Joseph Moore
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah.
No, I've been actually love the Wall Street Journal.
for the record, like I'm a big fan.
I'm a subscriber and The Economist.
I mean, I lean on those.
But here's what I have to tell people.
If you are truly a long-term retail investor, and so let's, okay, let's segment out.
If you're on the subway and you work on Wall Street and you're on your way there, you're doing a different thing
than a retail investor in Houston who's trying to figure out what to do with their money.
So let's just segment that out.
Let me talk to that second group of people who are trying to figure out what to do with their money in Miami or in Atlanta or in Bend, Oregon.
The most profitable section of newspapers like the Wall Street Journal or The Economist for you may be to read it backwards to forwards.
Because if you read the technology section, if you read the kind of culture sections first, then you start to get a sense of where you are in time and how time is changing.
And that, you know, for instance, I go back to the earlier example of like, oh, there's going to be, I'll give you another example from The Economist, actually.
And then I actually read the same thing in The Wall Street Journal.
It's like, well, they're both saying the same thing, was that we were going to have a revolution in battery technology.
Now, this is before it was obvious.
It was not obvious that Tesla would actually be a battery company.
Right.
But here were people who, the science reporters especially, are so sharp at those institutions.