You cannot go through life, doing okay without knowing anything about money.
What seems like common sense to everybody is how can I get rich the fastest?
That's the cause of every Friday's material. My guest is Morgan Housel, bestselling author to the tune of millions and one of the smartest thinkers on the psychology of money. He has spent his career finding the financial lies we tell ourselves and getting us to the truth on how to become really wealthy.
“I'm so excited for this episode, I think you're going to be too.”
Nobody's thinking about you as much as you are, and that goes for your ugly stuff for your insecurities and what you might think other people will really admire you for. And so it's easy to tell ourselves if I had this and that in this house and this car and these clothes, other people would give me a level of respect and admiration that they're not right now.
What are the habits of rich people versus poor people? It's a combination of obsession and long-term thinking. They wake up thinking about their business, they go to bed thinking about their business. They've been doing the same thing for 30 years. What have you found is the number one why or untruth we are told about money?
You don't need intelligence and connections and education and experience to do well. All you need is like...
First of all, I want to read a story from your new book, which I'm obsessed with.
A story goes like this. A man notices his coworker drinking a latte. And he asks, "How often do you drink latte?" Every day says the coworker, "Wow, every day for 30 years of your professional career says the man that's so much money."
Proceeds to talk about how much money that would be. It's like more than enough to buy a Ferrari. The coworker looks puzzled. "Do you buy latte?" She asks the man, "No," he says.
So where's your Ferrari? I love this story because your book is about saving in many ways and how to spend properly. Just like your other book is about the psychology of money. But it's not fucking boring advice about how to not buy a 5.0 latte. I think so much of financial advice and financial media is based off of two things.
A, lectures and B formulas. So let me give you a lecture to tell you that what you're doing is wrong. And let me give you a formula for how to fix it. And nobody is interested in that. Nobody is interested in that.
Nobody is interested in being told that they were living a wrong life. And nobody wants a formula that is indistinguishable from like algebra 1 and high school kind of thing. They don't want that. What people want is advice on how you can be yourself and be independent and live a life that is true to yourself. And to learn about that, tell them a story about somebody else and how they've done it wrong or have done it right.
“I think that's what's sorely lacking in all financial education.”
Finance is one of very few topics that affects everybody. No matter who you are, where you're from, money will impact your life. Health is the other one. Because of that, people have an obligation to learn about this stuff. You can go through life just fine knowing nothing about chemistry and have a great life.
You cannot go through life. Doing okay without knowing anything about money. It's so important but the way that it tends to be taught, I think, is completely broken. And so that's why I just want to tell silly little stories like that. You actually told a couple stories I really loved in the book.
One about Ronald Reed and Richard Fiscone. Can you tell us about them?
Ronald Reed, I've never met either of these people.
Ronald Reed was a guy who was a he was a gas station janitor. No, I'm sorry, a gas station attendant and a janitor at a mall. Just as humble, low key or dare I say, like, low class poor kind of person that you would ever meet. And when he died, he ended up leaving millions and millions of dollars to charity. And people were like, what, like, this guy's mop in the floors and pumping gas.
“Like, where in the world do you get all this money?”
And it turned out that he took what tiny dollars he could say from his minimum wage job. And he bought stocks that he held for like 50 years and turned into millions of dollars and gave it away. But he could not have been a more ordinary kind of person. Richard is, could not be more polar opposite. Born into, born into wealth and went to Ivy League schools and worked on Wall Street
and worked his way up to senior leadership on Wall Street, made tens of millions of dollars. And very soon, not that long after Ronald Reed died, he filed for personal bankruptcy. And blew himself up with debt and leverage. He had a house in Florida that had multiple elevators and like a swimming pool that you could stand on top like all these crazy things. All heavily levered financial crisis hits, boom, he's out, he's bankrupt.
And I use that juxtaposition to be like, you don't need intelligence and connections and education and experience to do well. All you need is like a couple of behavioral attributes that Ronald Reed had. Patience, low ego, that's all you need. And even if you have all of the intelligence in the world, you can go broke. What I should have written, I kind of regret not writing because some people pointed this out.
I don't think Ronald Reed is a role model. I think he had such a unique personality that he could have lived a much better life than he did than living in a trailer. So someone asked after he died one of his friends, what his hobbies were and he said the only hobby you can think of was splitting firewood.
Someone who has millions of dollars in the bank and just just living like tha...
I should have pointed that out.
“But he had the psychological attributes that you need to get wealthy of just low ego and patience, even if he took it to an extreme that I think was detrimental.”
And so but then again, there's very few endeavors like that.
You will never meet someone who is just an uneducated country bumpkin who can do open heart surgery better than a Harvard cardiologist.
That they will never happen. It's impossible. But not only does it happen with money, it happens pretty often. We're ordinary people with good behavior, outperform extremely educated people who don't have control over their emotions. There's so much freedom in that. It's realizing that the game is not actually that stacked against you as long as you are willing to put your finger on the scale of patience.
Because a lot of people think like, why would I try investing? Like, it's just a rigged game against me. And I think what's closer to the truth is that it's rigged against professionals who have to compete against each other on a 90 day clock. What were your returns last quarter and how do they rank next to your peers? That's what you live and die by. Like the rigs that games rigged against them. But for ordinary people who are like, I'm just going to invest in my 401k and leave it alone for 30 years.
I don't even know what my password is. I don't care. I don't know or care if somebody else outperform me last quarter.
I'm just going to do this and follow my goals. That's where the money's made.
“So I think that's the irony is we think it's rigged against you when it's rigged against the pros.”
Fascinating because you're right. I mean, I know a ton of hedge fund guys that have all, and not that of all. I have a few that I know that have had hedge funds for 28 years, 30 years plus. But most of them play them out pretty spectacularly. I mean, the pressure that they have because some of the hedge funds. It's not how do you perform last quarter. It's what you do literally that's weak. Oh, yeah.
Like what were your returns last week? And that lifestyle. I think it's nearly impossible. There's probably, you know, a dozen people in the world who can actually perform under those terms. And just unbelievably stressful at the same time. Well, I mean, look at Carl Icon today. I mean, which I think is a tragedy, but, you know, supposedly almost bankrupt, you know,
highly levered potentially not going to make it. And arguably, one of the best investors of all time in many instances. Fascinating. One of the most interesting is Jesse Livermore. I wrote about him in psychology money. He was the best stock trader of the 1910s, 1920s. And he was one of the only people who in the crash of 1929 was short the market and made a fortune. And actually after the crash of 1929, by most accounts, he was the richest man in the world.
He made during the crash where everyone else was going bankrupt and literally jumping out of windows. The equivalent adjusted for, for inflation of like $3 billion in the crash. And he was already unbelievably wealthy, just use the best stock trader in the world. And he made and lost several fortunes. Because after every big win when he'd make the equivalent of $3 billion, $5 billion,
he would take more risk, more risk and blow themself up. And so he went effectively bankrupt like three times. He went from billionaire to bankrupt to billionaire to bankrupt over and over again. And eventually took his own life the last time he went broke.
And so he's always so interesting to me, I've like, nobody in the world was better at getting rich than Jesse Livermore.
Literally the most talented person on earth at getting rich. And he had no ability whatsoever to stay rich. He couldn't do it. And so I think back to like the Carl Icon, there's lots of people like that who are very good at getting rich and much less skilled. At staying rich. And to do wealth and actually you need an element of both. And they can be conflicting personalities of like a personality that says,
I'm going to take a risk and swing for the fences and try to get this done. And I'm going to be a little bit scared and a little bit paranoid and not and be scared of debt. That you need both of those at the same time. And I think a lot of times with entrepreneurs and traders, they have a lot of skill in the first bucket. Taking enormous risks, very smart and intelligent.
But the kind of personality that you need to be a billionaire hedge fund manager is not the kind of personality who also says, That's enough. Maybe I should put a bunch of money in treasury bonds and take money off the table. Like they just don't, it's not the kind of person.
“That's why I think like Elon Musk will either be a trillionaire or bankrupt.”
And at this point it's much closer to a trillionaire at this point. But if you look at him 10 years ago, when he was not the richest man in the world, you could see that. Like this guy is either going to be the richest man in the world or he's going to go bankrupt very quickly here. Yeah. And there's a lot of that in the world.
You know, I was checking that some of your tweets because it was like Elon Musk is Warren Buffett richer than Jeff Bezos this week. And that was, I wrote that probably years ago. Now I think Elon Musk is like multiple Jeff Bezos's richer than Bill Gates kind of thing. Like it's just a completely different universe. Yeah, that's so wild.
Let's talk about this for the many. So I was reading some updated statistics on Americans living paycheck to paycheck.
You know, 62% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck.
Well, a couple of it's astounded me though, is that 50% of Americans earning over a hundred K also do. And 36% of Americans earning over 200,000 annually say they're also living paycheck to paycheck, which kind of shocked me.
“What should you do every time you get your paycheck?”
You're not like apparently most of America. There's two things to pick apart here. One is that we should not pretend in most parts of the country, particularly if you have kids. That a hundred thousand dollars is a fortune. It's like the Austin Powers, like one million dollars thing.
And he's like, no, you gotta like update that. It's not, of course, what it used to be. And particularly if you have kids in childcare and a big mortgage that for a inflated house that you bought in recent years. A hundred thousand dollars in many parts of the country is not going to do it for a lot of people. It's an answer like to really answer your question. What should you do when you get a paycheck?
I think when you're looking at your expenses, you got mortgage, car payment, whatever it might be. Taking care of future you needs to be near the top of that pack. And I think a lot of finances understanding and like being kind to your future self. Having empathy with who you're going to be 30 days from now, 30 years from now, and being really kind to that person and taking care of that person. And I think that's, that's a big part of this.
One part of saving to is that I've always been a big saver and I don't feel like I'm necessarily saving for the future.
I don't feel like I'm saving money. I feel like I'm buying independence. I feel like every time I save money, I'm buying a little bit of independence. And I get benefit from that today. I'm not, when I save money, it's not like, oh, this will help me 10 years from now, even though it will. That helps me tomorrow if I can wake up and be like, I have a level of independence that I didn't before.
That's going to give me control over my life. And I think that's ultimately what people want out of money is freedom and independence. And the ability to wake up and just say, I can do what I want today and make my own choices and live my own life. You have a thesis that I really believe, which is, you don't have to be smarter to make more money. You actually just have to know more and be more knowledgeable to make more money.
“I think the key is that you actually just have to have the right behaviors.”
And this is where a lot of people get thrown off in finance where we associate people who do well financially with big brain intellectuals. Harvard MBA worked at Goldman Sachs, hedge fund manager, we assume that's who's going to be the best. And I think there's, I think that can be true, but there's also in a way that exists in almost no other field. You have a complete nobody living in the middle of nowhere, no education, no background, no connections who does amazing financially. Because they have their right behaviors, they're calm, they're patient, they lack a big ego.
They have a couple of behavioral traits even if they know nothing about money and that's all they need to do. And on the flip side of that, you can have the Harvard MBA hedge fund manager who blows himself up financially. Or even if they don't blow themselves up, they are actually living paycheck to paycheck. They have a lot of financial sophistication, but they have no control over their behaviors. They're sense of greed and ego and patience and long-term thinking. Now, they'd be surprised how many Wall Street pros fit that bill.
Of like, big brain intellectuals, not a lot of the behavioral aspect that actually is needed to do well financially over time. Oh, yeah, I mean, I saw it all the time. When I was on Wall Street, that was the norm.
“Yeah, I remember one of our sales managers when I was at a company off of Wall Street. Actually, at this point, he said a line to me I'll never forget, which is with his sales guys.”
And so they're selling financial investments, like pension, sovereign wealth funds, et cetera.
And he said, hey, you know, when you go to hire your team, because I was a managing director, he was managing director. He goes, you always want them to optimize for one thing.
Oh, my God, what? He's like, as many spots in the garage as possible. And I was like, why? That seems sort of irrelevant. He goes, because if you get them hooked on cars, you'll also get them hooked on employment. Yeah, yeah. And I saw it firsthand. It was like, you know, look at my Ferrari, my Lamborghini, my whatever. And then these guys were slaves to the paycheck and used to look at, you know, myself at the time, like a dual income no kids. I think they called us dinks. And, and they were like, God, this is so great. You must, like, not have anything to spend on. I go, well, it's also because I don't give a fuck about like cars and huge houses and all of that stuff.
But how do you trick yourself into that? Because I think society tricks us into believing, I can spend so that other people will like me, or so that I can show off to other people. Do you have a trick to, like, that you use every day where you go, no, no, no. I actually trick my brain into thinking that saving and spending wisely is better. I think it's a healthy, selfish motivation with money to say, like, I want my money to benefit and be a tool for happiness for myself and my immediate family.
And that's about where the goals end. Because I think we always overestimate how much other people are paying attention to us.
And so it's easy to tell ourselves, if I had this and that in this house and this car and these clothes, other people would give me a level of respect and admiration that they're not right now.
You always overestimate how much those people are actually thinking about you.
These group of researchers put a woman in a very ugly sweater, like an objectively hideous sweater and sent her into a party. And she mingled about and she came out and they asked her, they said, how many people in the party do you think noticed your hideous sweater? And she's like, all of them, it's humiliating. And then they go in and ask people in the party, did you notice the woman in the ugly sweater? No, no, no, no. Nobody's thinking about you as much as you are. And that goes for your ugly stuff, for your insecurities and what you might think other people will really admire you for.
And so I desperately want the attention and the admiration from like seven people in life, right? Who's who's love and attention are actually a big part of my life.
“My family, a handful of very, very close friends and you should not pretend that the other people walk in down the street, driving past you, care whatsoever.”
It's not quite black and white, like I want to fit into the social group that I choose and to do that, I need to talk a certain way, dress a certain way. It's not that nobody, it's not to just ignore everybody and do your own thing.
But we overestimate the benefit that we get from it. And I first started thinking about this when I was about 19, I was a valet at a five star hotel in Los Angeles.
And when somebody drove into the hotel in a Ferrari or Lamborghini, I would stop and stare in admiration, but I never thought about the driver. What I would do is I would look at the car and I would say, if I was the driver one day, people will admire me. But I didn't care about the actual driver. And one day, I was like, do you see the irony here like, nobody cares about the driver, but they want to be the driver because then they think people will care about them. And it was just like no one's, and I think that was a big revelation for me of like, I see how this game is played now. You just overestimate the number of eyeballs that are on us.
And once you come to terms with that game, you can be like, okay, well, how can I then use money rather than as a useless tool to show offer other people who aren't paying attention. But as a tool to selfishly in a good way, improve the circumstances and the happiness and the independence of the life for myself and my family and a small group of friends around me.
I've never thought about the Ferrari that way, but you're absolutely right.
Nobody cares about the driver. You know, in fact, I negative effect the driver. I go back, guys, probably, you know, or he doesn't have a lot of cash. And so he wants to show it off this way, or he's like scamming people. So he's got a project that he's X, Y, Z. That's what I think when I see it on the internet. And it's not just cars, but even close, by and large, if someone looks at you and says, wow, really great jacket by and large, what happens is they're not actually admiring you, they're thinking if I had that jacket.
“Yeah, it's interesting though. I think there's one area where I've realized there's pushback differential, and I've even seen it in myself, which is physical fitness.”
Yeah. So like if you're fit or if you're physically good looking or well-styled, but you're right, it's not, I have a hot Gucci jacket or something. It's like if I am a type of person that is able to style myself and I am attractive, that actually has real reciprocal effects.
And probably is worth spending money on, which to me is bizarre, because I never cared about any of that before, but a lot of science seems to show that.
I think it's attractive to people who either want to be part of your social group, or you want them to be part of your social group, but that's a minority of people. And I feel like a lot of spending is this big broad trying to get the attention of people who don't necessarily care about you. And to your point, what do my wife and kids and close friends hopefully admire about me? It's not the square footage of my house or the horse power of my car. It's like am I a good dad? Do I play football in the driveway with my son? Do I sit and play with toys with my daughter?
“Am I responsive and receptive to my friends and go out and have dinner and laugh for a couple hours? That's what they care about.”
And I wrote about this in the book, I have a very good friend, I've known him for 20 years, one of my favorite people in the world. He's just he's I love spending time with them. And of our social group, he earns the least amount of money by far, and it bothers him. And he talks about how much it bothers him. And I told him one day, I was like, if you are a good friend, a good listener, a funny joke teller, and you're hardworking and taking care of your family, you've earned like 90% of the points that I'm capable of giving you as a friend.
And if you also happen to be rich and successful, maybe you would go up to like 9.2. But don't pretend like I like people because they make money. Some people will, like I only want to be friends with rich people. And those are the biggest shallowist, shortest living friendships that will exist. What do you think about, I mean, now you've, you've sold millions of copies of your first book, and I'm sure you will have this one as well. You've, you know, talked to some of the richest people in the world, you've talked to some of the most successful people in the world.
What have you found is the number one lie or untruth we are told about money?
I don't know if it's told so much has just expected, but there is a very clea...
that you can tell yourself, if only I had more money, those problems would go away.
“And I think to some extent, it can be true, money can give you a comfortable life and solve a lot of your problems.”
But what you see with a lot of rich people is that once they gain the money, they still had a lot of problems in their life. And that can be such a jarring feeling, because you told yourself, if only my net worth is X dollars, then I'll be good. And you get there and you're like, wait a minute, my friendship still on it, that great, my health is still not great, my marriage is still not that great. I still don't sleep at night, that well at night, I still have all these anxieties. And so then you kind of lose your sense of hope or you double down.
And so a lot of people are like, once my net worth is a million dollars, I'll be great.
And then you get there and you're like, well, I feel the same, so maybe it's two million. And you get there and like, I feel the same, maybe it's 10 million. And you're just constantly chasing the high that you think you're going to get from it. Money can solve a lot of problems in your life. But this is another area that we just overestimate what it can do for you.
What is the research that you've done showed is the amount of money for which we do derive a lot of happiness? Like how much, for somebody listening, how much you're like, you know what? You really don't feel bad for going up until this amount of money. I think it's so different for person, for person to person and geography to geography. But certainly at the lower levels, the more money you earn, the more that you can massively increase your happiness.
If your income goes from 10,000 years to 20,000 a year, you change your life completely. And going from 50 to 100 can change your life. Probably going from 100 to 200 can change your life. Different for everybody based off of their ambitions. But I think for a lot of people, once you own a house that has enough bedrooms for you and your kids,
and you like the neighborhood that you live in, and you have good neighbors that you enjoy, and your car isn't breaking down, and you're eating healthy food. And you're doing like, checking some pretty basic boxes, you have adequate health care, those things like that. And most bearers in life, you might be able to get that for different regions of region,
but 200 to 50, whatever it might be. Then after that, it's not that the money can't make you happier, but it diminishes quite quickly from there. And at the extreme levels, is there any difference in lifestyle between Elon Musk, who's worth, I think, 600 billion, and Jeff Bezos, who's worth 200 billion, of course not.
400 billion dollar difference, there's no difference in lifestyle whatsoever. For most of people, there would be no difference in lifestyle between 100 million and 100 billion. You have too many houses, you have planes, you have everything you could want. It just diminishes quickly from there. A more important point, though, is I think for a lot of people.
There is a net worth at which not only do you stop getting happier, but your life gets more complicated, and you start dealing with like big existential questions of who am I and what do I do with this? And it becomes a social liability. There's a level at which your friends and your family are going to start come asking you for money. You have such higher expectations of like, how do I raise kids without spoiling them and whatnot?
There's all those questions, and that level of net worth is probably lower than people think. I remember when I didn't have much money at all. I would listen to something like this. Yeah, I'm a triant. You have a triant. You'll see what happens.
And when I get there, if I'm still unhappy, fine. So be it, right? But I think the other thing to push back on here, and I feel this strongly,
“is like, you have to, like, what does Munger always say?”
And sentives always incentives.
And, you know, the incentive in the world today is to make you consume more, spend more, keep up with other people. It is just how our economic, in the competitive world. Yeah, in our society works. And so you have to like push back slightly on that and go, at what point is this all just
memetic desire where I'm chasing somebody else's dreams, somebody else's hope. And I'm stuck in a rat race that I didn't even want to enter in the first place. And, you know, I think you have a lot of reasons why we do that. And I love some of the quotes you have, like, spending money to show people how much money you have is the fastest way to have less.
And so, you know, even for the person that's listening out there, you know, it's not like, "Oh, don't worry, stay poor, we don't care." No. No.
It's really psychologically if you don't rewire your brain, you actually never will get wealthy.
And then simultaneously, you will have a counterproductive result, right? I think people should have a lot of ambition to have more money for independence. I think that should be the ultimate goal.
“It's not that money won't do anything for you and you should stop chasing it and enjoy being poor.”
Not that in this lightest. You should want more and I want more for that reason. I just want to be completely independent. And everybody is talented in their own way, can be happy in their own way if they have independence. And it's very difficult to have to express that talent and express who you are. If you are completely beholden to somebody else's goals, metrics, incentives, which most people are.
So that's why I think the ambition should be.
It's ambition for independence.
“So how do you tell if you're spending to show other people your cool versus your spending to get independence?”
This is like an imperfect way to think about it. I think about a lot about this in my own life, which is just asking if I was on a deserted island and nobody could see how I lived. Nobody could see a single possession that I have, where I still want this thing. And a lot of people in that mental exercise would say, in that world, I wouldn't change anything. I'd have the same cars in the same house and the same clothes and they're great.
And that's, I think a lot of people would answer that. But I think we would see it. Do you think a lot of people would say that? I think for the most part. Doesn't the African-American have like 20 pairs of shoes?
That's what it makes sense. Well, I think there is a lot of spending in the world that is purely social status. Yeah. It's just purely that. And so in that mental exercise, you understand the difference between utility and status.
Between like, what am I doing just to impress other people? And what is actually making my life better? And you can spend a lot of money to make your life better. It's not to say, like, on that desert island, I would have an awesome house. I would have very comfortable clothes.
And I wouldn't want to dress, feel like a slot, but I want to feel good about myself. So maybe it wouldn't be that much different. But you start thinking about things differently.
“If nobody was watching how would I live, because the truth is almost nobody is watching.”
I think that's a truth for most people. So in that situation, you go to, you just brought up Charlie Munger. And I just read this article about a month ago. That was describing his last week of life. There was last year of life, I should say.
And I might be getting a few of these details later on.
But he built an incredible house in Santa Barbara overlooking the ocean.
It was amazing how Santa Multi-Billionaire would own. And then he had his house in Pasadena that he had lived in like 60 years. And by every account, it was not just a middle-class house. It was like, there I say it, a dump. But he'd lived there for 60 years.
And in his last couple months of life, that's where he wanted to be. That's where he wanted to be. Not in the palace, overlooking the ocean. The house that felt like home to him, that had the memories that he had. That was probably I assume surrounded by neighbors who we enjoyed and friends in your by and whatnot.
That model explains a lot of things in life of like what you want out of this material possession is not just the price or the square footage or like the things that you can measure like that. So much of it is just like, well, do you actually enjoy it? It's the intangible things of what you enjoy them for. You know, it's so interesting because you have a quote that I really like,
which is somebody saying, quote, "Rentine is throwing your money away."
Is the kind of thing you said by a guy who has never had to replace the roof on a house.
I wrote that tweet in anger after replacing the roof on our house. I feel I felt that for me. I'm curious. Do you think it's better to own or rent a house? I can tell you might experience my wife and I rented for a decade or more,
and it was the greatest thing in the world. We lived in like five different cities and we could just pick up and go. And that flexibility at that phase of our life was unbelievable. And I was very pro-wrenching. I don't believe houses are great investments, financial investments. That's always my view.
About a week after our first child was born, I felt this overwhelming sense that like, I want to buy my own house and I want to do it right now. The idea of like, I don't want to be a transient renter. I want a firm solid home base for my family.
That feeling was so strong. So we went out and bought and it was and it's been great.
“The important thing was like, you should buy when you can afford it.”
And when you think you're going to settle down. And the idea of like people doing these calculations of like, "Oh, well, actually if I bought, I would save $100 a month."
First is if I rent, this is not a spreadsheet endeavor.
Like you should do it when you can afford it. But so much of it is just the value and stability that you want for you and your family. I think we did a lot of harm in society when we taught people that a rising home prices are a good thing that did a lot of damage to people. It's a terrible thing.
And the decision of whether you should buy or rent is a spreadsheet decision. Versus just the quality of life and the kind of life that you want for you and your family. Like those two, I think things inadvertently did a lot of damage to society. Thank you, right. I mean, because when you look at the math, it's actually quite hard to argue
that home ownership is better than rentain. If it's just looking from math. If all you're looking for is the financial outcome. I would not be surprised. In fact, I think it's almost certain that I've been a homeowner for 10 years
that if I had rented the whole time, my net worth would be higher. I think that's probably right. Well, of course, because-- And not a single sell in my body if I had a time machine. Would go back here.
Would do it differently. Yeah, it's a good point. I'm not doing this to maximize my net worth. I'm doing it so I have a stable place for my children. That's it.
And we can live in the school district that we want to. And that-- and I think the sense of ownership that comes with owning your house
Is a really good fulfilling thing.
If you're in the phase of your life, where you're ready for that.
“I want to talk about something else that I think maybe is a detriment to society and that”
people have categorized wrong, at least I think, but I'd be curious your take. Let's talk about passive income. Is it real? Can you get it? Is this reasonable for people to want?
I think it rarely, if ever, exists. Because what people think of passive income is I don't have to work to get this. And anyone who's been like a landlord, like realizes that could be a full time job for doing it. Or owning small businesses. The idea, like, oh, you just buy them and collect the checks.
Tens not to be the case. You understand this better than anybody.
If you're investing in the stock market, the psychological price you can pay for the uncertainty
and the volatility, or investing in somebody else's private equity fund. And the psychological price tag that you pay of, like, dealing with that person, trusting that person, lack of trust with that person. The returns are coming in like you thought you don't know when the returns are going to come in. That's a cost.
And it's a different cost than driving to work and working nine to five in a cubicle. It's a different cost, but let's not pretend that it's not a cost that you just give money to people. And then the money just starts flowing back. You don't have to do anything for it. It's easy to underestimate the price tag of those things.
That's true, even if you're just talking about the K1s and the tax applications. In public stocks, it's the volatility and the uncertainty. And once or twice a decade, that will be harrowing. You will not be able to sleep as a stock market's falling 50%.
And you don't know if this is a run of the milk correction or the second grade depression.
And you'll deal with that twice a decade.
“How do you protect your mind and your psychology for those horrible financial life events like that?”
I say a lot of money. Am I saving for a new house? No. Am I saving for retirement? Like not necessarily.
I'm saving for a world in which things are going to happen in the broader world. And in my life, personally, that I can't foresee that I am not thinking about today. And we'll have a major impact on my life. And so that's the psychology of it. I think a lot of financial advisors might look at my net worth allocation and say, like,
What are you preparing for? It's not that conservative, but probably more cash than people would generally recommend. And I think a lot of it is just being an amateur student of history. Like all history is a constant chain of surprises that nobody saw coming that fundamentally shape the world. Usually in bad ways.
And the people who do OK over time are the people who have a conservative enough financial arrangement and mental flexibility to endure those episodes. What are the habits of rich people versus poor people you've found in all your research? Well, there's obviously a lot of survivorship bias in rich people. So you can look at someone who's very wealthy and be like, well, look what they did.
They started this business and they took a huge risk and they didn't do this. And here's their morning routine. And for every one of those things, there are a thousand other people who did something very similarly and failed. And also that I think there's a Paul Graham quote where he says, Half of the attributes of very successful people are actually liabilities to them.
And so we can look at an entrepreneur and be like, Oh, he wakes up at three in the morning and runs twenty miles. But that's not why he's successful. He's a crazy person in general and he has all these other crazy attributes. Like there's no cause and effect in that. And so I think if you wanted to create a common denominator of it,
it's a combination of obsession and long-term thinking. It's a combination of like, these people don't obviously work nine to five. They wake up thinking about their business. They go to bed thinking about their business. When they're playing baseball with their kids, they're thinking about work.
“It's the only thing that they can think about.”
And they don't want to do it for two years in sell their business. They want to do it for fifty years. They want to do it for seventy years. All wealth comes from compounding. And when most people think about compounding, they're like, Well, how can I earn the highest returns?
What is appealing is how can I earn the highest returns for the shortest period of time? And where most wealth actually comes from is like, How can I earn merely good returns for a very long period of time? That's where it tends to come from. So if you find someone who's very good at their job or very wealthy, the common denominator of those people tends to be,
they've been doing the same thing for thirty years or whatever it might be. And if anyone does the same thing every day for thirty years, of course you're going to get good at it. So true, you have another quote I love, which is that everything that ends up working in finance stems from patients and self-control, everything that doesn't work stems from instant gratification and foam.
I've done a lot of work with like a young, young students, high school students. And two things stick out. One is I think relative to our previous generations. They're smarter because they have more information than we did. They're just constantly drinking from a fire hose of information.
They know things about the world that we didn't when we were 17.
And the other thing is every single group among these very intelligent kids.
“Everybody will ask me some version of the question, What penny stock should I buy to double my money this week?”
And I have to remind myself that like these kids aren't dumb, they're very smart. But the knee jerk reaction, what seems like common sense to everybody is how can I get rich the fastest? It's just what's the fastest way to get there? And that's the cause of every financial failure is usually trying to take something that naturally should take 10 or 20 or 30 years. And being like, Well great, but I don't have the patience for that.
How can I compress it as fast as I possibly can? And I think that's what it comes from. And the idea of being patient is not intelligence. It's not education. That's purely just behavioral.
There's some people who have no education. That can be the most patient people in the world. And people who are extremely intelligent who have the attention span of a fly. They just they can't they can't keep it going. Now I think it tends to be in finance.
It's sometimes the smartest people are the most impatient. And because they want to use their intelligence and their IQ to be like, Well, How can I speed this process up and get it as fast as I can? And that's the source of every blow up. That's fascinating.
It does feel like, I mean, I go back to like the Buffet quote of, you know, Why do you tell people all of your secrets? I mean, it's like, is nobody else wants to get rich slowly? They're not going to do it, right? Yeah.
You know, it's just so true. It's like, Morgan, why would you write a book on how to make a bunch of money and keep it? Because probably most people who read it aren't even going to do anything. I think about my parents. They have no financial education.
Moderate financial knowledge. That was like self-taught just from just like very modest interest in it. And so they are not the persona of like financial sophistication. But they did one thing, which is they dollar cost average into index funds, and they haven't sold anything for 40 years ever.
And if you compare their returns to professional fund managers, they're literally not it's beyond top one percent. It's probably top point one percent to this point. They've outperform for doing nothing and for knowing nothing. Because all they had was all that you actually needed was just like a profound sense of patience
and leaving it alone. Do you think that most people should just put money into a diversified, invest on portfolio, leave it there? Most sellers. Most people.
That's it. I'm not a passive investing zealot. The person who's like nobody can beat the market don't even try. Of course, some people can beat the market. People have beat the market and they'll continue doing that.
And some people have done that profoundly well. But it's like asking, you know, should most people try to get in the NBA. Like no, like some people can do it. Like this is not pretend that I can do it. And they were that.
Like of course it's hard. So whatever people bring up this statistics of like 99% of mutual funds will underperform their benchmark. They use that as a indication of like see the industry's a scam.
My response has always been like, no, it's of course it's how it works.
What world do you expect to live in and where everybody who tries to beat the market and make a fortune can do it? Like of course that's never going to exist. Just like everybody who wants to join the NBA is not going to be able to. And I don't know what the statistics are. Like what percentage of high school basketball players
make the NBA? I don't know. It's probably 0.00, like whatever it is.
“And people are like, yeah, that's how it should work.”
And it's the exact same in investing. So your question is like, should most people dollar cost average in index? Yes. Does that mean it's impossible to beat the market? No.
It also humans. We are the like you talked about optimism bias. But we are such funny little creatures. And that we will try to go beat the market. I mean, I talked to a lot of young people today too.
And that's always what they want to know.
Is, you know, how do I buy a business for zero dollars in 30 days? That makes me millions. That's an absentee owner that I don't need to. Right. Right.
And like the second you figure that out, fill me in. Let me know. We'll be right there with you. I think a lot of it is because the barriers to entry of investing in the stock market are zero. And you can any any 17 year old can open up a Robinhood account and transfer $20 into it
and start trading the same stocks that Citadel is trading at the same time. And there's not a lot of other things in life that I like that. If I said, if you said to a 17 year old like, "Hey, do you think you can go build the Golden Gate Bridge?" No. Of course, it's impossible.
But you can open up a Robinhood account and start pretending that you're the next George Soros. Right. So because the barriers to entry are so low, it gives everyone the shot of like maybe this is my ticket. Let me convince myself that I can do it. It's so true.
And you get this. I remember back in the day I had a chance to invest in Robinhood when it was like super super early on. And I'm an idiot and I didn't.
“But the reason why I didn't, I actually kind of stand by, which is that I really don't think you should gamify stock market investing.”
And so I remember when I saw the pitch in the background, I just thought, "I don't think this is going to be good for society." I think most people who work at Robinhood and work at Kalshi and Paul I mark are good people who want to do the right things. This is not a complete moral indictment on them.
No, I don't think we'll look back at those kind of tools as having helped a g...
I think if you compare Robinhood to Vanguard, Vanguard is an index fund company, super low cost, long term.
“That I think you could look back at something and say like that did a lot of good for people.”
But something that gamifies it is really important. There's a great interview with John Stewart when he was on the daily show. He interviewed Jim Cramer and this was in 2008, kind of the teeth of the financial crisis when the market imploded. And Jim Cramer went on the show and John Stewart's bringing up example after example of in a mockery fashion of like what CNBC was. And John Stewart had a quote that I loved. He was like, "I know you want to be entertaining, but this is not a game.
This is people's retirement, this people's life savings, this is not, this is not the casino, this is not entertainment, this should not be entertainment, it's a very serious thing." And you can see how like if we gamified health, people be like, "No, no, it's not a game, but you don't want to do that, especially if the risk of losing is cancer or something. People like you, that's not a game done to it, but we do that with money. And we do it to the most vulnerable segment of the population, which are young kids, particularly young boys who's pre-formal cortex won't fully develop for another 10 years as their day trading.
It's almost over the state, this school of school is just an example, and then hopefully this is the end. Oh, no, garney, this state is my savings. Do you think everything is possible? Yes, exactly, this state is like the state of the state who just understands, the state of the studio, the job, or the home. The state of the state is really not like the state of the state.
The state of the state? Save! With this state. Amazon beat all the fish-buck-in-a-n-a-l-t-n-d-in-d-logistic-centrum-extra-family-in-boni. So, we're on top of the city, the city of a new city in the city of Amheld.
Your glutes are for you, the beautiful city of the city. That means, you're the most beautiful city of all.
I've ever thought about it that way, but you're exactly right. My first job was a fan-guard, out of college.
And what I remember is like going to the cafeteria in Pennsylvania, I'm totally like a valley porch. Pennsylvania, where the headquarters is, and walking to the cafeteria, and that was when Bogel was still alive. The founder, and he was just sitting at the cafeteria table every day. And you could go up to him, he was an old gent, and he would get his little things. And he was like the opposite of what you think about as a flashy billionaire in the States.
“He kind of famously, I think, like Buffett drove a Buick.”
I can't remember exactly what it was, but it was some old car. But what I really respected out of him is that he kind of believed, he drank his own cool it. He really believed what he was doing there. And they actually, I remember at the time, they actually had an intellectual pattern on their shareholders structure, where this is like slightly technical, but it's kind of interesting.
Where they were one of the only mutual holding companies in the finance space, you know? And I remember I know one of the guys that was the one who came up with this model. And so it basically mandated just like an insurance company that you put all the earnings back to the funds to lower the cost. People don't understand this, most people don't understand this about Vanguard. Vanguard is effectively a non-profit.
And the reason Bogel didn't look like a flashy billionaire, because he wasn't. He did this incredible thing when he started it.
He took an entrepreneurial risk, an entrepreneurial effort, and built effectively a non-profit that he was never going to get rich off of.
And Vanguard pays dividends so to speak, and the forms of lower fees, to average ordinary people saving for retirement. And so like you look at that, like that's a public benefit. That's something that you look back, you're like that benefited society. The ability for 17 year olds to wager their life savings on a football game is not.
“It's not. I totally agree. So I think, so I mean, is there a good way?”
Like how do you learn investing without just learning gambling in the public markets? But harder today than it was 10 or 20 years ago, because so much of the material and the tools for young people investing are strictly round gambling. And so it's harder to do, I think, a lot of endeavors in life. If you start off not necessarily by trying it, not necessarily by like, "Oh, open an account and start trading." Start out by reading as many books as you can.
And not books that teach you how to invest. I would read books about the history of the economy. And like that could be boring and drive for some people, but you learn very quickly about how people's susceptibility to greed and fear and regret and copying other people. And if you can understand the basic tenets of those kind of things, you can learn so much about how you should invest.
And the forces of investment of greed and fear and long-term thinking and short-termism. If you can wrap your head around those concepts, you've learned 90% of what you need to know about investing before you've bought a single stock.
What are your favorite books on a investment if you had to pick?
I think the most interesting period in US history was the 1930s and 1940s, Great Depression World War II.
And less about the specifics of what happened about like, you know, the military battles.
“It's just that there was a wider range of emotions in that 15-year period than I think is ever existed, at least in periods that we've documented very well.”
So you read about that period of the uncertainty that people went through of the fear, the torment and the trauma, the happiness and elation when it was all over. The range of emotions during that period, I think, was just astounding. So there's a trilogy of books written by a guy named Frederick Lewis Allen. His three books, one's on the 1920s, so a little bit before, one's on the 1930s. And then his last one is how America changed from 1900 to 1950.
And that's been one of my favorite history books. And Frederick Lewis Allen was not writing about the big characters of the day. He's not writing about Churchill and FDR. He's writing about a farmer in Iowa, like, what was his life like?
And how did his life change when the car and the airplane and the radio came about?
What was life like that? What were his fears during the Great Depression? It goes into detail about ordinary people doing ordinary things in a way that I think is really fascinating. This is why I think people should read more history and fewer forecasts. Like, everything that we deal with today, it's a different cast of characters, but it's the same movie over and over again, of dealing with uncertainty and risk and regret.
And so if you read a lot of history, even about periods that you think have no analogy to today, like the 1920s or the 1820s, it's the same emotions that people are dealing with today. And that gives you a totally different perspective of what we're going through today. When you're like, you think it's unprecedented, what we're dealing with, whatever it might be. AI, Trump, whatever it might be, you think it's unprecedented, totally not.
People have dealt with this same thing in different forms for all of history. Yeah, I'm reading one right now called Software by Larry Ellison. Well, on Larry Ellison. It's a great title, by the way. I know, it's software. Software. I just got it. That's good.
But the interesting part is that it is all this repetition. So, you know, he was building software companies and kind of, in some ways, you could say that the initial AI companies back in the 90s. And you can see, you can see the rhythms to today. And so it's a really fascinating book if you're into building things. Have you ever made a really reckless money decision, but it actually paid off?
I wouldn't say it was necessarily reckless, but we bought a house, I don't know, eight years ago or so. And we came up with a budget, and here's our budget for the house, and then we're house shopping. And of course, I think a lot of people have those experience. Oh, we found this one, and it's way out of budget, but like, look at that thing, like that's fantastic. And it gave me a lot of sleepless nights, the decision to buy it.
I'm really going to do this, but we knew our life would be better. It was a better house and a better neighborhood with better schools, and I could check all those boxes. And since I had set an arbitrary limit of what our budget was, it felt reckless. It really did feel reckless. And I should say this was during a period when my career and the economy were not going that well. And so it was like, this feels wrong, but we did it.
And looking back at that, it was like, I'm so, so glad that we did that, so glad that we did it.
To me, that's always been a thing of like, of course, you can use money as a tool to live a better life.
“To many people get caught up in the fragality movement of like the best way to do everything is as cheap as you possibly can.”
Like, no, you can, you can live an awesome life and have a lot of material things that are fantastic. They will have no regrets of later. So that was an area where I'm like, I'm so glad, even it may not have been reckless. We could still afford it, but I'm so glad that I extended my comfort zone in that area. And I think a lot of people's comfort zones are self-imposed.
And sometimes you have to be like, look, for this thing that means everything to me, I want to go outside of it. Do you ever buy anything really ridiculous? Are you ever like, I got shit. I bought that diamond and crushed a Rolex. No. I mean, it's all relative, I guess. We have a cool house. My wife is really into gardening and landscaping.
And the amount that she spent on like rocks and trees. Surprisingly expensive. Surprisingly expensive. That is a, yeah, we travel well. My kids travel well. So everyone's got their little thing.
Yeah. We go out to dinner a lot. But there's not like nothing more going to happen. If the internet only knew. I spend a lot on ski equipment. I grew up skiing.
Oh, that is. And that's, that's my thing right now. I don't know if it's moving the needle that much, but if they make a better version, even if it doesn't improve anything at all, I'm like, give me. Or one of those people that knows the names of all the fancy ski towns in like you're up.
Oh, yeah. That is not me. I wish I were talking about that with.
“I think it was Vivian too, who I really liked to.”
But she was like, you know what I realized that even though I had gone to the fancy schools,
I was making money on Wall Street and whatever,
she realized that rich people speak a different language. Oh, yeah. They were like, oh, we're going to Bimini and then we're going to. And she was like, what do we, what, where's this? What's happening?
If you know what shamanie means, I can guess your net wealth. Yeah. You're your new net worth. I think it's going to be at least.
If you're skiing at, at shamanie, 10 million.
Yeah. Wow. Yeah. So if you're single, looking for a rich dude. Shamanie.
Shamanie. Okay. Not that I would really pick up men that way. I don't have any experience with that. I'm married a sailor.
Um, okay, rapid fire. So I'm going to read some common money cliches. And I want you to tell me to your false. Yeah. And you can give me a short explanation.
Okay. Everyone's that you feel like it. Talking about money is tacky. Can be, if you're bragging and flexing with other people, but we should talk about it more because everyone's dealing with the same problems.
“Talking to your friends, parents, spouse, essential.”
Yeah. Good idea. Follow your passion and the money will come. I will mimic Scott Gallaway when I said the people who say that made all their money and iron ore smelting.
And now they say it.
Buying a house is always a smart move.
No. Renting is throwing money away. No. It can be fantastic at that phase of your life. All dead is bad, dad.
I think all dead can be bad, dad. You can blow yourself up with any form of dead. Doing it wrong. Credit cards are dangerous. Credit cards are alcohol.
You can use them and have a great time and a great night. You can easily abuse them and a lot of people do. That's good line. Deversification is always safer. I think that's right.
Because if you're saying that safer. No. If you're diversified, you're not going to be the richest person in the world. That's always the case. But I think the vast majority of people don't want to.
They don't want to outperform. They just want to comfortable retirement without putting too much effort into it. You can't beat the market. You can't be in the NBA. That's so true.
Max your 401k no matter what. Some nuance here. Particularly for young people who might stay at a company for two years. Your company probably has a vesting schedule on the match. So a lot of people are like it's free money.
Get the match. It's true if you invest into it. If you're going to leave a company after a year or two, a lot of young people do, you're going to lose all that anyways. I explained to them what vesting is.
If somebody gives you money, it can be stock options. It can be a match in your 401k. I give you a dollar. But you don't actually get access to it at some point in the future. So I give you here's a dollar.
But you actually get 25 cents a year from now. And another 25 cents a year after that. And in four years, you can have all of it.
“And so that's what a lot of times the match on 401k is.”
It's a really good point. I also think people don't understand enough about stock options when they take jobs. Our mutual friend, Brent, be sure at this quote where he was like, yeah, I talked to a guy. And he said, I joined a tech start up and I'm making 500k a year. And Brent said, how much of that is options?
He said, well, it's 400 options. I make 100k salary and 400 options. And Brent goes, what's the strike price on the options? I don't know. What's the vesting schedule?
I don't know. Is there a preferred stack? I don't know. You make 100 grand a year. You're like, there's so many things in between there that such a big gap between the headline number.
And what you could actually get afterwards to make those things very different. Yeah, you can't eat equity. I think it's like the big actual, uh, fall city of our generation is that so many people.
I mean, I read a study the other day that said somewhere between 70 and 90 percent of stock options.
Uh, end up worth less. And so if you didn't actually optimize for some degree of salary and I really do believe in upside. Like take a little money off the table. Sure. But all of it.
Okay. Two more. Stop buying avocado toast and you'll be rich. No, enjoy it. It's delicious.
It's not misnomer.
“The only thing that moves the needle in most people's lives is school house, car, child care.”
Health insurance. The only thing that moves the needle. Everything else you're just spit around the edges. So enjoy your toast. Sponsored by the avocado.
Um, save 20 percent and you'll be fine. Save 20 percent and you'll be ahead of most people and better off than you otherwise. Would be. But you can still and will have challenges every day in your life. Money won't solve all your problems.
So Morgan, how's all on all the socials? Which ones your favorite? Twitter? And so you must see the only thing I spend time on is X and Twitter. I can't go.
I have Instagram, but I don't use it that much. Okay. I don't know why. So I'm both. I really like your stuff on X.
And then the book. Obviously psychology of money. I feel like if you have a red that oh my god, you better get there. But I think your new book, the art of spending is almost, it's not even a two point out. I almost might even start with that in some ways before psychology of money.
It's, I feel like you could read either of those book in our changeably. Part of the reason I wrote it is because a lot of psychology money is about building wealth and investing, which is important. But not everyone is going to get to that point. But spending money impacts everybody from every income level, every generation. How you spend what you spend, what you aspire to spend on that impacts everybody.
Yeah, and the other thing about the book that I really like, that sounds like a God awful boring book.
It's not.
Like you're so good at the stories.
“And you know, here's some specific takeaways.”
Without it feeling like I'm getting lectured to or there's a 372 step process.
Or there's a formula or something like that.
Yeah, it's like, no. You got me got me here when you said that. I was like, fuck.
But that's one of the most finance books are is a formula in the lecture.
“This is just, let me tell you some stories that I think you'll like about risk and greed and fear.”
And they'll stick with you. And then you might actually just change your life and say more money. I hope so. Morgan, how's all?
“I've just adored your books over the years.”
Thank you so much for writing them. Thank you for being here. Thank you for talking about money. So often, you know, all of us once we make it, we don't talk about it anymore. Because it seems kind of gross in some ways.
So I really appreciate you sharing all your wisdom today. I appreciate everything you've done. Thanks for having me.



