{"id":16014,"date":"2025-05-31T20:15:28","date_gmt":"2025-05-31T20:15:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/?p=16014"},"modified":"2025-05-31T20:15:28","modified_gmt":"2025-05-31T20:15:28","slug":"podcast-96-how-not-to-invest-avoiding-big-money-mistakes-with-barry-ritholtz","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/?p=16014","title":{"rendered":"Podcast 96: How Not to Invest &#8211; Avoiding Big Money Mistakes with Barry Ritholtz"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<p>In this episode of <em>Boldin Your Money<\/em>, Steve Chen talks with Barry Ritholtz about his journey from law to leading a $6B wealth management firm. They discuss Barry\u2019s book <em>How Not to Invest<\/em>, focusing on avoiding common mistakes, tuning out media noise, and the value of humility and process in investing. The conversation covers tech\u2019s role in finance, behavioral biases, and how to build smarter, tax-efficient portfolios in a rapidly evolving market.<\/p>\n<p>Watch the video on our <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=6qvXftR_-jo\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">YouTube Channel<\/a>:<\/p>\n<p>\n  <iframe title=\"How Not to Invest: Avoiding Big Money Mistakes with Barry Ritholtz (ep.96)\" width=\"788\" height=\"443\" src=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/6qvXftR_-jo?feature=oembed\" frameborder=\"0\" allow=\"accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share\" referrerpolicy=\"strict-origin-when-cross-origin\" allowfullscreen><\/iframe><br \/>\n  <\/iframe>\n<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-listen-now\">Listen Now<\/h2>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/the-newretirement-podcast.simplecast.com\/episodes\/barry-ritholtz\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Listen to the podcast on Simplecast<\/a> or right here:<\/p>\n<p>\n  <iframe height=\"200px\" width=\"80%\" frameborder=\"no\" scrolling=\"no\" seamless=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/player.simplecast.com\/479e6221-b29e-4875-924a-43f2f73ef8e3?dark=false\" style=\"max-width: 800px; display: block; margin: 0 auto;\"><br \/>\n  <\/iframe>\n<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-callouts\">Callouts:<\/h3>\n<p>[27:48]<strong> <\/strong><a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/3SAST1I\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">How Not to Invest: The ideas, numbers, and behaviors that destroy wealth\u2014and how to avoid them<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/s\/ref=dp_byline_sr_audible_1?ie=UTF8&amp;search-alias=audible&amp;field-keywords=Barry+Ritholtz\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Barry Ritholtz<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[27:48] <a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/3Hd7jTc\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>Bailout Nation<\/em> <\/a>by Barry Ritholtz<\/p>\n<p>[11:03] <a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/4mz27tb\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Market Wizards<\/a> by Jack Schwager<\/p>\n<p>[11:03] <a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/4mqdaom\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>Reminiscences of a Stock Operator<\/em> <\/a>by Edwin Lef\u00e8vre<\/p>\n<p><em>[12:27] <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/3Fdw4yd\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>How We Know What Isn\u2019t So<\/em> <\/a>by Thomas Gilovich<\/p>\n<p><em>[40:33] [41:31] <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/4kdgz8u\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>Winning the Loser\u2019s Game<\/em><\/a> by Charles Ellis<\/p>\n<p><em>[29:56] <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/4jmec1Q\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>On Bullshit<\/em><\/a> by Harry Frankfurt<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-transcription\">Transcription<\/h2>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=0.24\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:00:00<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>This episode is brought to you by the Boldin Financial Planning Platform, formerly NewRetirement, create a financial plan for free Boldin.com. Welcome to Boldin Your Money, where we dive into the decisions of shaping our financial lives. I\u2019m your host Steve Chen, and today we\u2019ve got Barry Ritholtz joining us from New York and he\u2019s the co-founder, chairman and CIO of Ritholtz Wealth Management. And he also recently wrote a book <a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/3SAST1I\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">How Not to Invest<\/a>, and he also hosts a popular podcast, masters in Business. So he is pretty well known. We\u2019re going to dive into his book and talk about some of the mistakes that we want to help people avoid. So with that, Barry, welcome to our show.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=50.28\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:00:50<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Hey Steve, thanks for having me.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=52.14\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:00:52<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>No, I appreciate you making the time. And just before we get going, I wanted to share a quick anecdote. So I was texting my brother this morning. He shared your blog, the big picture with me 20 years ago, plus I think used to be on Geo Cities.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=68.49\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:01:08<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s right. 98. It launched on GeoCities back in the day when you had to code the HTML by hand. And once Wizzywig came along with software like six apart, it went from a half hour of writing and two hours of coding to a half hour writing and two minutes of coding. Technology has made us all more efficient and more productive.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=92.34\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:01:32<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And for people who don\u2019t know what Wizzywig is, it\u2019s what you see as what you get.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=97.47\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:01:37<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>By the way, that\u2019s the only technical jargon I\u2019m going to use today.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=101.52\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:01:41<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s okay. It\u2019s impressive. So it was the first finance oriented blog ever shared with me, and so I was checking out, I was like, Hey, guess what? I\u2019m going to have B hol on our podcast. And he\u2019s still reading it, so he\u2019s like the daily read.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=117.87\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:01:57<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s just part of my process. I started on a trading desk and if you can see the rest of my office with books and crap piled up, everything is a mess and it\u2019s really quite a disaster. In order to compensate for that, I would just put together my list every day and I learned, don\u2019t read crap on the way into the office. Get in your head when you\u2019re trying to make good trading decisions. And so I would make my list every day, here are the earnings that are coming out, here\u2019s consensus, here\u2019s the range, here\u2019s the economic lists that are coming out, economic releases. Here are the 10 things I skimmed through New York Times, Washington Post, wall Street Journal that I want to read on the way home. That eventually became something that got xeroxed and shared around the office in the 1990s. And then that eventually became something that got, once I found people were faxing, it was like, Hey, I could just email it to \u2019em, get an email address.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=175.77\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:02:55<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So that became an email list. And then in 98 that became GeoCities, which I really regret that when GeoCities went belly up, they didn\u2019t at least archive the stuff. I grabbed three or four of my favorite posts when they said they were going out. I didn\u2019t know. They were like, we\u2019re really going out. Yahoo did the same thing with their video. Any of the appearances anyone did in the nineties or two thousands on Yahoo was this rich mine of behavioral data showing how biased individual investors are and all that stuff disappeared. I remember, well, we will get into it a little later, but that\u2019s one of those things like, what a shame. There\u2019s a great story about Monty Python on the BBC and somebody lent them $40,000 to buy the videotape masters from the BBC because they were going to just reuse them. Like, oh, the content isn\u2019t anything. The 40 cent tape is what mattered. And Yahoo GeoCities is the same thing. They just wipe those servers and it\u2019s gone.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=244.39\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:04:04<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s too bad. Yeah, it\u2019s pretty interesting hearing your story that you were kind of doing this, faxing it around, emailing it around early GeoCities internet. Yeah. So you appreciate probably what\u2019s happening with AI and everything now, right? Another evolution of tech that is going to amplify people\u2019s influence significantly.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=263.71\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:04:23<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I think I have a slightly different perspective on AI than a lot of people. Technology is a tool. Anything that makes me more productive, more efficient means either I can crank out the same work in less time or in the same time crank out more work. I used to have these debates with my economist friends about the famous Robert Solo Nobel Laureate. I think MIT Robert Solo. Technological progress is everywhere except for the productivity data. And I always laugh. So what you\u2019re saying is your measurement is imperfect or just outright wrong. Or maybe that might be true for heavy industry, but any information service or service business, I just don\u2019t believe that there\u2019s no productivity gains. I just know what we do today with 75 people would\u2019ve taken 320 years ago.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=323.17\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:05:23<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Oh yeah, I\u2019ve seen that data too where they\u2019re like, oh, it doesn\u2019t look like we\u2019re getting more productive. You\u2019re like, I find that hard to believe given what we\u2019re doing<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=329.32\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:05:29<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>In the book. There\u2019s a quote I rely on frequently, which is George Box. All models are wrong, but some are useful. And so as long as you recognize economic models, portfolio models, all of these are a, I don\u2019t want to say false, but an imperfect reproduction of reality. Take \u2019em with a big grain of salt. You\u2019ll be in much better shape.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=350.02\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:05:50<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Before we jump into the book, I would love if you can give us just a couple minutes on your career. So I saw that one highlight. You\u2019re on the equestrian team at Stony Brook. So you\u2019re the first person here I\u2019ve met who has been on the equestrian team, and then I\u2019d love to zip through that.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=365.84\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:06:05<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So spent my summers as a kid, upstate New York, play baseball, swim. Oh wait, there\u2019s a horse farm here. Hey, what can I do to ride horses? Well, it\u2019s $40 for an hour. Well, I\u2019m 12 and don\u2019t have $40, but what can I do? You could muck out the stalls, water down the horses, groom them, this, that. I don\u2019t know how to do any of that. We\u2019ll show you. So I had been riding horses like Western. You sit in the saddle, it\u2019s a big comfy couch and you go for a ride. And for the most part, I\u2019m the one who gives the horses carrots and apples. So they like me, they do what I ask. So I undergraduate applied mathematics and physics at Stony Brook, which I was really good at in high school and in college. It\u2019s like I\u2019m pretty good at this, but those gis bankrupt is worthless. So when I say this to the client and oh no, Cisco\u2019s going to be a trillion. Alright, so it\u2019s going to be a trillion, it\u2019s 500 billion now you\u2019ve made a hundred x. Why are you hanging around for the last leave a little for the next guy is what they used to say on the trading desk. Hey, you don\u2019t have to capture it<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2060.66\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:34:20<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>All can take your advice.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2061.98\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:34:21<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So I found out that they sold half, which I was unaware of till months later. Then March, 2000, the market peaks May, 2000. Fortune magazine has this big piece, Cisco the one stock you have to own. And so I write this up and crickets, nobody says a word. This is tariff. This is ridiculous. The vendor finance all this stuff. By the way, another annoying thing I forgot to say from GeoCities. And so in the ensuing 25 years since that May, 2000 fortune covers out, Cisco proceeds to fall 95%. The other stock that they said, yeah, you don\u2019t want to own Microsoft, they have legal problems. And I think the other one they looked at was ge, which didn\u2019t do as well as Microsoft, but did much better than Cisco. Not only did a full 95%, here we are today. I haven\u2019t looked at its price recently, but as I was writing the book, it was still 20 something percent below when that article came out. So I got to revisit all these things that nobody paid attention to and now we know how the movie ended so we can discuss it in a different context.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2137.13\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:35:37<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I have a question. So just today, when you\u2019re helping clients though, do many of them walk in with that kind of position a concentration, or is it much more like indexing and kind of taking a broader approach?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2147.43\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:35:47<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>It depends on the client. It\u2019s a little bit of everything. We\u2019ve had the chapter on regret minimization in the book. We\u2019ve had people walk in, Hey, I have a portfolio of $11 million, $10 million is fill in the blank, Amazon, apple, Nvidia, whatever. So here\u2019s your choice. You can ride the Bronco or you could say, I\u2019ve already won and I\u2019m going to exchange potential upside in a super hot stock for less volatility and more predictable returns.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2180.61\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:36:20<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>How do people typically end up when you have that conversation?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2183.85\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:36:23<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Well, 90% of the answers are that\u2019s going to generate an incredible capital gains tax bill. And so we set up a tax practice. We also in conjunction started using Canvas as our direct indexing platform. The answer usually at that point is, well look better to take a hundred dollars and pay $20 in capital gains than to not get the 80 net. So you have three choices we can try and sell a little bit over the next, you tell us how much capital gains tax you want to pay or how many years you want this to go for. And we could do that. You could ride the Bronco and hey, maybe it works. Ask shareholders and GE or Lehman Brothers how that approach works or Enron or Sears or I got a giant list for you and if we set up a portfolio with direct indexing, we could save you a decent amount of tax loss harvesting. If you just own 10 mutual funds, hey, maybe it\u2019s 2025 bips a year direct indexing is 75 80 or better a year. And so maybe we could take that seven year and cut it down to 6 5 4. Depends on what happens.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2259.99\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:37:39<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Oh, so interesting. So you\u2019re setting up a direct indexing portfolio over here, capturing a bunch of tax losses and then using those tax losses to rebalance people out of their concentrated position.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2270.31\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:37:50<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Someone says, I have a really low cost basis in X, Y, Z, and it\u2019s I\u2019m willing to sell a million dollars a year and pay $200,000 in taxes a year. So the next question is, well, if we can sell more and cap your cap gains at 200,000, is that something you would like? Or do you want to sell a million and pay as little taxes as we black letter law legally with IRS approval can. And so depending on their answer determines what the strategy looks like and clients. We have a lot of clients who are in the tech industry. We have a lot of clients who work on Wall Street or work in finance, so anyone with capital gains or employee stock or whatever. And then when we do their taxes, when you find they overpaid 40 grand last year, no one cares if you\u2019re 10 basis points ahead or behind the s and p, but you get a $40,000 refund that they weren\u2019t expecting. Oh my God, why am I wasting my time? Picking stocks is always the answer<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2333.23\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:38:53<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>A hundred percent. I think as people get, this is our users too, right? As people get wealthier, they start thinking much more about taxes and hopefully and not losing money than trying to continue to build. Once they get to a certain level of wealth,<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2346.73\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:39:06<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>You would be shocked how many people don\u2019t. And when you lay it out, it\u2019s like, oh my God, what have I been doing the past 10 years? It\u2019s always fun to see those sort of responses.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2357.68\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:39:17<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Okay, back to the book a bit. So how not to invest is the big takeaway. Basically make fewer mistakes.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2365.18\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:39:25<\/a>):uys are great.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=417.71\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:06:57<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So eventually switched to political science and philosophy. And when I do that, suddenly my calendar was a lot freer. So I read in this campus paper that Stony Brook has a nationally competitive equestrian team. And I\u2019m like, wait, what? So smoke Run farms was like a 15 minute walk from campus from my dorm. So one Saturday morning I walk over, I meet the head coach and I\u2019m like, Hey, I\u2019ve been riding western horses. I\u2019m interested in learning how to really ride. And he is like, well, you have to sign up for a class. It\u2019s two or three gym credits a semester, and it\u2019s $5 a week, $5 a week. It was like $50 for an hour. And it\u2019s instructed not just on a trail. Okay, let\u2019s do that. And the ironic funny thing about that is when I went to apply to graduate, it turned out that I had been doing that for, I dunno, two and a half, three and a half years.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=476.27\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:07:56<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I had so many gym credits that I was short graduation. I had like 138 total credits, 118 of which applied to graduation. I had to find two credits in order to graduate too many horseback riding class. So that was really fun. Didn\u2019t know what I wanted to do with my life. And I live on Long Island and the rule is, hey, you\u2019re a Jewish kid from went to college, dunno what you do yourself. Go to law school. So that\u2019s what I did loved law school wasn\u2019t a big fan of being a lawyer. Graduated cum laude, law Review, all that nonsense. The teaching of legal studies is fascinating. The practice of law is really tedious and detail oriented. And the guy who named his blog The Big Picture, probably not the guy You want doing all the little detail legal work on your behalf. When the opportunity came to go work for a friend at the firm that was the predecessor firm to what eventually became, that\u2019s where I started on a trading desk.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=545.16\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:09:05<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And how did you pick, how\u2019d you get into trading? What motivated that<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=549.15\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:09:09<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Misery? I was miserable as a lawyer and I had done some work for somebody who later goes on to be Bill Porter at E-Trade right Hand man. And he\u2019s the co-founder of ISE, wildly successful. I\u2019m still in touch with Marty. We chat all the time and he\u2019s also an M-B-A-J-D. He said, if you\u2019re miserable as an attorney, you got a good head for numbers, you\u2019re good with computers, why don\u2019t you join the trading desk? What do I do? You\u2019ll figure it out. And that was essentially the training. They push everybody into the deep end of the pool and whoever doesn\u2019t drown. Congrats. You\u2019re a trader.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=587.34\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:09:47<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>When you\u2019re a trader though, at that point, in what years was this?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=591.66\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:09:51<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Right around the Netscape IPO, so long before the dotcom implosion, but pretty much<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=598.44\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:09:58<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Like 97, 98, 96, 97, okay. But are you dealing with retail people and making trades for them or are you taking institutional managing money?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=608.97\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:10:08<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So you are executing order flow on behalf of the company and as you demonstrate the ability to do this and have a p and l, you get a capital line and your capital grows as you show p and l responsibility. And there were some guys who were wildly profitable and then would blow up. And then there were guys who were really steady and I was somewhere in between. My wife once said to me, I don\u2019t understand. You\u2019re up 50 grand, you\u2019re down 50 grand, can you, she\u2019s a teacher ready, steady, stable. So I had enough self-awareness to know I was always looking for that vein. The dopamine hit was really a thing. And so I figured out maybe I can make a living doing this, but what I really should do is go to a shop that has research and analytics and take everything I\u2019ve learned and bring it there.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=663.9\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:11:03<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>In fact, I was really fortunate because I had spoken to a bunch of guys I knew from Merrill and elsewhere that were on trading desks and said, Hey, you come out of law school, it\u2019s like, give me something to read. What can I learn? And one guy suggested <a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/4mqdaom\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>Reminiscences of a Stock Operator<\/em><\/a>. Okay, classic. Probably the best recommendation someone gave me as a newbie trader was Jack sch swagger\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/4mz27tb\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Market Wizards<\/a>, which is all about risk management and discipline, but I was kind of fascinated by the up and downs and why is this guy killing it and why is that guy getting crushed? And then next month that switches. And so I found a book called <a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/3Fdw4yd\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>How We Know What Isn\u2019t So<\/em><\/a> by Thomas, a professor at Cornell, really the first mainstream behavioral economics book. I think it was published in 93 or 91. So by 96 or 97 I stumble onto that and that just opened a whole new world for me figuring out how and why we make decisions and even more importantly, how and why these decisions go awry. Not because we pick the wrong stock, but because of the way we go about that decision making process. That was fascinating.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=747.46\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:12:27<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So it sounds like you go through school, you try law, didn\u2019t love law. A lot of lawyers, this happens to a lot of folks, I think<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=754\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:12:34<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Seven years after graduation is the stat 50% of all lawyers who pass the bar are not practicing,<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=760.57\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:12:40<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Are out. Yeah, it\u2019s good stuff for people who are thinking about going to law school right now,<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=764.14\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:12:44<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I will tell you I believe it\u2019s better intellectual training than an MBA. If you\u2019re going into wealth management, if you\u2019re going into investment banking, save a year, go get the MBA,<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=776.29\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:12:56<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Okay. And then you\u2019re kind of writing behind the scenes the whole time. So you go from law, become a trader, you\u2019re kind of continuing to write and then fast forward, you start your firm, right? In 2013, right?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=791.05\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:13:11<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So let me give you a little background to that. So I spent most of my career turning down money because I didn\u2019t want nervous clients in my ear. Every 2% move down. I got a little bit of pushback. A month and a half ago I did a post tune out the noise and no, you can\u2019t do that. This is existential. And here it is six weeks later and we\u2019re 3% above April 2nd. And the funny thing is we\u2019ll talk about the book, but there are four or six chapters in here on how to manage the noise and navigate it. And I sometimes forget people haven\u2019t read everything I\u2019ve written. So when I say that it\u2019s within the context of here\u2019s 500 words if you want to read 5,000 words on that topic. It\u2019s a couple of chapters in the book. Howard Marks likes to say smart and hardworking is good, smart, hardworking, and lucky is better.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=845.17\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:14:05<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m paraphrasing. My mom was a real estate agent. And for someone who worked on the investment side in Wall Street, I spent a lot more time watching real estate than the average Wall Street guy. And so in oh 4, 0 5, 0 6, it was pretty obvious that if you looked at the proper data, it was obvious that something was terribly amiss. So the three data points I love to point out, if you look at a hundred years of median income to median home price, it was like this. And then in oh 3, 4, 5, 6, it did this. And then cost of owning versus renting, it\u2019s the same hockey stick chart. And then value of U-S-G-D-P to the total of real estate. How much is all the residential real estate as a percentage of GDP? Same thing. It\u2019s really steady for decades and then whoop. So because I was fortunate to be looking at that and I also read and wrote a piece about Reinhart and Rogo who eventually turned this into a book, but they write a paper on what happens to a country when a credit crisis unfolds.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=919.4\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:15:19<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And I\u2019ll save you 50 pages, real estate falls 30% and they use five recent examples. It was like Japan, Helsinki, Mexico, the US great depression. I always forget whatever the fifth one is, maybe it was Sweden, Norway, but it doesn\u2019t matter. So as an exercise, I said, let\u2019s see if we can figure out what happens to the DAO at 13,000 and change if real estate falls 30%. And this is why I say you got to be a little lucky. And I did the DAO only because I didn\u2019t have the patience to do all 500 stock in the s and p. I come up with a number about 9,800, but then the behavioral finance comes in, I\u2019m like, Hey, if we break 10, we\u2019re going to 6,800<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=966.05\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:16:06<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Want to overcorrect? Yeah, totally.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=967.88\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:16:07<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I thought the number was irrelevant. It\u2019s made up. It\u2019s just, and nobody wants to talk about the analysis like that 68, what that\u2019s down 50%, blah blah, blah. So for all of 2007, I was the idiot on Wall Street. And then in oh eight,<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=983.33\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:16:23<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>You\u2019re a genius.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=984.26\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:16:24<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Well, it took a while in the beginning stuff started to go south and I had a conversation with a buddy, Hey, don\u2019t let me be that a-hole where if we get anywhere near 6,800, I double down and say 3,400. So you\u2019re empowered to kick my, if I do that, and again, dumb luck, my wife\u2019s a teacher, we travel on the school calendar, it has nothing to do with me. We are on vacation, we come back, there\u2019s a March, 2009, there\u2019s a message on the voicemail, Hey, we\u2019re at 7,000, call me back. Hey, we\u2019re at 6,900, call me back. Hey, 6,800 I\u2019m coming over to kick your. And I get home. I\u2019m like, I was on vacation when we just got back. What are you doing? I\u2019m going to go through all my numbers, put out a piece right now. And I literally said, cover your shirt, go longs.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1036.76\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:17:16<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Every data point I look at from market internals to economics to sentiment, they\u2019re as pinned as far to the edge as possible. And I send it out. And immediately Sunday night, Henry Blodgett responds and I had been on when the piece first came out and everybody thought I was an idiot. And then when we broke 10,000, he had me back on and he\u2019s like, come on the show tomorrow. I\u2019m like, I just got back from vacation. I got to no come tomorrow. So he talked me into coming on Yahoo Finance and I just said, Hey, we\u2019re down 50 something percent. Every indicator is negative. When is that not a great entry. And so by the dumbest of dumb luck the next day bottom and the market\u2019s up a thousand points within like 48 hours of my interview. I think the interview was Monday, they released it Tuesday and the market bottomed in Tuesday, 8:00 AM And I wasn\u2019t sure if it was Tuesday or Wednesday when the market screamed higher, but it was just dumb luck. It was a total coincidence. But people started throwing so much money at me and a number of colleagues said, dude, it\u2019s so hard to raise money, you got to stop turning it down. Okay, I\u2019ll be the CIO, you run the back office crap on patients for that. And that was, I dunno, almost 6 billion ago.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1118.22\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:18:38<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So that\u2019s how you got started. When did the firm start? I thought it started in 2013.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1123.47\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:18:43<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So the firm launched September, 2013. I had hired Josh from the sell side, I want to say late 20 10, 20 11, somewhere in that. So this all kind of came together slowly and then we hired Chris Van and then we hired Mike Batnick. And when we decided we were going to tap out and launch our own, I was pretty comfortable that we would be fine. I did not know when the fire hose would turn off. And over the next decade, Josh became a rockstar. Mike Batnick became a rockstar. Ben Carlson became a rockstar. Nick Majuli became on and on, Blair and Callie, and we just keep adding pieces to the board. So it\u2019s no longer just me bringing the money in and if anything, I\u2019m a minority rainmaker compared to how much talent is out there.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1179.66\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:19:39<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Yeah, I remember I was at one of your conferences several years ago and I think Josh described it as we\u2019re building the boy band of bloggers as a media company. Yeah, we\u2019ll talk about the whole media side of things. Yeah, definitely having some insight and awareness of the history makes a ton of sense. I\u2019ll say back in 2005, I was in escrow buying our first house and I was like, this makes no sense. I\u2019ve saved my whole life. I\u2019m in northern California to buy a house and anyone who can fog a mirror can get a million dollars of credit. This is crazy. So real estate is a way to build wealth, especially out here. And I was like, all right, I bailed out of the house, I bailed out of escrow and I was like, we\u2019re going to keep renting. This doesn\u2019t make any sense. And then I actually did the same thing you did, but drawing a line of the appreciation of California real estate and it was like, now it\u2019s this, but long-term it\u2019s like this. So I\u2019m like, I bought our house in 2009, I\u2019m going to pay this price here, not up here. We bought it for like 30% off the peak<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1242.03\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:20:42<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And that\u2019s the Reinhardt and Rogo number. Financial credit crises lead to real falling 30%. And then if you go through history, you\u2019ll see down 50% in equities along with a down 30% real estate is not all that unusual. It happens within credit crises more frequently than not. My favorite line in \u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/3Hd7jTc\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong><em>Bailout Nation<\/em><\/strong><\/a> was you said they\u2019ll give a mortgage to anyone who could fog a mirror. There were two, I don\u2019t know if it\u2019s a husband and wife, but two people who bought a house together. They were strawberry pickers and if they would\u2019ve taken 100% of their pre-tax income and gave it to the bank, they still wouldn\u2019t have been able to make the mortgage payment. And so when people blame the borrowers, it\u2019s like, hey, you are the bank, you are the professionals. This is on you. You screwed this up. A mistake was not sending all the banks to the nice building downtown with the Roman columns, the bankruptcy court. That\u2019s where they all should have gone.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1303.57\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:21:43<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I know that was a giant miss. I mean it was ridiculous, but it was like Warren Buffett buy when there\u2019s blood in the streets. I mean, the other thing I did get right is I nailed, I remember buying Google at three 50 and then it doubled quickly and I was like, oh, don\u2019t get greedy. And I sold. And that was a huge mistake. You do have to put your money to work when people are freaking out, but then you have to keep it and stay in the market.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1326.13\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:22:06<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And I believe that\u2019s a Rothchild who said, buy when there\u2019s blood in the streets. And he was correct.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1332.04\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:22:12<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Yeah. Alright, well just to wrap up this section, so did you envision this fear but just sounds like you kind cruising along?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1339.81\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:22:19<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>No, no plan, no idea. I never planned on being an RIA, but it was like we were at a hybrid RIA software company. So they had a technology that I was running that division trying to figure out how to use technology to make better investment sector stock selections. And we had a BD and an RIA and as all this money was coming in, a big part of me was like, I don\u2019t want money to go here. I don\u2019t like their models, their methodology. There\u2019s not a true fiduciary part of this. So we set up the fiduciary part of the RIA inside and I was doing a ton of CNBC in the two thousands and Bloomberg and Fox and it was kind of funny to go on TV one afternoon, Hey, talk about hedge funds, come for the high fees, stay for the underperformance and go back to the office and as an email, here are the new six hedge funds on our platform.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1399.42\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:23:19<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So this was kind of inevitable that we would\u2019ve had to leave. It wasn\u2019t a good cultural fit after a while, but eventually it was like, Hey, we should really figure out how to do this ourselves. And we continually just tack into whatever\u2019s working. When the wind is coming from the south, well you\u2019re going to the north and vice versa. So whatever worked, we did more of it. We try a lot of stuff, some of it worked, some of it didn\u2019t. And I had been hosting the Big Picture conference since oh nine. So we had done that for a decade. When the idea came from Matt Middleton to we had done Wealth Stack with him in 2019 when the idea from him is, Hey, let\u2019s get the band back together after COVID and put on another show. Great. How do we make this not be a super spreader event?<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1452.92\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:24:12<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>We\u2019ll host the whole thing outside, it\u2019ll be a festival. There was a ton of pushback. There were a lot of people like this is going to flop. You\u2019re going to land on your face. And my attitude is, if I crash and burn, I get up, I brush myself off, we try something else. If you\u2019re not failing, you\u2019re not trying hard enough, you\u2019re not occasionally striking out, you\u2019re not swinging in enough pitches. So that was the whole backdrop of if it works, do more of it. If it doesn\u2019t work, do less of it. Probably pretty good philosophy in life also. A<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1484\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:24:44<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Hundred percent. And also sounds like it\u2019s interesting, I met Matt Middleton, I didn\u2019t know you knew him way back in the day.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1489.22\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:24:49<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>He was in Informa and we had done a few conferences with them. I want to say I don\u2019t remember if it was 2018. I vividly remember 2019 doing Wealth Stack was our conference in Scottsdale, Arizona. And Matt Middleton and his team ran it and when they wanted to extract themselves from Informa during the pandemic we are in, what do we have to do? So we have a small piece of them. We\u2019re colleagues and collaborators and we\u2019re thrilled to be working with him.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1524.17\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:25:24<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Yeah, no, it\u2019s been a really good synergy. I went to the first Future Proof and<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1528.19\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:25:28<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>That was the little one. That was little one last year was, I think this year it\u2019s going to be close to 5,000. We\u2019re full<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1533.8\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:25:33<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Capacity. I\u2019ve been going, I\u2019ve been going to California one. I didn\u2019t go to the Miami one, but it definitely, it\u2019s been cool and useful. It\u2019s fun. It makes it very real, right? I think it\u2019s hard. You\u2019re out here running this media company and you\u2019re like, oh, okay, there\u2019s lots of people out there in cyber world or whatever, and then you\u2019re like, oh, you bring 5,000 people. You\u2019re like, holy smokes. There\u2019s a lot of people here and it\u2019s real.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1554.44\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:25:54<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>The fun thing about doing podcasts and writing blog posts and other things is you don\u2019t really know where it lands. And what\u2019s been so gratifying at Future-Proof and other events are the number of people who are like, Hey man, really you\u2019ve helped me develop my asset management, my investment philosophy. The whole world is trying to get me to panic out of stocks in 10, 11, 12, and thanks for doing what you do. Reading you has kept me level and steady. I mean that is just so gratifying to know that you never know who read your stuff. It doesn\u2019t always show up, but sometimes to see that you are having a positive impact, it\u2019s fabulous.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1600.58\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:26:40<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Well, I think good things happen to good people. It\u2019s clear you\u2019re a good person and also attracting good people. I met Josh obviously. He\u2019s a nice guy and<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1609.92\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:26:49<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>The whole team is just one rockstar after another. And there are people you want to hang out with, have a beer with just spend some time with. And the amount of upside surprise, we hired Michael as a research monkey who knew he was going to become, first of all, he\u2019s an old man. He\u2019s wise behind his years far beyond his age, but then second, he turns out to have this develop the skillset. It\u2019s phenomenal. We hired Cali Cox when E Toro was going through some craziness and it was just one of those things where, what am I getting wrong here? She\u2019s spectacular. How on earth would they dare not do everything they can to keep her and everybody in between? Nick Majuli and just go down the list of people.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1656.39\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:27:36<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Yeah, yeah. Want to come back to this bit, but I do want, let\u2019s get into your book a tiny bit. So what inspired you to write this book? And in the preamble you were telling me you\u2019re writing a book every 15 years, so you\u2019re not<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1668.36\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:27:48<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So like clockwork. The sequel will be in 2040. Well, so Bailout Nation comes out no nine really well reviewed Wall Street Journal. New York Times sells pretty well for a dry financial history book. And so the firm launches a few years later and I\u2019m busy, so the publisher wants me to do another one. Friends like guys we just launched with $70 million. I got stuff to do. And as is, I\u2019m still doing the blog and that\u2019s just part of my process. And Morgan Hausel is a friend and he\u2019s kind of nagging me, dude, it\u2019s so easy. You have no idea. Just take a bunch of blog posts, string \u2019em together, no one will know Morgan, you write stories. Everything I write, there\u2019s a market data point, there\u2019s a stock just updating that is a giant lift. And then the pandemic hits and I find myself having a little time to think about this.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1726.8\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:28:46<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m not commuting. And so this is not on the board anymore, but what I started doing was just writing down ideas on three by five cards. They\u2019re color coded, the topics and subtopics that kind of festered for a while. And then we come home from, again, vacation plays into this. We come home from vacation in December, 2023 and you have that dead couple of days before everybody goes back January 2nd. And I just started sifting through. I do a quarterly call for clients four times a year. I start looking at those notes. I look at market commentaries, I look at research. I was personal finance column for six years at the Washington Post and then for another seven or eight years at Bloomberg. And as I start sifting through this, I kind of discover, man, I spent a lot of time debunking investment bullshit. So Morgan had introduced me to his publisher and Hey, how do you guys feel about that as a title and a focus?<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1796.5\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:29:56<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>They\u2019re British and very proper and they\u2019re like, it\u2019s been done. What\u2019s his name? Harry Frankfurter did a book called On Bullshit. He was a professor. It sold really well. Every other book after that bullshit became just a shocking title and they all did poorly. Well, let me play with this. I\u2019m thinking about it. And so I normally like to work on software, but the board is just a little different. And so I\u2019m moving things around and I\u2019m like, this is going here and now I\u2019m putting this a cop show. It looks like the murder board for figuring out who\u2019s the killer. And I start to, it\u2019s like a wordle where suddenly, wait a sec, all these are all numbers related. Wait, all this is all idea and media related. Oh wait, here\u2019s all behavior related and I don\u2019t want to say the book, but once I kind of fell into that, and by coincidence as I\u2019m having this epiphany, Morgan and I chat and he\u2019s nagging me again and he doesn\u2019t know all the work I\u2019ve been doing for the past few years.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1865.08\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:31:05<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So I say to him, I\u2019ll make you a deal. You write the forward and I\u2019ll write the rest of the book. And he\u2019s like, done. How hard can it be to write a forward? So how hard can it be to write a book? So that was the genesis of it. Whereas Bailout Nation was kind of a slog. It was cathartic, but every week a different company would blow up and then I have to rewrite a chapter and then Lehman Brothers blows up and I\u2019m like, I don\u2019t have an ending. I got to write a whole new ending. This was a pleasure. So just as a perfect example, I think the financial crisis is how people learned who I was. I had been doing CBCs and Fox and CNN and Bloomberg since like oh two, but there\u2019s a million people who is this guy? Nobody knows who he was.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1915.18\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:31:55<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I had a GeoCities post, I was working for a firm. Klein comes in from out of town chic from the Middle East and he owns a bazillion shares of Cisco. And I had been watching Cisco, which is going to be the first trillion dollar company, and really kind of thinking by January, 2000, the cracks on the facade were starting to show, even though we\u2019ve learned Walmart bull markets go further, higher and longer than anybody expects, and this guy comes in and Hey, will you come in and talk to my client next week? He\u2019s flying in from wherever and he owns a batan of Cisco and I\u2019m, oh, funny you mentioned Cisco. I was just reading Paul Segal at Alliance Bernstein who if he wasn\u2019t the ax on Cisco, he should have been and he had turned negative and everybody hated him. Which by the way, fast forward to oh seven and I got to relive his experience.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=1977.56\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:32:57<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So I reached out to him and said, we\u2019re not a clients of yours. Do you have five minutes to talk? And he\u2019s like, sure. So we have a client coming in with a lot of Cisco, I\u2019m not comfortable with the stock fundamentally or technically you\u2019ve been covering it for forever. And he proceeds to regale me for half hour with the tale of when Cisco launched, all their clients would buy their goods or finance their goods themselves. Cisco was just a seller of product. They had nothing to do with sort of like what was the GM one that blew up or Ford Credit or between 1988 and 1999, they went from 0% vendor financed to 92% vendor financed. In other words, 8% of their clients were buying products and 92% of their clients were taking product and leaving them a piece of paper, which as we later found out was worthless. A promise to pay when your client\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>I dedicate the book to two Charlies and they both explain the idea of make fewer mistakes. Well, Charlie Munger famously was asked, Hey, are you and Warren just smarter than everybody else? And the most Munger thing Munger could say was, we\u2019re not smarter than everybody else. We\u2019re just less stupid. And I\u2019ve always loved that because it\u2019s such an inversion of the way we typically think. And then Charlie Ellis, who\u2019s well known for Greenwich Associates on the board of Vanguard, chairman of the Yale Endowment, legendary investor in finance. He used to liken investing. This was a paper in 1975, which became a book in 1990 something. He would liken tennis to investing and say both of these activities are a winners and a losers game. What does that mean? Well, in tennis winners win by hitting with power accuracy, serving ACEs, hitting the ball where their opponent isn\u2019t kissing the line drop shots.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2433.43\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:40:33<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s how 0.01% of the world plays tennis. The professionals win that way. The rest of the amateurs like myself, that\u2019s not how we win. We actually lose through unforced errors. We play outside of our skillset. We hit the ball long, we double fault on the serve, we hit it into the net, we hit it right into our opponent\u2019s sweet spot. Just dumb mistake after dumb mistake. And to mix metaphors, I\u2019m a car guy. I\u2019ve taken a lot of high performance driving classes, which I\u2019ll let the secret out. They\u2019re really very, very sophisticated defensive driving classes. But the takeaway from that is you have to stay within your capabilities and the capabilities of the vehicle. If you set the course record on the straightaway, but you\u2019re going too fast and can\u2019t make the turn and crash and burn into the wall, the record doesn\u2019t count. You have to make the turn.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2491.78\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:41:31<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And so learning how to just operate within yourself is such a huge advantage. So make less mistakes was the philosophical idea I began with. By the time I finished the book, I couldn\u2019t help but notice that two other themes emerged, and one is, Hey, everybody in finance needs to have a little more humility. We all need to be a little more humble and stop pretending we know what comes next. There\u2019s a whole section in the book on Nobody Knows Anything. It\u2019s the William Goldman quote, all the studios passed on Star Wars Raiders of the Last Ark. Oh, we have another alien film coming out. We\u2019re going to pass on et. There\u2019s a chapter on John Wick. There\u2019s a chapter on all the reviews on the Beatles first appearance on Ed Sullivan. And it\u2019s hilarious how dumb and terrible these things are. So applying that to markets, the economy, stock, picking, investing, Hey, you don\u2019t want to make a bet or a guess as to what comes next.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2558.33\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:42:38<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>You want a portfolio that\u2019s robust enough to withstand anything, and that requires us to just admit we don\u2019t know what comes next. So that was a theme that just kind of emerged and having some humility and then having done 500 masters in business the first time a billionaire says, well, I just got lucky. You think they\u2019re blowing smoke up your As, but when you hear it 5, 10, 20 times, I\u2019ll never forget, the guy who really put this into sharpest relief for me was Howard Marks of Oaktree Capital. He once said, you also have to get lucky. You have to be in the right place, right time. And I\u2019m like, Howard, not for nothing, but you are smart and hardworking. Don\u2019t tell me you\u2019re this successful Kush. You\u2019re lucky. I think he went to Columbia and the guys he used to carpool, it was like him, Lee Cooperman. It was like four future billionaires. I said, smarts and hard works. And he said, everybody at Columbia School of Business that I went to school with were super smart, many smarter than me. He said, super hardworking. I wasn\u2019t the hardest working person there. Not all of them. He didn\u2019t say became billionaires, but not all of them achieved his level of success. And he goes, you could be smart and hardworking. Smart, hardworking and lucky is better.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2641.7\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:44:01<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m picking the right markets. Picking the right business models. Yeah, all that stuff.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2645.72\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:44:05<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve met so many people in so many different markets, businesses, strategy styles, Hey, it helps to, like we launched in 2013, I just did a piece last week, a spectacularly underappreciated 15 year period. When you look at rolling 15 year periods, I\u2019ll make this really short. The best 15 year period in the past century has been the 15 years after World War ii, right up to 1957, 18% a year. You go to 99, the 15 years average, 17% a year. This market, which everybody has hated, right? I mean, I wrote a piece in October oh nine, the most hated bull market in Wall Street history and was this is the third best 16% a year. So there\u2019s a little bit of luck in, hey, we\u2019re going to launch now as opposed to 2000 if we would\u2019ve launched in 2000, I think it might\u2019ve been a little rougher sled.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2702.55\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:45:02<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And what do you think about the next 15 years? It feels like from my perspective, I\u2019m like you. I\u2019ve been around for a while and seen these ups and downs and it feels like things are accelerating, tech is coming quicker and quicker and the cycles are coming quicker and quicker. I mean, do you think the next 15 years could be equally good or better?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2718.48\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:45:18<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So I don\u2019t know what the next 15 years are like, but I\u2019ll give you two interesting observations about it. First, such a small data set. If you look at 1957, well the next decade was pretty damn good, right up until 1966. Then you had a 16 year bear market, but you still got 10 more good years. Fast forward in 1999, not for nothing, but really from 2000 to 2013, lots of ups and downs, but essentially you ended where you started. So with a data set of two, it\u2019s kind of hard to forecast. So that\u2019s data 0.1. Data 0.2 is simply this. Every time President Trump makes a decision, if you can tell me who the last person had his ear was, and I\u2019ll make it really simple, if it\u2019s Treasury Secretary Scott Besson, then I\u2019m really optimistic. He\u2019s the guy who came up with a 90 day pause. He\u2019s the guy who\u2019s driving the deal with China. Besson is a wall streeter. He understands what Mr. Market wants. He understands how consumers have a finite amount of cash. And if you pass a massive VA tax, call it a tariff, call it whatever you want, even if manufacturers and exporters and importers eat some of it,<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2797.08\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:46:37<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s going to go to the consumer.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2798.49\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:46:38<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Yeah, people have a finite amount of cash. You will have a worst GDP worst consumer spending, lower corporate revenue, lower profits. This is not a prediction. That\u2019s simply math. So if Besson is the last person, I don\u2019t mean a hundred percent of the time<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2814.06\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:46:54<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And you\u2019re like, it\u2019s going to be good, market\u2019s going to go up,<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2816.19\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:46:56<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Right? If you say Besson is the last person speaking to him, him 75% of the time, I\u2019m bullish as all hell. If you take Pina Navarro who\u2019s a fourth tier economist from a third tier school and he\u2019s the last person, well then bad news, I\u2019m hiding under my desk because this whole craziness, the rumor was that when Trump asked Jared Kushner to find him, a economist who supported tariffs, Kushner goes to Google and out of the bajillion economists in the world, there\u2019s one schmuck who thinks Smoot-Hawley in the 1930s tariff was a great idea. So if it\u2019s 75, 25, we\u2019ll be great. If it\u2019s 50 50, there\u2019ll be upward trend, but with a lot of volatility. And if it\u2019s 75% Navarro, 25% scent, hold onto your hacks kids, it\u2019s going to get bad.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2874.22\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:47:54<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Well, it feels like Trump in administration is definitely getting the message right. They started like, Hey, let\u2019s do liberation Day Come market goes crazy. I think Trump\u2019s like, oh, I don\u2019t like when Pepper\u2019s pissed off. I was actually talking about this with a friend of mine on the hike this morning. Who knows you guys? And it\u2019s like, okay, let\u2019s come back to let\u2019s be a little bit more rational. And then the markets come back. It feels like, hey, maybe we\u2019re going to, in 90 day pause, we\u2019re going to get some quote deals. We\u2019re going to get the tariffs back down effectively to where they closer where they started.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2903.11\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:48:23<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>By the time this airs, a post that I have coming out this coming Monday or whenever this comes out, maybe it was last Monday, is titled, the Market Remains Undefeated. And what that means is I give three references and it doesn\u2019t matter what\u2019s driving. It could be the bond market. It doesn\u2019t make any difference. In October oh eight, after Lehman Brothers had blown up, Ben Bernanke went to Congress and said, Hey, our charter is low inflation, full employment. Now there\u2019s this structural credit crisis and things are frozen. We don\u2019t have the authority to do this. We want you guys to give us the authority. I dunno if you remember this week in October 9th or October 11th, that was a Monday, and Ron Paul got up, gave a fiery speech, and the market went right into for the next five days, they voted it down. Friday, they called Bernanke back and he says, Hey, listen, this is going to keep going until you guys figure out when the president gets a phone call from the CEO of Ford, my bank is telling me they don\u2019t have any capital.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=2970.91\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:49:30<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m not going to make payroll. Monday, Bernanke told the story of calling his wife and saying, go to the ATM and take out as much cash as you can. So what was the market down? I don\u2019t even think it was 20%. I think it was like 11, 12, 14%, something like that. And they pass whatever you need. And that was enough to start the process of stabilizing. There still was, market was still priced too high and there was a lot of crap that had to be resolved. But that\u2019s what set up the next quarter. March. Oh, nines bottom. Fast forward to 2020. I love this story. I don\u2019t remember if it was a Monday or a Tuesday, but one day in the week, Congress is debating renaming a library in dc. Is there anything that matters less than whose name is on some local DC library?<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3019.72\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:50:19<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And they\u2019re just arguing they can\u2019t pass anything. And then the next day, the NBA cancels the season and suddenly all sorts of dominoes start to fall. And really the market begins to accelerate. It had been dribbling down mid-February. There were a lot of store shelves that were wiped out. You couldn\u2019t get alcohol, you couldn\u2019t get sanitizer, you couldn\u2019t get bleach, you couldn\u2019t get toilet paper. People began freaking out within a matter of a few weeks as the market plunged, 34% in 17 trading days. The US Congress that could not agree on renaming a library passed the single biggest fiscal stimulus at 10% of GDP since World War ii. So cares Act one was giant under President Trump. First term cares, act two was Trump Cares. Act three was Biden. And then you had the infrastructure bill, the inflation reduction bill, the semiconductor. Those are 10 year things.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3084.05\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:51:24<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And then fast forward to 2025. So my takeaway is around and find out, let get really bad and the market will say, and to be fair this time, the market simply said, oh, we were expecting 10% tariffs, a hundred percent tariffs on 182 country means our year ahead expectations for corporate revenue and profits we\u2019re way too high. We\u2019re make up a number, 10, 20% too high on revenue, 30, 40% too high on profits. We have to adjust to reflect the math. This is just math. And down 15% Besson and Lutnick are in the Oval Office saying, Hey, your legacy is going to be worse than Hoover. And Mr. Market remains<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3133.13\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:52:13<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Undefeated. This interesting side story I had a guest on recently, we were talking about social security and just in terms of Congress being able to act. So the last, everyone\u2019s worried about social security running out in 2034,<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3146.96\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:52:26<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Social security will never run out. Whoever says that, please pass along the message. Hey, Ritholtz says you\u2019re an enumerate idiot. You don\u2019t know how sovereign countries operate and we can never run out of money. Now, there are issues with that, but when people say social security is running out of money, what is FICA capped at? 160 grand 150. Alright, make it a half a million. You\u2019re good for another century.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3174.74\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:52:54<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>The story is that basically the last time, I think it was 1983, we got within two months of running out of money in the Social Security Trust fund. And then bang, Congress fixed it all with making some adjustments. And then here we are. And so the prediction is probably the same thing\u2019s going to happen. We\u2019re going to run right up to the wall and I\u2019ll look at fixed, but people don\u2019t have to worry about it.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3192.65\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:53:12<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Every time I hear somebody say, the government is like a household budget, let me stop you right there. Do you like sports or movies? We can\u2019t talk about this. You clearly have no idea what you\u2019re saying. I don\u2019t have a standing army in my house and I don\u2019t have a printing press where I can run off or a central bank where I could create as much money as I want. And eg. Look at oh 8, 0 9. Oh my God, we\u2019re out of money. No, no, we\u2019re not. Now the risk is you become Venezuela. But so far we\u2019ve avoided that fate.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3228.24\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:53:48<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And luckily for us, all our debts are denominated in our own currency. So yeah,<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3233.64\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:53:53<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>In the Ritholtz household, there are no riol bucks or riol coins. I have to trade with dollars. And so my family household budget can\u2019t say, oh no, there\u2019s a financial crisis. Let me just print up another billion dollars. I cringe every time I hear that. But I no longer get angry, I just say, so Nicks game seven, what do you think? Because we\u2019re not going to talk about this.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3261.6\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:54:21<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Yeah. I want to cover a couple more quick things, but I know we\u2019re running up against the clock real quick. But just to recap. So in terms of your book, you dive into, be careful of the media, be careful of your own behavior, be careful of bad data. If you had to kind of summarize the biggest risks people face and the things that they should not do, what would that be In a couple minutes or a minute?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3285.24\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:54:45<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So when you talk about media, one of the things I tell people is don\u2019t take candy from strangers. You remember, your mom used to tell you that there\u2019s a bajillion websites, a million podcasts. Now I have 500 channels on cable. And to say nothing of endless YouTubers and Instagram and tiktoks, the one advantage of the old days were there was three channels on tv. There was the New York Times, the Washington Post, everybody had the plethora of outlets putting out commentary, opinion, nonsense is so large, I think it\u2019s lazy just to say all media is garbage. Although I quote Ted Sturgeon in the book, who was a famous or not so famous science fiction writer in the 1940s, fifties, sixties, people always used to bust on him about how terrible science fiction was. And his answer was, you\u2019re reading the wrong stuff. Science fiction is no different than anything else. 90% of everything is crap. And that\u2019s been called Sturgeon\u2019s Law, Sturgeon\u2019s Theorem. If you take that philosophy and apply it to finance and financial media, Hey, you know what? Look below the top decile of ETFs. Most ETFs ain\u2019t worth it. Mutual funds, maybe you don\u2019t even have to look at the bottom. 95% hedge funds, venture capital, alternative SPACs, wherever you look and stocks, wherever you look in the world of finance,<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3379.86\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:56:19<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>90% bad.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3381.9\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:56:21<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And then I\u2019m not looking to harp on Fortune or Forbes or Bloomberg or CNBC or CNN or all the magazines. All the advice I give in the book is because I am both a giant consumer and producer of content and media. So my advice to people is simply this. If you\u2019re going to pay attention to somebody who you don\u2019t know, well then maybe you\u2019re risking. Cisco is the one stock you have to own. There\u2019s a chapter in the book about the Apple stores that were launched and the Business week headline, and this was before Bloomberg owned them, but the business headline was, sorry Steve, here\u2019s why the Apple stores will never work. Fast forward Apple was something like $5,700 per square foot. I don\u2019t remember if it was per day. Most, by far, Tiffany\u2019s was number two. Half of that before you take investment advice from someone who doesn\u2019t know you, doesn\u2019t know your risk tolerance, doesn\u2019t know your financial circumstances or even your tax bracket, maybe you should be aware of who they are, what their process is like, and what their track record is like.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3452.65\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:57:32<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So my advice is always build your own all-star team of people that you\u2019ve been following for a while. They have a process that\u2019s defendable. They didn\u2019t just throw a dart once and get lucky, and they\u2019re living on that. And there\u2019s so many examples of that. They\u2019re levelheaded. They\u2019ve seen a few cycles and that you can trust that they\u2019re not just going to freak out and lose you money. So I never say ignore all this. I say, don\u2019t take candy from strangers. You can\u2019t answer those five questions. What\u2019s their process like? What\u2019s their track record? Are they cool under fire? How long have they been doing this for? Give us some examples of where they were with the crowd right up until the point of the crowd becoming an ugly mob. If you don\u2019t know those answers, why on earth are you listening to these people? It\u2019s just astonishing to me. Don\u2019t take candy from strangers.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3508.28\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:58:28<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Okay, I appreciate that. Hey, look, I know we\u2019re getting the time here. So as you look forward, how do you think the world changes and with AI and with wealth and advice over the next five to 10 years, given what you\u2019re seeing, is it going to be kind of the same? And I\u2019m also curious, just for your own firm with Red Holes, obviously one differentiator is you guys started 70 million, now you\u2019ve got 6 billion, largely organic, right? You\u2019re not buying companies. Most companies<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3535.48\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:58:55<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Are. We did one acquisition kind of as a favor. I jokingly say BlackRock had bought a RoboAdvisor in 2015, and it\u2019s not their core competency. It\u2019s not what they wanted to do. And we worked out a purchase that was a win-win win. They wanted it off their hands. We negotiated a fair deal, we got a slug of assets, and the clients got someone who would actually return their calls and emails, be very proactive with them. That\u2019s the only acquisition we\u2019ve done so far. Although never say never. I don\u2019t know what the future holds. The AI question is really fascinating because I got enough gray hair that I remember when people were talking about internet companies, and that was not just Cisco, but Yahoo and pets.com and Global Crossing and Metromedia Fiber, and there were all these internet related companies. And the ironic thing is every company is an internet company.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3594.05\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">00:59:54<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>We all have a website, we all live on email. We all have digital uses of our services. And I really try and think about AI in the same way The media focus, again, don\u2019t take candy from Strangers, has been on the Magnificent seven. But to me, the more interesting play is the, let\u2019s call it not Magnificent four ninety three because those are the companies that are going to deploy ai. They\u2019re going to become more productive, more efficient, more profitable. They\u2019re either going to offer more services at the same price or the same services at a higher degree of profit. I don\u2019t see how the rest of Forget it. If you want to own Nvidia own Nvidia, I mean I think Nvidia is the first US company to lose a trillion dollars in market cap. So a lot of people made a ton of money on the way up. The example in the book is Arc. And I don\u2019t think Kathy Woods did anything wrong. I think the media feted her after she was up 163% and everybody piled in just before the mean reversion kicked in. That\u2019s not her fault. That\u2019s people who took candy from strangers.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3668.45\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:01:08<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Well, she was leaning into, I think the narrative of some of these stocks are just going to keep going to the moon, right? And I don\u2019t know.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3675.68\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:01:15<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>So same question. What\u2019s her long-term track record? How many cycles has she been through? Does she keep cool under fire? Is her process defendable? I\u2019ll let you in on a little secret. And my favorite joke is, Hey, if you ever want to confess a murder, do it in the last 10 minutes of a podcast, no one will hear, no one\u2019s listening. But I never had her on masters in business. I sat down with her in 20 15, 20 16 in Iceland of all places. And I mean she\u2019s very intelligent. She\u2019s been really successful in a lot of ways. I could not figure out what the hell her process was. We had an hour conversation. I\u2019m like, but how do you do this? And I walked away thinking she seems to be smart, but I can\u2019t defend this. And so I missed the runup, but I also missed the subsequent collapse. There\u2019s a section in the book where I discussed the guy who tracked all her investors some crazy amount, like 90% of them are underwater for a fund that did as well as that did in 2020. It\u2019s kind of crazy.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3740.4\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:02:20<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>They piled in late. That resonates a lot. Like every company will be an AI company.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3744.24\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:02:24<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>By the way, are you a telephone company? Yes. We all use the telephone, whether it\u2019s a cell phone or a landline. We\u2019re all telephone companies, we\u2019re all internet companies. We will all eventually be AI company<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3756.75\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:02:36<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Companies. Does it affect your strategy? It feels like you\u2019re really in your moment right now in terms of, I mean obviously you\u2019ve had a great career and you\u2019ve been doing all this stuff. A lot of things are coming together. Great team kind of content media thing has come together. What do you think it looks like in five years? In 10 years?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3772.95\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:02:52<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I would love to be able to say that I\u2019m a mad evil genius and this is all working out according to my plan. But let\u2019s be honest, the reality is you throw a lot of stuff up against the wall, you see what sticks and you do more of it. I mean, it\u2019s not quite that crude and blunt. So when Alexa first came out, we rolled out this voice powered Alexa content, and we read all our blog posts and we create all of these things. Nobody cared. Nobody paid attention. So since you start as a stock trader, everything you do is how do I measure success? How do I determine failure? What are the metrics I\u2019m tracking? What\u2019s my stop-loss? Where do I say this isn\u2019t working? Fold up tents, move on to something else. If you approach the same thing with Futureproof, do a whole event outdoors.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3826.32\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:03:46<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>What are you guys crazy? Either it works or it doesn\u2019t. And if it doesn\u2019t work well, you pick yourself up, you try something else. So I honestly don\u2019t know what the next five years will look like for us or the industry. I assume one thing is constant. I could quote Eric Cletus. We could talk about no man steps into the same river twice for he is not the same man and the river is not the same river, but change is ever present. That is the nature of what we do. And so I think we\u2019re going to continue growing the way we\u2019ve been growing, attracting clients who, like our philosophy, find us through our footprint, attracting advisors who want to work in a place where they don\u2019t have to smile and dial, where not only is the guy whose name is on the door and his co-founders are equity shareholders, but everybody who\u2019s here for a long enough period of time who\u2019s in either a CFP or an advisor or everybody will get eventually to participate in the equity side of it.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3895.47\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:04:55<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And we just want to keep doing what works, keep growing the way we\u2019ve been growing. Me personally, I\u2019m thrilled with how our tax practice has built out. We brought in somebody to run our family office that\u2019s expanding nicely, very happy with direct indexing and Canvas. On a related note, we\u2019re in a direct indexing muni bond platform run by a smart guy out of Fidelity, Eric Golden called Canopy. So we want to keep looking at the technologies that let us be more efficient, more productive, provide more services, provide a higher quality level of services to our clients. And just more the same<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3943.93\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:05:43<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Last question, any big bets? I know it feels like maybe future proof wasn\u2019t a big bet, but<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=3948.64\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:05:48<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Oh no, it was a giant bet at the time. And I have vivid recollections of having conversations with people and thinking, I think these guys are rooting for us to fall on our face here. And God bless Vanguard and BlackRock. I had interviewed enough of their senior people like Guys, have I ever steered you wrong? I\u2019m not telling you to buy a million dollar booth, just give it a shot. The worst case scenario, you\u2019ll have wasted one conference out of the hundred conferences you either sponsor or attend. But if it works out, you are an anchor tenant. And thank goodness it was Morningstar, BlackRock, Schwab, Vanguard was the first big one. That was a big swing. A lot of people were like, Hey man, you could be really embarrassed. I like, I\u2019m sorry, but if you\u2019re not failing, you\u2019re not trying hard enough.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=4003.45\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:06:43<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>A hundred percent. Okay, cool. Well look, Barry, appreciate you coming on the show and we\u2019ll definitely link to how not to invest for our audience.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=4011.85\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:06:51<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m not terribly, but with this book, I\u2019ve just been constantly LinkedIn, Twitter, blue Sky, the blog, every couple of days there\u2019s something out about it. And this book was such a joy to write versus the slog that was Bailout Nation. I\u2019m really having fun with it.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=4031.83\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:07:11<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Was it quicker? I saw Morgan Household also ripped out another book and it felt like boom, that was faster. Was it quicker for you to write this with technology and everything?<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=4041.52\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:07:21<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s a really interesting question. The problem with Bailout Nation, it was originally McGraw Hill and I did a version of that that took like a year. And there was a chapter that was highly critical of the bond rating agencies, of which McGraw Hill owned, one called s and p. But I was fortunate enough to have negotiated final cut, full edit. So when they said, no, we\u2019re not going to publish this with that chapter, let me try to rewrite it and make it a little less hair on fire. And it turned out that the more data and the more third parties I quote, and the less histrionic I made it, the more devastating it was to s and p. So they\u2019re like, Nope. And I\u2019m like, okay, well I\u2019ll go publish it elsewhere. Wait, what? No, no, you can\u2019t do that. We own it. Yeah, you should go read the contract you don\u2019t own.<\/p>\n<p>(<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=4091.26\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:08:11<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>And so Wiley published it and that was another. So that was like a long ordeal. I love the folks I work with at Harriman house. I don\u2019t know if it comes across in the tone of the book, but I tried to bring in a lot more stuff from outside of the world to finance, music, tv, film, sports, all these different things. And I just wanted it to be kind of a light fun read with really short chapters. The book is deceptive, it\u2019s got some heft, but the chapters are one and a half, two, two and a half pages. It goes by pretty quickly. And it was really a lot of fun to write.<\/p>\n<p>Steve Chen (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=4129.52\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:08:49<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s awesome. Alright, well look, Barry, thanks again for coming on and for our listeners, hopefully you check out Barry\u2019s book, how Not to Invest, go check out his firm and compass us at bold. All reviews and feedback on this podcast are welcome. So thanks again.<\/p>\n<p>Barry Ritholtz (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rev.com\/app\/transcript\/NjgzNWZkNmE3MDAyMGQzNDI2NjZhYzM5eVJjcHZMbUdwUlZV\/o\/VEMwNDkwNzgwNDI0?ts=4144.97\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">01:09:04<\/a>):<\/p>\n<p>Thank you so much, Steven, for having me.<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.boldin.com\/retirement\/podcast-96-how-not-to-invest-avoiding-big-money-mistakes-with-barry-ritholtz\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Source link <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In this episode of Boldin Your Money, Steve Chen talks with Barry Ritholtz about his journey from law to leading a $6B wealth management firm. They discuss Barry\u2019s book How Not to Invest, focusing on avoiding common mistakes, tuning out media noise, and the value of humility and process in investing. The conversation covers tech\u2019s<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":16016,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"rank_math_lock_modified_date":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[348],"tags":[2408,6525,242,109,1365,104,3149,6550],"class_list":{"0":"post-16014","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-retirement","8":"tag-avoiding","9":"tag-barry","10":"tag-big","11":"tag-invest","12":"tag-mistakes","13":"tag-money","14":"tag-podcast","15":"tag-ritholtz"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16014","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=16014"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/16014\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/16016"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=16014"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=16014"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/finderica.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=16014"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}