statements. It's all in audit reports. It's all in textual databases that now we can analyze in real time very fast.
And so I think investing is just going to be a completely different game. The exercise is going to be absorbing data sources, which are extremely complex, but that's where you find those nuggets of value.”
Full Episode, Transcript & Links
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Well, hello everyone. It's Jim O'Shaughnessy with yet another Infinite Loops. My guest today, there are just so many different ways that I could describe him. I think maybe vying for one of the world's most interesting men, it is Luis Seco, the Professor and Director of Mathematical Finance at the University of Toronto, Director of Risk Lab established in 1996. Honestly, it might take me the whole weekend if I was to list all of the things that you are doing, that you are involved in.
Luis Seco:
It may.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I find you absolutely fascinating. It seems like we have several of the same heroes, Richard Feynman, Wittgenstein, et cetera. But first, welcome and thank you very much for joining me today.
Luis Seco:
What a pleasure to be here.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
So the first thing I'd like to do is, the thing that really drew me to you is, I have a layman's familiarity with mathematics, so I have nothing but in awe of mathematicians who, both the intuitive and the more traditional way of approaching math, but what really drew me to you was your explanation of your getting to Princeton in 1985 and interacting with Charles Fefferman. I love music. Bach tends to be what I have on most of the day, but I love all of the composers you talked about in that. So I would love it if you would be willing to share with our audience that story, because it speaks to me in a number of ways and I think it will to everyone listening and watching.
Luis Seco:
Well, I was very fortunate that I went to Princeton to do my PhD, and then I did work with Charles Fefferman, who is a child prodigy, winner of the Fields Medal very, very young. But besides all of that, he's a wonderful person and one who does mathematics like no one else. I went to Princeton, as I explained in my paper, thinking that I was going to meet a child prodigy and very eager to find similarities with, say, Mozart, which is what you would expect if you know music. I love Mozart, I have to say. The Magic Flute is perhaps my favorite opera. But I ended up with someone that he's so deep and profound that, as I say in my paper, I think he's more like Beethoven. He does math in a way that really no one else does math. He takes a theme and then he just extracts as much value from that theme as you can. And in my paper, I quote the Fifth Symphony of Beethoven, where with these four notes, he builds one of the masterpieces of music in four notes, four notes.
Luis Seco:
And to me, Charlie is a little bit like him. And if I have to say what I learned from him is probably that, look for that element on which everything is based, and then just extract as much value from that as you can. And that goes to the ubiquity of mathematics. That's why mathematics is so successful. And Richard Feynman, that you quoted earlier, he said, and I'm paraphrasing, that one of the reasons for the unreasonable usefulness of mathematics is that the same equations have the same solutions. And for those who know math means, well, if I know this and this reality is similar, then the same thing should apply. That's why triangles exist, right? A triangle here or a triangle there would have exactly the same characteristics. And that's why mathematics is such a human science.
Luis Seco:
Feynman said that too, that he actually doubted that mathematics was a science because math is not really designed to understand the world around us, it's made by ourselves. It's the only science which is made by humans. And that perhaps makes it more like the humanities. But so math is right in there, and it's so modern because modernism is about transversality. It's not about vertical silos, it's about going all the way around. It's about 360 degrees. And that's what mathematics is to me. And that's what I learned from Charlie Fefferman back in Princeton.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And the other thing that excited me about the paper was the idea that math, human creation, and yet math can also be kind of looked at as the universal language, right? The author of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, I don't know if you're a fan of Douglas Adams, but he had a quote about Bach and he was talking about music and he said, "This music implies this. This music implies this. But Bach, when you listen to Bach, Bach explains what it means to be the universe." Tie in some of the other references that you made. Because when you were talking about Professor Fefferman, you also said that he did math the way Rossini wrote music. And for the music lovers out there, that was quickly.
Luis Seco:
That's very, very fast. I was amazed at his speed. But I think it's because of that, it's because once you find the nugget from which everything follows, just follow it, you just walk and run and run and run. And that is what you can do. But going back to your other comment, see, mathematics has always been a language. And as I like to say, it's on my website, mathematics is the language that computers speak. Linguists don't like that because they say, "No, computers don't speak." Of course, it's poetry. But that's what it is. Pythagoras said it, he said, "The universe is written with numbers." And that's basically the message that I'm delivering. And in this day and age, if you want to understand everything that is happening with artificial intelligence, you have to know math as a language, not as the way to build all those theories, but as a way to understand how these things work and how we are communicating with each other. The concept of the neural network is now out there. Chat GPT, people talk about that, that's all math.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Indeed. And an experience of when I was a young adult, I became really fascinated by quantum physics. And so I went through all of the books that were written for the general reader, but I still wanted to know more. And so I bought some more sophisticated books and I looked and it was all math. And so I said to my wife, "This might be really, really difficult for me." And then I had that insight that you just said, because it just looked very, very daunting. And I thought, "Well, wait a minute, math is just a language. If I can learn how to speak that language, I'll be able to at least partially understand what they're saying here." And I completely agree with your assessment that that is the language of computers, that is the language of AI. And I was chatting with an AI genius recently, and he was speculating, he said, "At some point we might get to code that AI writes that we humans literally don't understand." What do you think about that speculation?
Luis Seco:
It's possible. It's definitely possible. But now, you said something about the human's understanding, and that is the concept, the meaning of that is already changing because we're dealing with realities around us which are more and more complicated. A thousand years ago, you understood everything that was around you. Everything was physical. Even currency trading started that way when people didn't understand the value of currencies in different ports. And then of course you could [inaudible] arbitrage that and then, wow, that's how you start making... But for the most part, you could understand the world around you. Now the world around you is daunting, is mysterious, and I don't think a single person can understand it, we need to form groups. And I think it's going to give a new value to the concept of a community. We're going to need to form communities so we can understand what we are doing. That's going to give us so much intellectual power also.
Luis Seco:
And that's, in a certain sense, the way science is evolving too. We no longer have people like Newton who in isolation, actually during the bubonic plague he developed theories. I think that is a thing of the past. Now, it's much more collaborative, it's much more community-based. And we're going to have to surround ourselves with humans so that together, aided by computers, can understand what's happening around us. But it's very mysterious. And that poses a tremendous challenge for us as a society, as an educator. We don't want to leave anybody behind. Education is going to face tremendous challenges, making sure that everybody understands the realities that we are creating every day. And I wished that this is something that was spoken more frequently because we're going to see a very big divide when it comes to that.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I am 100% simpatico with that attitude. Of course, Leibniz might disagree about Newton and calculus, but we had two contenders for the crowd. But I completely agree with your assessment that we're going to need collective intelligence, collective collaboration. When the internet came along, I sort of said, " I think this is the beginning of the human colossus and the ability for us to network," because of what you just said.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I think I do agree that the era of a Newton, the era of any profound thinker coming up with the whole shebang is over. And then you also have a lot of support for your argument in the Flint effect on IQs from the late 1800s to the late 1900s, they went up. And his assessment was partially, at least, I'm kind of doing this from memory so I could stand to be corrected, but was that in the earlier era, everything was physical. And when they would ask more abstract questions to a thinker or a person from that era, they literally just didn't quite understand or how to grok what the question was. Whereas as the world became much more complex, people were able to augment their thinking, make it more abstract, etc. And he said that his hypothesis was that was one of the reasons why we had this inherent increase in overall IQ. It's always mean to a hundred, but if you look at the raw data.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
But your other assessment is another one that's near and dear to my heart, which is one of my worries is this potential divide that could happen could be happening right now. And you hear about a bunch of different ways, the digital divide, the technology divide or what have you. But what are your ideas for how we bring everyone along, how we get everyone who has access? Again, you have amazing videos available for free on YouTube. You give great presentations. We're going to talk about the one I just watched right before joining with you in a minute. But what are your thoughts on that? How do we bring everybody along?
Luis Seco:
Let's look at the education sector. I'm a professor. That's where I live. Education is conceived as follows: you're born, as soon as you can speak you're basically put into an education system that for most people ends at age about twenty-something. And then you go to work. This dichotomy, you study, you work, well, that's going to get very blurry. I don't believe that the education system should leave people at age 24 as it's happening now. It's a lifelong journey. We don't have that infrastructure. But education is no longer just for children, young adults, and young professionals. No, no, it's for everybody. It has to be a system of human transformation that never ends, not even after retirement. And it's not just about the job that you do. It's not just about your profession, it's about you as a human. So that's the first thing.
Luis Seco:
Second, and I really like this because I'm a mathematician, I'm a scientist, I've written papers on physics, and very often I am expected to think that science is all important and everything is about science and this and that. I say no. What is called humanities, art, literature, that always was important and perhaps today is more important than ever because, I like to exaggerate to make my points very often, so I like to say that if the 20th century was the center of engineering and that helped us go to the moon, the 21st century is going to be the center of the social science where the voyage we're taking is to the human brain. That's what we want to understand. And what makes us humans is actually not the bridges we build. It's more closely like the music we listen to. And that humanism is going to become very, very important.
Luis Seco:
And this is perhaps a redeeming quality that will help us as a society, as a community, to live, prosper and be happy and make sure that all of these things that are created are created for the good of all of us and not for exceptionally bad things, which is the big discussion that's happening. Actually, it's a recurring theme in some of your other podcasts, which is people are afraid that these things which are being built, would it be used for this or for that?
Luis Seco:
And the defense is under DNA. Humans have always been confronted with the things we can do badly. And a lot of them are built into our DNA. I'm not a psychologist, but they say that one of the reasons we're monogamous is because as babies, when we're born, we're so defenseless that the role of the father is so much more important than in other animal species. So that makes that familiar bond to be much more important than, say, for a cow. And that's in our DNA. And as a society, we welcome that, we value that, we price it, and we give awards to the people that behave like that, which is how goodness is built. And some of that, that's still there. We're humans. And that I think is going to drive us as how we evolve as a society. It's very important.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Again, you had me at hello. I couldn't agree more. In fact, I thought of two things as I was listening to you. The first one was the book by C.P. Snow, The Two Cultures, where the science and the arts kind of stopped speaking to each other. And if you look historically, they spoke to each other all the time, and one informed the other all the time. And then we got into, as you eloquently put it, the sort of 20th century engineering mindset that dominated the sciences and that the humanities didn't spend as much time thinking about. And then like Robert Pirsig and Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, that's basically one of his topics. Why aren't these two talking to one another? I often say we need Athens and Sparta. We need Plato and Aristotle. We need to be able to look and think about these things in a multifaceted way.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And so I'm delighted to hear you say what you're saying about the 21st century being the one of the humanities and bringing the humanity back to our understanding. But I worry, and I also completely agree about learning. Learning should be a lifelong obsession almost. It is with me. I know it is with you. I think a lot about people like you and people who are very super interesting and polymaths and just incredibly obsessively curious. Is there a way that we can get people, even great people who have the honor of being able to take classes from you, how do we get people to that point where they really do embrace the idea that learning is a lifelong thing, and if we stop learning, we start dying? I think of it as life is movement, death is stasis, and learning is part of movement. And another big part of learning is unlearning because we know a lot of things that are wrong. What do you think? How do we get the average person to just say, "Yeah, I really want to embrace that"?
Luis Seco:
People like you and me, we believe that learning is fundamental. It's not something that you do because it's a task or something. As humans, we do that. By the way, as humans, we are rewarded for teaching. It's some of the things that actually gives us pleasure. And we have chemicals that reward us when we teach. Everybody is a teacher. This is very important. Everybody, we enjoy teaching other humans something. We are rewarded with that. So that gives me hope. It gives me hope and perhaps is the reason why you do your podcast, which is fantastic. That's why you do it, and that's why I have my YouTube channel, we want to explain people, because as humans, we are programmed to do that. So I have hope, I'm an optimist because I know that in the end, we have close to seven billion people who are rewarded for passing that message across. No one is going to give you a dollar bill because you say this to this other person, you do it because this is who we are, this is what we do. We are a bit confused, it's true. We're very confused because these things that are happening, many people don't understand. My hope is that the people who understand them like me, like you, we speak up, we tell the others with your podcast, with my YouTube channel, with my classes in universities around the world and other people with their tools, and then we can go over this challenge we have, which is to understand this new world.
Luis Seco:
I'll give you, I'm an optimist, but I'll give you one fact which is a little bit pessimistic. If you look at the history of society, the deadliest, the one with the largest number of deaths was the 100 years after the invention of the printing press. That's a very bad figure. It's true, but it's by a little bit worse than the 20th century with its two world wars. Okay? And why is that? Well, this is what these revolutions do, especially revolutions that affect the way we think, ideas travel and ideas are so powerful.
Luis Seco:
Right? So I hope we can avoid that. I hope in this new revolution that we're going through, I hope that these tools with people like you and me are given will be used to avoid that tragic scenario. And I hope it doesn't take us a hundred years like it took in the 16th century to go over that and realize that actually books are great and they will have the French Revolution and they will have democracy, and they have all of those things.
Luis Seco:
I hope we can do a lot faster, but it's going to require a lot of communication, a lot of podcasts like yours and a lot of teaching and a lot of YouTube channels, and then people will find it. But we have to always be there teaching each other and helping each other come up that mountain so that we see the new landscape, that new reality, and then we can continue to perfect ourselves as humans.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Yeah. Whitehead said something along the lines that all great eras are chaotic eras, and I think you're right, after the invention of the printing press and that period in history, the uncertainty, I think that you're absolutely right about the idea that we have to really look closely at what's in our DNA, what's in our basic building blocks. And when you get a world that was fairly static, where I used to joke, the priesthood said everything in Latin because they didn't want the laity to know what they were up to.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And suddenly when the laity had books, which one of my favorite writers, Robert Anton Wilson references, I think it was actually Korzybski who's called it time binding. And that's what it allowed us to do, it allowed us to, for the first time and in mass, time bind our ideas and send them into the future and so that we could learn from somebody who'd been dead for a thousand years.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And one of the things that fascinates me about that period is, and back to Newton, right? It was possible for a single individual to pretty much invent some brand new thing. It was possible for a very learned individual to know most of what there was to know, even though of course most of it was wrong, but they could know that. And then we had the printing press, which started of course as a luxury. I was reading recently that many of the earliest books were encrusted with jewels because they were seen as luxury items and they were sold to very, very wealthy people.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And then it was like, huh, maybe if we print the Bible in German, that might get some more people interested and more people interested in reading. And then of course, that onslaught of new ideas caused that violence that you referred to. I, like you, am also an optimist. And I wonder though, is there a proxy for that physical violence?
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I mean, you spoke about the 20th century being the physical world. We're moving more into the world of the mind now. I always kind of had a theory about social media, which was maybe it's a proxy that acts like a steam valve for people who are really angry and in earlier eras would've taken up their pitchfork and they're torch and gone and pitchforked people, but now they just say mean things on Twitter.
Luis Seco:
Exactly. That's about it. And actually I think that's a very good analogy, and I believe in that. Okay, so if that's the analogy of what the wars in the 16th century was, okay, let's go through that quickly. Okay? And let's imagine going back to, you said something, I said Newton you [inaudible] Leibniz. So Newton and Leibniz were mirror images of each other, and it took them years to realize they were doing the same thing. Imagine they had Twitter.
Luis Seco:
Imagine they had email with each other. Wow, maybe the whole thing would've lasted in who knows, two years. And then in two years where actually we can send people to the moon, we don't know. So it is important when we look at history, of course there's some bad things that happened. We need to learn from them, we need to teach each other also all the bad things that happened. Okay?
Luis Seco:
So we can drew the analogies as to what's happening today, just as you just said very eloquently comparing social media with what may have happened in the 16th century, for example, and say, well, "That's what it is. Let's quickly find what our path forward is. Let's deal with some chaos for a while. But then we're going to go into this new area of growth and prosperity, intellectual prosperity, physical prosperity, and basically a new relationship amongst all of us."
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Yeah. And that is also my hope. And one of the things that motivates me is I have six grandchildren and I want the world that they live in and the world that all humans live in that we're moving into to be the, as Voltaire mocking Leibniz in the character of Dr. Pangloss said, the best of all possible worlds. Obviously I'm not Panglossian, but it's not a bad directional aim to try to get the world to be the best of the best of all possible worlds.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And another thing that I love about you is I'm going to get to some of the math and some of the asset management stuff maybe because this is just so interesting. But you did a lecture about trying or helping your students understand that success in life is really about communicating. And you did a great job both defining what communication actually is. I think you used Wittgenstein, if I remember right.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And it's not about the words, right? And you said something that really struck me, and it was when we go to university, what we're learning is that 15%, right? About the right words or the right formula or what have you, the right system, the right way to program, et cetera. But in communication, that's just 15%, 85% is nonverbal.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
It's, are you making eye contact? Are you having a conversation as opposed to a lecture? And one of the things that you said that I'd never heard before, which is very impressive because I'm very interested in this topic, and it was the first second and the last second are the two most important times. Elaborate on that for our audience because I loved that talk you gave.
Luis Seco:
That was great. Thank you. So I should start by saying I play the violin. I've given a number of concerts in my life, so I performed a lot. I performed with music, not with words. Right? When you perform with music, you know that there's no content. It's all in something that goes right to your brain, to your stomach to somewhere. So I've always had that, and I always learned that when you're performing, what is what makes the audience react cannot be the content.
Luis Seco:
And then I bumped into this work done by people at Harvard and other places where they actually do the same thing, but with real psychology and experiments. And then I say, well, let me say it in my way, which is when you're doing any act of communication, say a job interview, being a parent, being a teacher, 15% of the result of that is due to the content.
Luis Seco:
The 85% is these intangibles that are hard to measure. If you do a cross-section of the human brain, this is very well understood by psychologists now, and it's all measured. It's a science, it's not a theory. Our brain has the limbic brain that we develop when were reptiles, and then we have the frontal neocortex, which is very recent, and that's the one that in universities we get people to focus on, learn this, understand this, and it's all words in the frontal neocortex.
Luis Seco:
But deep down, we are still a little bit like lizards. The limbic brain is what drives a lot of behavior. And I use an example when I teach this to my students is how do you fall in love? How do you date someone? You don't go around with a CV, right? No one falls in love to a CV. So when you're going to be hired, when you go to a job interview, the CV is there, the CV takes you to the interview, but then it's just you.
Luis Seco:
They're going to hire you as a person. They're going to spend eight if not more hours per day with you. That is like a marriage. Right? So they're going to look for all the other stuff that you're going to be doing. I mean, I've hired people in my company, you've hired people in your companies. And yes, you want people who can do the job, but you also want people that you're going to be working with.
Luis Seco:
When something bad happens, right? And you have an emergency and you need to fix something, something happened, you need people around you, you need the humans around you that not only can get to the answer to that question, you need people that you can rely on. You need people that you can work with, the people that you're going to make mistakes, they're going to mistakes. That's a community that you're building.
Luis Seco:
A company is a community, and if you're hired to be part of that community, they're not going to hire you for skills only. They're going to hire you for everything else. They're going to hire you for how well you sing, how well you speak, how well you dance. This is very important. That's the analogy that I bring to my students. And I should say that this is, for many of them, this is the last lecture they have before graduation.
Luis Seco:
This is typically fourth-year students, and this is the last lecture, the last week of classes. And I tell them that everything they've been doing for four years is like 15%. And I said, "Where's the 85%?" I said, "Don't worry, I'm going to spend all my three hours on the 85% that matters." At least you got something. Right? And I have to say that I've been teaching for, I don't know, 30 years some.
Luis Seco:
Some of the best comments I have received about all of my courses is this one. Many students, they come and they tell me, say, "You know, you said something that I had not suspected. I now understand what I'd be doing right or what I'd be doing wrong." And I, for many of them, this is a life changer. And it's a math course where I'm not talking about math, I'm talking about how to speak, how to be part of a community, how to relate to people. And that goes back to what I said earlier, this humanism is I think something which is going to make the 21st century very different from the 20th century.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Yeah. And you highlight that communication is really about understanding, making sure it's about the people that you're communicating with. It isn't about you, it's about them. And the for example, I didn't read the book "How to Win Friends and Influence People" for 25 years because it had such a cheesy title. And I just thought, "Oh, that's got to be just... it's ugh. That's all. I am not going to read that. I'm not going to read it." But so many of my friends who were really great communicators.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
"Jim, have you? Of course you've read How to Win Friends and..." And I'm like, "No, that sounds like trash." And they're like, "Oh my God, no, you have to read it. You absolutely have to read it." And after I read it, of course I understood why, because he was saying a lot of what you say about the art of communication, the art of storytelling.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And I learned that early on, thank God, because I ran a quant finance long only firm. Right? And so I realized though, I would start some of my presentations with, "I'm going to tell you a series of stories that I hope influence you to understand that you shouldn't let stories drive your investment decisions." And people of course would laugh, but that is the only way, I've found at least, any listener or anyone watching has a way that isn't that way, please let me know.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
But if you really want to be able to communicate with people, you have to tell them stories. Maybe that's that limbic brain that it influences that. Because another one of my ideas is that many decisions, even among the most analytical people, are made emotionally and then papered over with logic and rationality to explain in quotes why they made that decision.
Luis Seco:
You're absolutely right. As people in the investment sector in particular, you talk about the art and the science of investing, well, that's, they use those two terms because if you are convinced with formulas and you're not convinced with your limbic brain, you don't get that feeling, then you say, "Well, the art is missing." That's just the best thing you can come up with. But people, investors, portfolio managers, they like to make decisions where they got the proof, but they got the feeling.
Luis Seco:
And that feeling, it's hard to express, it's hard to quantify, is the quantum in us, right? Maybe with the quantum computer one day we'll understand what that means. Right now, this is, we're still very digital. But that quantification, quantification not in the way of quantities, in the way of quantums, which is the opposite of quantification, that is very important. Because the world is very complicated, and we have an analog computer, not a digital one.
Luis Seco:
It's an analog computer, which is very effective sometimes. We say, "It just doesn't feel right." And then you capture something that maybe now with AI, we can capture it very quickly too. But realities are complex and numbers oftentimes they oversimplify things. And that's where the art is so interesting because go maybe back to Beethoven, why is Beethoven's fifth symphony so... It's four notes, but why is it-
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
[Sings]
Luis Seco:
Four, four notes, right? Four notes that play for half an hour, 35 minutes and then, but they make up something, which is that's wonderful, and the brain can understand that, but it's very hard to quantify.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And that leads me into your work in risk management, in asset management. When I first saw a value at risk bar, I had a real negative reaction to it. And my negative reaction was due to you don't understand people. When you put your risk is, and then they would quantify it with a single number. Right? The portfolio risk here is 15% plus or minus, right?
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
People carry a lot of baggage with that number and they start down a thought pattern. And I saw it happen time and time and time again, especially during the great financial crisis, right? "Wait a minute, you told me that this wasn't even possible." And you are doing a lot of really interesting work in risk management, have done a lot and are doing a lot.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And so let's talk a little bit about that. Let's talk about where that type of art and science is going and what you find the most promising. I enjoyed reading your work on using AI and ESG. ESG has become kind of a negative phrase these days, but I enjoy your work on it because I agree with your original assessment, which is the way they were doing it wasn't the right way to do it. So if you wouldn't mind talking about that a bit.
Luis Seco:
Well, now you touched the nerve. This is all very important for me. So I'll start with value at risk. Let me tell you how I explain value at risk to my students. I tell them once upon a time, risk management was very simple. Tell me how big you are and I'll tell you how much risk you have. That's it. And in 1987, that was proved wrong because a fairly large change in the S&P 500, 25% change in the data, but that made people lose more than a hundred percent.
Luis Seco:
So how is that possible? Well, there's a nonlinear something going on in here. What is that nonlinear something? Well, it turns out that it's options and derivatives. And I'm not going to go back in 1987. But then something interesting happened, which is we need to understand that the world has become nonlinear. So I need a way to control things that I don't understand that are suddenly nonlinear.
Luis Seco:
So value at risk came up. But the important thing about value risk is while it's nonlinear, it was an attempt at doing that. The important thing is it was part of the regulation, and as well as I know, it's the first time that a deep mathematical concept, rightly or wrongly, became part of the law regulation. Once that happens, then mathematicians, you're going to be hired because you are the only ones who can actually make this happen. You can agree or disagree, but it's part of the law.
Luis Seco:
Now, it was the first step in a direction to understand complexity. Okay? It was perfected and for a lot, many people think that value at risk is the solution to everything. It's the solution to nothing. It's like taking your temperature, oh, you have fever? Great. Are you sick? Maybe you're not sick, maybe you are. Okay? So it's like that. It's just the first step in understanding complexity and well, maybe regulation should not become more... how can I? More complex or that's, I think perhaps not the point.
Luis Seco:
I think that was a very big change for that. But now talking about ESG. Okay, ESG, for people who don't know is environment social governance. It's really something which I like to express it differently, is dealing with even more complexity because value at risk and financial management, risk management for a long time was about money, making money, losing money, currency, all based on currency. But now we live in a world where everything around us, we talked about that earlier, is complex.
Luis Seco:
And we want to understand, for example, social issues that you are doing. We have very good accounting for money. People know how much money they spend, they know how much money they have, but you don't know how much water is used in your everyday activities, and you don't know if you are being water efficient in the way you deal with your life. You don't know if you're wasting water. Emissions is something that is talked about a lot and understood by very few people. Some people think it's about pollution, it's not about pollution, it's just that certain gases like CO₂ have an impact that when they interact with the sun rays, they get warmed up. Like when you put your food in the microwave, only the water gets hot, the plate is not. And these are extremely complicated physical realities that now we have the hope of understanding because our unprecedented computational power called AI and other things. So if I can understand risk at that bigger scale, let me do it. So of course, value at risk is what I did in the '80s, '90s, but that was just the first step into understanding all the risks that we may have. Value at risk is like the seatbelt you put it on. Okay, that's it. That does not mean you're not going to have an accident. It does not mean that if you have an accident, you're going to be safe.
Luis Seco:
There's other things and now you have GPSs and you have airbags. So this is part of the evolution. And what is also remarkable is that mathematics is part of all of that. And that's what I tell my students. Mathematics is perhaps not the solution to the problems, but it's the language that will help you understand what you're dealing with. Mathematics will understand what risks you still have if you have the seatbelt on. Mathematics is the one that will help you understand that the GPS sometimes does not work. This information, which is not in the database and you're stuck in traffic or something like that.
Luis Seco:
So I think the 21st century is going to be the century of math as a social science, perhaps even more than as a social science. And that's how I see value at risk. That's how I see financial risk management. It's an evolution that it started with a big bang called value at risk and this thing that many people thought was the solution to everybody's problems. No, it was just the first step in the direction towards complexity. And now we are going further and further into that and it's going to be fantastic. We'll see.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I think so too. And as I listened to you, God, I would've loved to have you sitting by my side when I was trying to get these people to understand the first step because what they did was they saw value at risk and they were like, "Okay, that's it, that's everything." And as you just very eloquently pointed out, no, no, that's not everything. It's the first step, it's the seatbelt and then the movement towards the complexity and the idea of the interactions between so many different variables that that's where we should be moving, that's where you are moving with AI.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Describe if you don't mind the way that we are seeing the change from very heavy data, numeric data, and a very limited amount of it. If you've done any research like I have. The Compustat only goes so far, and the earliest ... A lot of even the CRISP, the Center for Research in Securities Pricing. There's a great paper by a guy, I think, what was his name, Macquarie, in which he kind of dissects the .... I think the name of the paper is the Myth of 1926 or something along those lines in which he points out all of the massive holes, even in a pretty pristine data set. And you've been arguing that we're moving to completely non-structured data to a very, very different way of doing the analysis. If you wouldn't mind, just walk us through that.
Luis Seco:
So I like to explain this by looking at the last 100 years. So a hundred years ago, data was something you could write with a pencil in a piece of paper. Very important in particular, accounting practices started that way. Very, very important. Then in the '50s, when computers were invented, suddenly data became databases, amounts of data that no human could read, and that was great, but they were numbers. Around the year 2020, our databases, the concept of data stopped being numbers, and words were welcome. That's where ChatGPT started to be useful. And in the midst of that, we're going through a database revolution where what is changing is the fact that my data consumption, my data input is no longer just numbers. They are words and going in the midst of that. But what's coming is even more interesting because what's coming is what's called multimodal models, multimodal data, data which includes sensor data, images, video, all things that I could analyze in real-time.
Luis Seco:
So if we think ChatGPT is a big deal, it is a big deal. No question about that. It is only a change from numbers only to numbers and words. To that, I say now give me images, videos in real-time and then I will, that's going to change. It's going to change agriculture, it's going to change engineering, it's going to change manufacturing. And when we have the hardware that will help us analyze this, when we have the communication systems which are faster so we can share this information very, very quickly, now we're going to start to see even bigger and faster speeds at the change in which this revolution is taking place, which by the way, going back to our previous discussion about education, is we really need to have an education system so that no one is left behind because if you think ChatGPT is a big deal, no it's not. The big deal is about to happen and it's going to be databases that grow at a formidable rate that we can understand in real-time what's happening to my plantation of peaches in southern Spain or whether I should be planting olive trees here or something else.
Luis Seco:
A lot of the geoengineering challenges that we have are going to be affected by this. There's one thing that I like to remind people, which is in the '50s, the big problem for humanity was talked to be food. We were going to run out of food. I was born in the '60s, so I get to see the tail end of that. No one talks about that anymore. Why? Because small changes in engineering, in agriculture, small changes, they gave us ... That's the value of the exponential function. Over time, they made us better. We're going to go through something like that. But what is different is, in my opinion, the need for a different type of education.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And so the immediate next question, is what does that education look like? Let's both live in the future for a moment. What are we? It's 2045, and we're both young men. I was born in the '60s too. I was born in 1960. So let's imagine that we're both young men in 2045, and we're just the same, we have the same interest and curiosity that we have now, but what's going to look so much different then?
Luis Seco:
So at 2045, let's do another podcast together in 2045. That's number one. Okay?
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Okay. We'll book it now.
Luis Seco:
I'll remind you. Yes, let's book it now and let's see if we are right. But what I think we're going to see is that democratization of education. Education is still centralized. I mean a university, great university, University of Toronto, I've been to universities, great universities, Princeton and this and that. It still is centralized. It may make sense or not. I'm not going to argue about that, but I think education is going to be decentralized and with all the good things and the bad things. Okay? The good thing about centralization, you can have this thing that we call quality control.
Luis Seco:
So I like to use an example to explain this, and that's what happened to the company Kodak. So Kodak is a wonderful example because they invented the digital camera, but they thought celluloid is the thing to go because it's much better quality. And they thought Hollywood would never go digital and this and that. So they went bankrupt. So I do an analogy between Kodak and universities and I say, well, Kodak should have become Facebook. Different business model, you may think, but that's what happens when you democratize something. This actually is in a book, I forget the title of the book now, but when it comes to education, we're going through the same thing. I think education is to be democratized, is to be decentralized, and we're going to have systems ... Of course, who is this person teaching me this? Well, maybe you don't know. Maybe the whole community will have its own way of helping you select who that teacher is going to be. A little bit like what YouTube does.
Luis Seco:
There's people in YouTube telling you all sorts of nonsense and people telling you all sorts of great stuff. And eventually, maybe an algorithm, maybe something will tell you, well, this is what you learned here, this is what you learned there. But we need a system like that. We're going to need to have companies and the prices are important, extremely important in this. I don't think governments are big enough to be able to drive this forward. Education right now is run mostly by governments. I think we're going to have to have the private sector develop a version of that. I have a company that actually I created with that purpose hopefully. I spoke at Davos two or two years ago about the Metaversity, which is what I would like to see developed. But we're going to have to have a way where humans are being taught, are being explained their realities by having this decentralized system where you have access to information, you have access to data, you have access to opinions, you have to all of that, knowing that what you learn will become obsolete very, very quickly.
Luis Seco:
So that's going to have to have ... This is my iPhone. Everybody has more or less a smartphone. And these devices, they need an upgrade. You get an operating system upgrade. What happens if you don't upgrade that operating system? Your apps stop working, you may get break-ins. People can break into your phone. You need to upgrade. Well, with our operating system here, we need the same time. So I think education is going to look very much like that basic thing. That's the operating system that you have when you buy your phone and then you need a company that does the upgrades. You have an operating system upgrade. Every few months, you need to upgrade your operating system here.
Luis Seco:
I think it's going to look very much like that. I think it's going to be decentralized. I think it'll become a business where many companies to operate in and then humans will be participants in that. Humans will participate not only as learners but as teachers also, right? Pretty much like a blockchain works. And that may be what you and I will talk about in 2045. And we'll have this blockchain-based system where who knows what podcasts would be then, maybe groups of organized individuals all sharing ideas very quickly and doing it very, very well. We'll see.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Yeah. Again, I am just smiling here because I knew I was looking forward to talking to you for a reason. And it's because I too think about it that way. I love the idea that we are moving away from this centralized way of education. Also, this idea that still permeates much of our psyches in the West at least, which is we got our certification, we got our stamp, our diploma, and we can get a nicer, better-looking stamp with a master's and even a spiffier stamp with a PhD. But we do get this idea that, okay, now I'm done. No, no, you're just starting.
Luis Seco:
You're just starting.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And the way that I see it unfolding is I completely agree education needs to be decentralized. I also agree that the private sector has to get involved. I think for example, that great professors such as yourself, you should be making millions of dollars a year from being a great teacher. And I think in the future, that might happen, you might see the emergence of these great teachers who are being compensated for being a great teacher, letting the market decide. But that's going to require curation. That's going to require ... As you said, it's a great example and the earliest of days over on YouTube, but it's a good analogy to look at. On YouTube, you can find just absolute garbage and it's all engineered to get people to click on it.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I was never a big YouTube person until some of my much younger colleagues were like, "Jim, you got to go and check YouTube out because it's amazing." And so I did it for ... I devoted a weekend to it. And I was like, "Holy shit. They weren't kidding." But one of the first things I noticed is what you pointed out, there's a lot of garbage. So there's noise, and right now it's mostly ... not mostly, but it's largely noise. But then, and I'll use your YouTubes, there's really high signal on YouTube as well. And so the curation part of this, I see, coming in, helping isolate the signal from the noise and getting it so that great teachers can earn a great living from their ability to be great teachers, I think is a laudable thing to happen. And I also agree very much of the community aspect of it.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And again, what we have now has collapsed: time, space, and geography. You and I can ... It doesn't matter if you're in Toronto and I'm in Connecticut, but an even more better example is many of my colleagues are in Bangalore or Singapore and it doesn't matter anymore. And so I think that you're dead on. And how do you see that? What could derail that? Both of us are optimists? What could derail that?
Luis Seco:
No, I think nothing is going to derail this. I just don't see it. It could take longer. It couldn't take a short time. But no, this is the way we are going to evolve. I think we're going to organize ourselves like that because it's needed. There's a need. There's no provider to that need. Like I said, education now is conceived that age 24, you're out and then you're left to your own devices. I think we're going to start ... I mean YouTube post, perhaps it does fill a void. We'll see much better versions of that. We'll see a type of ... The word social media is misused. It would be social, it may be media, but it may be a new type of a social media. But we are going to have a way to get organized so that we can teach each other.
Luis Seco:
I'll tell you another thing. I don't think the concept of a nation is going to stay around for much longer either. The concept of communities is not going to be, as you said earlier, geographical. This is it. This is the river and all the different country. That will be there. But there's going to be so many [inaudible], so many ways to organize people in different communities. Some things will be geographical by our countries as they exist now, but some other times, there will be in different ways. Culture has been a very big divider of communities because of the language. But now even that is being thrown out because language is just something that we can fly over very, very quickly. So I think we're going to see a disruption in the concept of community, the concept of nation, the concept of education, certainly a decentralized education. And humans are just too valuable. I think the concept ... It's not that I want to attach a price tag to a human, that's not what I mean. But humans are extremely valuable. And oftentimes I think that a human is valued at price lower than a cow is just not right. A human that you transform, that you help get better is so much better. That's why education is the best business. You give me some raw material, which is a person which is so-so, and then I give you this fantastic, excellent person. The value added there is fantastic. So you monetize in any way you want. Okay? I'm talking monetization now. You understand what I'm talking about. If you do that, the value of improving the quality of a human is fantastic times 7 billion people who are here. What is the revenue of typical social media network? It's about $50 per person. Imagine I could run something that increases the value by thousands of dollars. I mean, the multiples are just tremendous. So that's the inherent value in having a proper commercial education system. And it pays for itself. It's not that people have to start saving. Not only it pays for itself because the way you calculate the value of education at a very basic level is look at how much your salary will pay. That's the typical MBA argument. What do you do in MBA? You spend $50,000, but now you make $100,000 for the rest of real life. That's the monetization of that. Take that everywhere.
Luis Seco:
So you can look at this from many different perspectives. I use the monetary perspective. You can use the human element perspective. We will all be kinder to each other, we'll be more educated, we'll be happier, and that your grandchildren will love you for that because they will watch your podcast and they say, "Wow, look what Jim did." All of that has value, and the value is so exorbitant. There's nothing to derail this. It will be done one way or another. This person or this leader or that leader will take care of that. But there's nothing to derail that.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Yeah, it reminds me of Julian Simon's idea that humans are the ultimate resource.
Luis Seco:
Yes.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And he goes after the Malthusian argument. You mentioned the questions about food and scarcity in the 1950s. And of course, way before that, we had Mr. Malthus who's positive that we are all going to starve to death because it was just basic mathematics, right? He said, "Here's the population. Here's food production. That's starvation." What he did not account for is human ingenuity.
Luis Seco:
True.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And the ROI on human ingenuity, which is nearly infinite and endless. And so I completely agree that it has to be decentralized. It has to be commercialized because right now we're at the tail end of an old system, I think. And that old system was very valuable. Absolutely valuable. But now because of the world that we're going to all live in, it's going to be much more complicated, it's going to be much more ... We'll need to learn how to understand the exponential function because there's that great quote. "The great sadness of humanity is that humanity can't understand the exponential function." And I think you're dead on the way it gets solved because the value, it's going to be so enormous from these types of learning systems that people will just flock to them. What do you think about the idea that's been emerging that I find interesting? They call them smart swarms, where people with different capabilities, different expertise, et cetera, are drawn to a problem and they all work on it together and they either get a solution that works or they don't. But it isn't this old hierarchical, The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit.
Luis Seco:
Yeah. I think that is an example of what we're talking about. It's an actual real life example of what we're talking about. We're focused on education. This one's focused on problem solving. Problem solving, as you said earlier with Newton and Leibniz was very often engaged as a solitary pursuit, Einstein, right? Now more and more is a collaborative pursuit. One of the things that I think we're also going to witness is if you look at certainly the 20th century, I say it's the century of confrontation. Now, I think the 21st century is going to be the century of collaboration. We have ways to collaborate and by collaborating, we can be so much stronger at problem solving, at educating each other, at making each other happier and so on and so forth. And anything that enables this collaboration aspect is going to be well unavoidable because it's going to be extremely valuable. We're all going to go towards it. It's going to make us happier. And the question is, when/ is it going to be in a year, five years? I don't give it a very long timeframe. I think it's going to be fairly soon.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
What do you see emerging right now that are good examples of your thesis?
Luis Seco:
Well, apart from the example that you just mentioned, they're all small here and there. I think this idea is a little bit early because I think people are still ingrained in the past. I think people are still thinking of education. I'm at a university. So many people think about education, you go to the university when you could argue that the university is like a rating agency and their learning happens elsewhere. So we're still in the old system, but as soon as, for example, companies start to hire people based on other types of merits where the rating system gets expanded and it changes when now education can be made available here and there.
Luis Seco:
I mean, I created my education company a year ago. I think this is all beginning to happen. So we don't have very many examples about this. But if you do the calculation of the value-add of a decentralized system, just from a calculation perspective, you would say the only thing to stop it is if you cannot develop the resources to make it happen. But we know the resources are there now, right? We have communication, we have your podcast, resources are there. So they will be organized probably very quickly to deliver it. I think it's going to be very, very fast. I think it's going very, very fast.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
And that's the part that I find very interesting. Because I agree that the century... I love the way you frame it, the 20th century being the century of conflict. And the 21st century hopefully being the century of cooperation and collaboration. And the way I try to frame it is the way we do things at O'Shaughnessy Ventures is a CV, a diploma suggests competency, but that's all it does. It suggests it. You mentioned the rating system. So one of the things that we do is look at proof of work, but then we also... Everyone that joins the team starts out on a trial period. Because we have to see... An interview is a snapshot, a six-month working together experience is more of a movie, right? And it tells you more of a story. You mentioned earlier in our conversation that how are people in crisis? Do they fall to pieces or are they more Stoic about it?
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
At least I'm not smart enough to get to an interview question that tells me whether somebody could be great in a crisis unless we happen to be in the midst of one. And I'm observing them. My friend Jason Zweig, who writes for The Wall Street Journal says that... He's talking about risk. And he says, the difference in trying to really disambiguate true risk is like the difference of showing a person a picture of a snake and saying, "Are you scared?" And then the way to really tell is throw a live snake in their lap. So I concur with you that this is the way forward. And do you think that right now that there is an institutional imperative, an institutional wariness of the existing leaders in education, et cetera, that is going to in any way thwart or try to block this?
Luis Seco:
It may be, but I cannot believe that this can be stopped. The value creation is just too high. Okay? But I'll give you another... I'll continue. I mentioned that I had this metaversity concept, and I spoke about this at Davos a few years ago. My concept of the metaversity is one in which the participants are not only people, they're also corporations and institutions of other types, right? You mentioned the concept of the process of hiring. The fact that someone goes through... Then through a certain process, education, they get a degree, and then they become interviewed. And you have to decide in a few days, weeks whether they want to hire them or not. What if this person was part of your community all along? Okay? You know them. They know you because you are part of that community. There's no like, I leave this university and I enter this company. They were always there together to begin with, right?
Luis Seco:
So the community has to be extended to institutions too, to legal entities, not just to people. Because at the end of the day, most people still today, they get hired by legal entities. That relationship is very important. So if this person you're going to hire is someone you've been following for a long time, that self-interview is really not an interview. You've been interacting for a long time. You already know this person has a certain skill set. Maybe they're not the right ones for you today, but when they are, you already know where they are. You know who they are and vice versa, they know you too, right? So this could happen very, very quickly. Goes back to an enhanced concept of collaboration. One that doesn't exist now because we collaborate by hiring someone very quickly and firing someone very quickly or even your company very quickly.
Luis Seco:
It's all very abrupt. It's like zero- one. And that I think is ready to be disrupted too. We may even require new labor laws. So we can have different types of relationships. And by the way, I think we need to find a way that we can hire children, right? You know what I mean by that? Of course, we all know what happened in the 18th century with child labor. That's not what I'm talking about, right? But we want to give children an opportunity. I used to take my daughter to work one day a year, right? We all have done it. Take your kids to work day. What if I could do it every day, for a few minutes?
Luis Seco:
The amount of learning they will do, and the amount of learning we will do by watching their reaction to what we do is priceless, right? So I think a way to, or... This is going to be part of the change too. It's not just this new [inaudible] university we're going to create. No, I think it's going to be a different way of collaborating with each other, a different way of interacting with each other so that this thing we call learning, which is really human transformation, is enhanced and adapted to the needs that we have now when everything is changing.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Yeah. That's a really interesting point as well, because the idea of the extended period of teenage adolescence is really a very modern idea. And for most of human history, that wasn't the case at all. And again, we're not talking about sending little kids into chimneys and Charles Dickens type stuff. We're not talking about that. We're talking about the interaction between a child and an adult in a family even, right? Where it was constant. And I've been thinking a lot about young children as sort of un programmed humans. And you can learn a lot from watching young children, in my opinion. Because what are they? They're learning machines. I have the joy and happiness of having very young grandchildren around, and I just love watching them because they're what natural human curiosity is all about, right? It's like everything they do is meant to learn. And they're not afraid.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Imagine if they had programmed many of the fears that we get programmed as adults, right? Nobody had ever learned how to walk. My new grandson's learning how to walk. And they fall down and they get up again and they fall down and they just persist and keep learning and learning and learning. And so it seems to me to be a much more natural process. And in terms of take your daughter to work daily as opposed to day makes a lot of sense to me. And also this idea that we have, that you have to... Which is also from our more recent history, I think, right?
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
This idea that no, no, no, no, no, you can't contribute anything like a first year analyst on Wall Street in the old way of doing things. They were meant to just sit there, shut up, take the notes, do everything that the senior persons wanted them to do in bidding. That's an awful way to run things, in my opinion. And I find that by empowering younger people, boy, great things can happen. Because they're closer to the newest stuff than I am, certainly. And the ability I learn from them all the time, right? I mean, my guess is you learn from your students all the time as well.
Luis Seco:
Every day. And they all know it, right? And I have an example that I use. For example, I am terrible at playing video games. I can't, my hand eye coordination is just terrible. I don't know about you, but I can't. But so much, I am convinced that everything around us, all the gadgets, all the portfolio management tools that we have, the Bloomberg's of tomorrow will be like that. Because there's so much better if you know how to manage them. But I confess my incompetence dealing with that. But these people can do it.
Luis Seco:
So why not introduce these interface systems that would allow them to do what we used to do more slowly? They can do it in a different way. And that's the value of youth. And even children, when they look at things fresh, they've developed skills that we don't have for whatever the reason. We need to find a way to make them welcome into the world. And even I who are not, I cannot play a video game. I should allow for video game interactions, if they contribute to something, whether... The word is gamification, if there is a way that you can gamify some learning process, some portfolio management process, anything, do it because he's going to be better.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I agree. And I think that's an unfortunate term because label thinking is not really great for us if we're trying to extend our understanding. And I think certain people hear gamification here. It should be fun and think, no, it should be serious. It should be this and that. And I really disagree. I think that learning is fun and teaching it in a way that isn't fun transmits to the student. Yeah, no, welcome to hell. You're not going to have any fun in this class at all. What do you expect their reaction to be if they're told, "Here, put on this sackcloth and we're going to cover you in ashes and you God damn better, right? Have the correct answer machine installed in your brain." Well, you're going to get different results. Yeah, exactly. That is not how it works.
Luis Seco:
Back to the humanities aspects of what we're doing, right?
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
So I'm getting my producers giving me the little... With me, it tends to be more of a 10-minute warning than a two-minute warning. But what do you see as the most promising thing in a lot of our listeners and viewers are interested in investment and asset management, etc. What are you seeing as the most compelling and interesting developments there that are incorporated in the theme of what we've been discussing?
Luis Seco:
Wow, we haven't talked about that. So I'll give you a... This is very, very important. I mean, as you know, but maybe your viewers don't know, I've managed money. I run an investment company for 20 years. We manage about a billion dollars. And the way you manage money has been based on numbers. Now, the way you manage money is based on words. And I use an example, it may sound very cheesy, I may not have time to explain myself, but for example, if you want to understand what happened to GameStop, Bloomberg is behind, you can't use Bloomberg, right? You have to go to Reddit. So if you're going to understand the realities, the complex realities of what's happening, that information is not accounted for. Companies don't account for the value of their data. Companies don't account for the value of their community, and lots of other intangibles. Investment decisions are going to be driven by variables that we don't know, right?
Luis Seco:
And analysts, I wouldn't have to rely more and more on these expert systems, which are really just based on fantastic data that we don't have or that someone is going to produce. And one example is all the focus on sustainability, which is what I do now. Sustainability is just something that is worth so much money and so much lives that... But it's not accounted for. Accounting standards don't go there. If you develop a system to create concrete that does not have the emission and the heat consumption that you have, well, what is that accounted for? I don't know. If you have a way of accounting for these transformational changes that are happening. The new companies that will be created is great. Private equity, the way that's going to be done... Private equity is it's considered to be the investing without data because you're not publicly traded.
Luis Seco:
Well, there's so much data out there, but it's all in disclosure statements. It's all in audit reports. It's all in textual databases that now we can analyze in real time very fast. And so I think investing is just going to be a completely different game. The exercise is going to be absorbing data sources, which are extremely complex, but that's where you find those nuggets of value. And so it's everything we talked about, but applied to the act of investing, which is taking risk. Putting something on the table so that things get better and your value goes up, right? It's just the quantification of that will be done with new forms of AI, which we have and will be developed, and it's going to be a fantastic activity.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Yeah, I agree. When I was still at OSAM, before we sold it, we did a big research piece on intangibles, and they're the game. They're the game now. And the antiquated figures that we still pay so much attention to, right? GDP, a variety of those things, they're all beyond useless in many regards today because it is the intangible factors of some of the biggest companies by market cap, for example. Most of the value that you're seeing there belongs in the intangible category. And how do you get to that? You get to it through natural language programming, machine learning, the ability to mine the text data and other data, right? And so that's, in my opinion, when people ask me, well, what's the future of quant? I said, "The future of quant is more art than science. The future of quant is the ability to manage these complex data streams in a manner that you can test and hopefully replicate." But the old days when it was just numbers, those are gone. They're done.
Luis Seco:
That's right. It's not black or white. It's the fifty shades of gray that matter now.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Exactly. And what a perfect way to put it, because it's something that I often harp about, but I think is really important for us to remember. We don't live in a deterministic world anymore. And the yes, no, zero, 100 binary choices, that is the way it's going to work. And if you want to be successful. The other thing when people would say, well, what do you think? Who's going to be the Warren Buffett of... I'll stick with 2045 since I used that date earlier. And I say, I don't know, but he or she isn't going to look anything like Warren Buffett. The way they got there is done got anything like Warren Buffett's path. Well, this has been absolutely up to my expectations, which is always a great thing. You are an amazingly interesting man. I love what you are doing. I love what you are working on.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I love the way you get your ideas across and your insights into non-math things that are incredibly important, and like the whole communication lecture that you give at the end. Well, if you've seen the podcast or listened to the podcast, you know that our final question is really just fun. And we're going to wave a wand and we're going to make you the emperor of the world. You can't kill anybody. You can't put anybody in a reeducation camp. But what you can do is we're going to hand you a magical microphone and you can say two things into it, and the two things that you say are going to accept the entire population of the world, and whenever their morning is, the next morning, they're going to wake up and they're going to think that the two ideas that you give me now, were their own. And they're going to say, unlike all the other times, when I wake up and have a bright idea and never act on it, I'm going to actually act starting today on these two ideas. What are you going to incept in the world?
Luis Seco:
I only need one, which is love each other.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Oh, that's great.
Luis Seco:
I mean, I have a way of expressing the concept of... I mentioned it earlier. When you hire someone, you have to be in love with them. So the concept of love is very, very interesting and not enough, in my opinion, promoted. I think I only need one.
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
I love it. You're leaving one in reserve. That's very-
Luis Seco:
I'll save my next one for 2045 when we do the-
Jim O’Shaughnessy:
Well, I certainly hope that you'll accept an invitation in between those two dates to come back on. Because I didn't even get to 80% of what I wanted to talk to you about because it was so fascinating to talk to you about what we chatted about. Thank you so much, and just really, really enjoyed the conversation and really admire your work.
Luis Seco:
What a great program you have here. Thank you.
Excellent. Thanks!