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By?Patrick Donley?and?Shawn O'Malley, edited by?Robert Leonard??·?August 22, 2022
*LinkedIn newsletter is posted at a one-day delay.
Welcome back to?We Study Markets!?
Hope everyone had a good first day of the week!?
Just a reminder that?We Study Markets?will be arriving in your inbox at 6 pm Monday through Friday from now on. This will allow us to provide you with the latest news and market data of the day.?
Speaking of which, the S&P 500 dropped 2.1%, and the Nasdaq tumbled more than 2.5% as investors turned skittish ahead of Jerome Powell's planned speech regarding the future of interest rates.
Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) shares continued to get pummeled and fell 16% after S&P downgraded the retailer's credit rating.?
Here's the market rundown for today:
MARKETS
*All prices as of market close of 4 pm
Today, we'll discuss the timeless investing truths of Bernard Baruch, building Wall Street on blockchains, Turkey doubling down on Russian oil, and one reason global food prices are rising.
All this, and more, in just?5?minutes to read.
Let's do it! ??
IN THE NEWS
?? Goldman Sachs Aims To Construct A Wall Street Built On Blockchain (WSJ)
Explained:?
What to know:?
?? The Other Reason Global Food Prices Are Spiking (CNBC)
Explained:?
What to know:?
???? Turkey Doubles Its Imports Of Russian Oil?(Reuters)?
Explained:?
What to know:?
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BERNARD BARUCH'S TIMELESS INVESTING TRUTHS?
Over a rainy weekend morning, we settled in with a cup of coffee and listened to one of our favorite podcasts that our own, William Green, recently released on?Richer, Wiser, Happier.?
He interviewed?Jim Grant,?the editor of?Grant's Interest Rate Observer, which is considered required reading among the world's most successful investors. Loaded with investment wisdom, one of our favorite parts of the interview was a discussion about Jim's book,?Bernard Baruch: The Adventures of a Wall Street Legend.
Bernard Baruch (1870-1965) was the son of a South Carolina physician whose family moved to New York City when he was eleven years old. By his mid-twenties, he bought a seat on the New York Stock Exchange for $19,000. He began speculating in the sugar market, and by age 30, he was a millionaire known as "The Lone Wolf of Wall Street."
In the interview, William mentions a memo we were unaware of, which Baruch wrote to himself in the spring of 1930. Baruch was fabulously wealthy and worth roughly $30 million at a time when gold was $20.67. He had over 30 years of investing experience then and sat down to codify a list of rules on how to invest successfully.?
As William says in the interview regarding Baruch's memo in Grant's book, "those two pages are worth the price of entry for the entire book. They're pretty amazing."
Given such high praise, we decided to delve deeper and read Baruch's investing rules for ourselves. Let's go through our takeaways.
Baruch's Timeless Investing Rules
Admittedly, Baruch was reluctant to put this list together. He was skeptical of its effectiveness. As he put it, people either lack the discipline to follow it or think they’re the exception that can outsmart the?game?Baruch played for decades.
Simply put, most people need to make the mistakes themselves before the painful lessons sink in.
Baruch was a perpetual student and sought to understand how market psychology influenced asset prices. He was highly influenced by Charles Mackey's?Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds.
Baruch went on to say, "What we can try to do perhaps is to come to a better understanding of how to reduce the element of risk in whatever we undertake. Or put another way…our problem is how to remain properly venturesome and experimental without making fools of ourselves."
For more on Bernard Baruch, we'd recommend checking out his memoir?Baruch: My Own Story.
SEE YOU NEXT TIME!
That's it for today on?We Study Markets!?
See you tomorrow at 6 pm.
All the best,?
P.S The Investor's Podcast Network is excited to launch a?subreddit?devoted to our fans in discussing financial markets, stock picks, questions for our hosts, and much more! Join our subreddit?r/TheInvestorsPodcast?today!
? The Investor's Podcast Network?content is for educational purposes only. The calculators, videos, recommendations, and general investment ideas are not to be actioned with real money. Contact a professional and certified financial advisor before making any financial decisions. No one at The Investor's Podcast Network are professional money managers or financial advisors. The Investor’s Podcast Network and parent companies that own The Investor’s Podcast Network are not responsible for financial decisions made from using the materials provided in this email or on the website.