For those with a technical or analytical background, the world of finance often seems like a chaotic departure from the orderly laws of nature. However, by applying the logic of physics to economics, an aspiring investor can uncover the fundamental “laws” that govern wealth creation.
The Laws of Market Motion
Equilibrium (Supply and Demand): In physics, forces balance to reach equilibrium. Similarly, financial markets seek a price point where the quantity buyers want equals the quantity sellers offer.
- The Analogy: Think of market price as a planetary orbit. Just as planets are held in a stable path by balanced forces, prices settle where supply and demand intersect. If prices are too high, a “surplus force” pushes them down; if too low, “excess demand” pulls them up.
- The Caveat (Chaos Theory): Unlike identical particles in a vacuum, markets are driven by humans. Human emotion (fear and greed) introduces “noise” and uncertainty, making financial systems behave more like chaotic systems than predictable Newtonian clockwork.
Momentum (Newton’s First Law): An object in motion tends to stay in motion. In finance, this is known as “momentum investing.”
- The Analogy: A stock trend often continues in its current direction until an external “force”—such as new economic data or a change in business fundamentals—disrupts it.
- The Warning: Even Isaac Newton lost a fortune in the South Sea Bubble because he could calculate the motion of stars but not the “madness of men.” Blindly following momentum without understanding the fundamentals is dangerous.
Thermodynamics: Risk and Reward
No Free Lunch (The Second Law): The most inviolable rule in investing is the relationship between risk and return.
- The Analogy: Just as a “perpetual motion machine” is impossible because you cannot create energy without input, you cannot generate financial returns without taking on risk. If a scheme promises massive wealth with zero risk, it violates the “physics” of finance and is likely a scam.
- Potential Energy: A low-risk asset (like a government bond) is like a ball resting on the floor—it has low potential energy and is stable. A high-risk asset (like a volatile stock) is like a ball perched high on a hill. It has high potential energy (high possible returns), but it faces a greater risk of falling.
Forces of Growth and Decay
Compounding (Exponential Growth): Time is an investor’s greatest lever due to the mathematics of compounding.
- The Analogy: Compounding is comparable to organic exponential growth, such as bacteria multiplying or a snowball rolling downhill gathering mass. Money earns interest, and that interest earns its own interest. Over long periods, this feedback loop creates an upward curve that accelerates significantly.
- The Lesson: Start early. The “snowball” needs a long hill (time) to gather maximum size.
Inflation (Friction and Entropy): Holding cash is not a “neutral” act; it is an act of losing value.
- The Analogy: Inflation acts like friction on a moving object or the radioactive decay of a substance. If your money sits idle, its purchasing power erodes over time.
- The Application: To simply maintain your wealth’s value, you must generate returns that match the rate of inflation. To grow wealth, your “thrust” (investment returns) must exceed this frictional force.
System Architecture: Building a Portfolio
Budgeting (Resource Allocation): Before investing, one must secure the resources. The 50/30/20 rule is a universal framework for this.
- The Method: Allocate 50% of income to Needs, 30% to Wants, and 20% to Savings/Investments.
- The Mindset: Treat the 20% investment allocation like a scientist prioritizing critical resources for an experiment. “Pay yourself first” rather than investing only what is left over by chance.
The Emergency Fund (Buffer Capacitor): Before entering the market, an investor needs a safety net (typically 3–6 months of living expenses).
- The Analogy: This fund acts like a buffer capacitor in a circuit or a backup generator. It absorbs unexpected shocks (job loss, medical emergency) so you aren’t forced to disrupt your primary system (selling investments at a loss) when a crisis hits.
Diversification (Signal-to-Noise Ratio): Never put all capital into a single asset.
- The Analogy: A diversified portfolio is like an “ensemble of experiments.” Individual experiments (stocks) may yield noisy data or fail, but combining many independent results averages out the noise to reveal a stable trend.
- Structural Integrity: It is also likened to a table with many legs. If one leg breaks (a specific stock or sector crashes), the table stands because it is supported by others.
The Global Laboratory
Geographic Diversification: Investors often suffer from “home bias,” investing only in their local country. However, physics and economics operate globally.
- The Concept: Just as weather patterns differ across the globe, economic climates vary by region. A recession in one country might coincide with a boom in another.
- The Strategy: By spreading investments across developed markets (steady, lower volatility) and emerging markets (higher growth potential, higher volatility), an investor smooths out the “turbulence” of the portfolio.
Summary Analogy
To generalize the investor’s journey described in the text:
View your financial life as designing a long-range rocket.
- Fuel: You need capital, generated by disciplined budgeting (the 50/30/20 rule).
- Thrust: You need compound interest to overcome the downward pull of gravity (inflation).
- Stability: You cannot control the atmospheric turbulence (market volatility), so you design the rocket with redundant systems (diversification) to ensure that if one component fails, the mission continues.
- Trajectory: You must aim for a long-term horizon, ignoring minor fluctuations, much like an astronaut focuses on the destination rather than the changing weather patterns observed from space.
Author is Faculty of Mathematics, Department of General Education HUC, Ajman, UAE. He can be mailed at reyaz56@gmail.com