Founders - #103 Hetty Green (The Richest Woman in America)
Episode Date: December 22, 2019What I learned from reading The Richest Woman in America: Hetty Green in the Gilded Age by Janet Wallach. ----Come see a live show with me and Patrick O'Shaughnessy from Invest Like The Best on Octob...er 19th in New York City. Get your tickets here! ----Subscribe to listen to Founders Premium — Subscribers can listen to Ask Me Anything (AMA) episodes and every bonus episode. ---[0:10] She was the smartest woman on Wall Street, a financial genius, a railroad magnate, a real estate mogul, a Gilded Era renegade, a reliable source for city funds.[0:19] “I have had fights with some of the greatest financial men in the country. Did you ever hear of any of them getting ahead of Hetty Green?”[1:10] I go my own way, take no partners, risk nobody else’s fortune.[1:29] She was considered the single biggest individual financier in the world.[1:58] A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age by Jimmy Soni and Rob Goodman (Founders #95)[2:55] Watch your pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves.[3:31] Don’t close a bargain until you have reflected on it overnight.[4:00] I am always buying when everyone wants to sell, and selling when everyone wants to buy.[4:51] I never set out for anything that I don’t conquer.[5:55] To live content with small means; To seek elegance rather than luxury, And refinement rather than fashion; To be worthy, not respectable, and wealthy, not rich.[7:27] Her father’s advice: Never owe anyone anything.[9:44] By the time she is 13 she is the family bookkeeper.[11:53] She paid attention when he (her father) repeated again and again that property was a trust to be taken care of and enlarged for future generations. She obeyed when he insisted that she keep her own accounts in order and later praised the experience. “There is nothing better than this sort of training,” she said.[13:28] Hetty hungered for money itself.[14:08] List of financial panics discussed in the book: Panic of 1857, Panic of 1866, The Long Depression 1873-1896 which had several panics within, (Panic of 1873, 1884, 1890, 1893) Panic 1901 and Panic of 1907.[16:18] She was a master at studying what happened before her.[16:31] The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt by TJ Stiles. (Founders #54) and Tycoon's War: How Cornelius Vanderbilt Invaded a Country to Overthrow America's Most Famous Military Adventurer by Stephen Dando-Collins (Founders #55)[17:15] Clever men like Russell Sage, a future role model for Hetty, kept substantial amounts of cash on hand and used it to buy stocks at rock-bottom prices. John Pierpont Morgan told his son there was a good lesson to be learned from other people’s greed and good bargains to be found in the aftermath. In future times, Hetty would always keep cash available and use it to buy when everyone else was selling. Much later, Warren Buffett would do the same. But most people watched their money wash away in the flood.[23:57] This was the start of the contrary investing she followed for the rest of her life: buying when everyone else was selling; selling when everyone else was buying. “I buy when things are low and nobody wants them. I keep them until they go up and people are crazy to get them. That is, I believe, the secret of all successful business,” she said.[26:46] Hetty, like Claude Shannon, Warren Buffett, and Ed Thorp, collected a lot of information. Hetty read more and studied more than most other people.[28:07] The opportunities were enormous for those with the stomach to take the risks.[30:25] The markets may change, the methods may be revamped, but as long as human beings are propelled by greed and ego, they are doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past.[31:11] She had a pile of cash when others were scouring for pennies, but she also had a deft mind and the colossal courage to push against the crowd.[36:17] Hetty’s investments were not always known: she purchased property under fictitious names, bought stocks under other identities, and was praised by shrewd observers for how closely she held her positions.[37:41] Williams greeted his new customer with all the courtesy and respect due a woman of her wealth. “I have observed that many a tattered garment hides a package of bonds and that gorgeous clothing does not always cover a millionaire,” he told his colleagues.[44:14] The Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America's Banana King by Rich Cohen (Founders #37)[45:52] Hetty didn't like the idle rich. She respected authentic achievement.[48:48] Companies who stocks had skyrocketed collapsed when their lack of capital was revealed.[49:22] The HP Way: How Bill Hewlett and I Built Our Company by David Packard. (Founders #29)[49:30] More companies die from indigestion than starvation. —David Packard[50:58] She used her intelligence to increase her wealth, her independence to live as she wished, and her strength to battle anyone who stood in her way.[55:24] They sought her out to sell off their possessions. As rates rose, more and more of “the solidest men in Wall Street,” she said, from “financiers to legitimate businessmen,” came to call, begging to unload everything from palatial mansions to automobiles. “They came to me in droves,” she recalled.[59:30] When it comes to spending your life, there have to be some things neglected. If you try to do too much, you can never get anywhere.[59:53] You see this advice over and over again. You just got to figure out what that thing is that you want to focus on. No one can answer that question for you.[1:00:14] I think the key to a happy life is getting to the end of your life with the least amount of regrets as possible.[1:00:24] She prized the life she led. “I enjoy being in the thick of things. I like to have a part in the great movements of the world and especially of this country. I like to deal with big things and with big men. I would rather do [this] than play bridge. Indeed, my work is my amusement, and I believe it is also my duty.”——“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested, so my poor wallet suffers. ”— GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast ----Founders Notes gives you the ability to tap into the collective knowledge of history's greatest entrepreneurs on demand. Use it to supplement the decisions you make in your work. Get access to Founders Notes here. ----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast
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A passerby might say she looked as poor as a church mouse, but her clothes were merely a costume to conceal her incredible wealth.
Hedy Green was the richest woman in America.
She was the smartest woman on Wall Street, a financial genius, a railroad magnate, a real estate mogul, a Gilded Era renegade.
I've had fights with some of the greatest financial men in the country, she said.
Did you ever hear of any of them getting ahead of Hedy Green? The public resented the somberness of her clothing,
the plainness of her diet, the austerity of her home. But Hedy Green refused to yield to the role
of gilded age socialite. Indeed, she refused to comply with any stereotype. Defiantly independent,
she made her own rules and lived by them. Whatever
method she used to make her money, she would not succumb to the tactics of other millionaires.
She did not employ workers as slave wages, did not steal land from the public or outsmart
stockholders or pay off government officials. She did not scheme with Wall Street or speculate
with other people's money. No, she told a reporter, her formula for success was simple, common sense and hard work.
I go my own way, take no partners, risk nobody else's fortune.
Her holdings ranged from mortgages in real estate in New York to dozens of buildings in downtown Chicago. Gold, copper, and iron mines out west, diamonds
and pearls, railroads, and government bonds. She was considered the single biggest individual
financier in the world. By the time she died in 1916, she was worth $100 million, the equivalent
of more than $2 billion today. Okay, so that is an excerpt from the book that I read this week
and the one I'm going to talk to you about today,
which is The Richest Woman in America,
Hedy Green in the Gilded Age.
And it was written by Janet Wallach.
So I found out about Hedy Green
when I was reading the book, A Mind at Play,
which is the book about Claude Shannon.
And in the book, it says that when Shannon wanted to learn about investing,
he read books about other investors. And one of the people that he read about and that he studied
was Hedy Green. So my calculus was rather simple. Claude Shannon was really smart. And if he learned
from Hedy Green, why wouldn't I? So I'm going to jump right into the book. I have a lot of notes.
In fact, I spent about two hours before I sat down to record trying to edit down my notes with not
a lot of success.
So at the very end of the book, they have this like excerpt, this additional chapter,
it's called The Wisdom of Hedy Green. And it contains a bunch of aphorisms that she'd repeat
throughout her life. And I actually think putting that at the beginning is a way for one, for us to
learn about the personality, like who was the person. And I think having that information before
you study like their early life and how they built their business, I think that's helpful. All right, so let me just read you some of the aphorisms that I
particularly enjoyed. Before deciding on an investment, seek out every kind of information
about it. She says, watch your pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves.
After your business is over, you may take your colleague to dinner and the theater or allow him to take you.
But wait until the transaction has been closed and the money paid.
She's got some advice on what to do before making a deal.
She says, before making a deal, if anyone is full enough to offer you the full amount, take it.
If you are offered less, tell the man you will give him the answer in the morning.
Think the matter over carefully in the evening.
If you decide that it will be to your advantage to accept the offer, say so the next day. And then this ties into another one of
her aphorisms, which is in business generally, don't close a bargain until you have reflected
on it overnight. She says it's the duty of every woman to learn how to take care of her own business
affairs. When good things are so low that
no one wants them I buy them and lay them away in the safe when owing to some
new development and they go they go up and my shares are so needed that men
will pay well for them I am ready to sell more on how the way she invests and
thinks about value I am always buying when everyone wants to sell and selling
when everyone wants to buy and I'll give you several examples of that later on
Then she's gonna list what I would say is like her main focus. She says railroads and real estate are things
I like
Government bonds are good though. They do not pay very high interest
still for a woman safe and low is better than risky and high and
Finally common sense is the most valuable possession anyone can have.
So let me go back to what she was saying,
the fact that she likes railroads, real estate, and government bonds.
I would say after studying her, that was her circle of competence.
That's where she invested most of her money.
Okay, so I want to go over, I pulled out a couple other excerpts
that will explain to you the person behind the ideas.
And so if there's only one sentence that could distill her personality down, it would be this. And this is a quote from her. She says, I never set out for anything that
I don't conquer. More examples of her personality from the book. When Sylvia, who was her aunt and
the richest person in Massachusetts at the time, when Sylvia warned her away from a dangerous horse,
Hedy took it upon herself to break him and rode the wild animal until he settled down. Here's another idea, a little
quick story that'll give you an idea of her personality. On one occasion, she trundled down
with a satchel stuffed with $200,000 worth of bonds and handed them over to John Sisko. John
Sisko was her banker at the time. Her banker admonished her for carrying negotiable securities on public transportation it's dangerous he told her
you should have taken a carriage heady shot him a look with her steely eyes and replied
a carriage indeed perhaps you can afford to ride in a carriage i cannot and then another way to
to learn about the personality of somebody is through the quotes and the things that they are attracted to.
And so this is, Hedy would repeat this quote that came from her favorite poem.
And now she's quoting her favorite poem.
She says, to live content with small means, to seek elegance rather than luxury, and refinement rather than fashion.
To be worthy, not respectable, and wealthy, not rich.
Okay, so now I want to get into her early life. One thing to know about her early life is she was
raised in a Quaker family, that she comes from multiple generations of successful whalers,
which was a massive industry at the time. In fact, the city, New Bedford, it blew my mind to find out
in the book, at the time where Hedy was alive and her family was operating the whaling business,
it was the richest city in the world per capita. Okay, so let me tell you a little bit about our
father. He had a huge influence, both negative and positive in her life. And it says, he was
consumed by wealth and the intent to increase his means. He admitted that making money was the great object of his life.
He pursued his fortune like Ahab pursued the great white whale.
Hedy's not born yet.
She's going to actually wind up being the firstborn of her family.
But what her father Edward really wanted, he really wanted a son.
So the book talks a little bit about that.
He says they, meaning heady's mother and
father they had no doubt that their firstborn would be a boy he meaning edward took satisfaction
in knowing his son would inherit both the wealth and the pedigrees he would educate him in the
intricacies of enterprise it was the duty of every heir he believed to increase the family's riches
with that in mind he would teach his boy to loan at interest and tell him never to
borrow a cent one of his favorite sayings was never owe anyone anything uh to the surprise
and shock and then grief it's a girl Edward which is her father's name and and Abby which is her
mother Hedy's mother he says Edward fumed at his fate. Abby sobbed in her pillow.
Both rejected their only child.
Like the biblical Ishmael,
the unwanted Hedy was cast aside.
Dismissed from the house,
she went to live with her grandfather, Gideon.
She was two years old.
So Gideon at the time that Hedy's two years old,
he's the one that inherited the family's whaling business.
Eventually it's going to be passed when Gideon dies to Hedy's father. Gideon actually is the
first one that starts educating her in business. And so let me share a little bit about that with
you. He says, with his eyesight failing, he handed the evening newspapers to Hedy and asked her to
read aloud. In her child's voice, she called out the stock quotations and commerce reports.
That was how she absorbed some of his business methods, she later said.
And so from the very beginning, they were extremely frugal.
Their entire goal in life, and I'll talk more about it. It's really interesting how the family viewed money and how they taught their kids to think about it.
But their entire goal, I would say, is to increase their riches, not to spend frivolously.
So Hedy understands that lesson from a very early age.
And so as a result, she starts saving money from an early age.
At the age of eight, she gathered the precious coins she had saved from her weekly allowance and opened a bank account.
Not only did she earn compound interest, she made her family proud.
So eventually her grandfather dies and her father inherits the business.
And so these are some business lessons
that she learns from her father.
After he sent her away,
their second born was a son.
He died in infancy
and then they weren't gonna have any more kids.
So over time, their relationship was somewhat repaired.
And you understand why I use the word somewhat there.
But he essentially starts to tutor her. He does something
really smart, that he brings her around his business at a very early age. And we've seen
this in the past from other founders too that were fortunate to have entrepreneurs as parents,
right? You can learn a lot at that age. So let me go over some of the business lessons she learned
from her father. Just to give you an idea, she is around 10 years old at the time. And by the time
she's 13, she becomes a family's bookkeeper as inspiration for a
young girl in search of a way of life Hedy turned to her father it was said
he squeezed a penny until the eagle squawked he was known for his cunning
and boldness Edward Robinson ran the company and controlled its affairs and
presided over the Bedford Commercial Bank.
So something about the whaling.
They talk a lot about the whaling industry at the time, which at this time in American history was perfectly legal.
Obviously, now it's illegal.
But the way I would think about the nature of the whaling industry at that time is very similar.
It's like you invested in like early, early stage companies or even like movies.
Each expedition could be thought of as like
a miniature company so you could seed their voyage right in return for part of the pro the profits if
they're successful right but they're heading out into open sea they don't know if they're gonna be
successful but the return so they cap their downside right so maybe they invest five thousand
dollars total for the journey and in some cases cases, if they're successful, they'd
bring back over $100,000 worth of, like they sell essentially whale oil. And so they had a bunch,
the family would have a bunch of these, it doesn't take very many of these successful
investments to generate an excessive amount of wealth. So when her father dies, he's going to have assets of over $6 million.
And this is in like the 1800s. So it's a substantial fortune. Even though, I bring that
up now, because even though he squeezed a penny until the eagles squawked, he did not spend
furiously. All right. So it says he ran the company and controlled his fare. He also presided over the
commercial bank. He was the one Hedy chose to emulate. As her father's anger subsided, the
adolescent Hedy stayed closer to his side. She watched him closely as he assessed the inventory,
inspected the ships, dealt with the captains, and heard the rough talk of the crews.
She listened to him bargain with merchants and berate them when he thought they were charging
too much. She followed along when he took her to the counting house and showed her how to read the
ledgers. He brought her to the brokers and taught her how to trade commodities she paid attention this is this is a especially
important sentence one of the most important sentences in the book in my opinion she paid
attention when he repeated again and again that property was a trust to be taken care of and
enlarged for future generations.
How many families on the planet think of wealth like that?
Very few.
She obeyed when he insisted that she keep her own accounts in order
and later praised the experience.
There is nothing better than this sort of training, she said.
A girl acquires the habit of keeping track of every cent
and gets the most value for every dollar she spends.
Knowing how frugal and fond of money he was, she imitated her father's ways. Slowly, she flourished
and felt she was gaining his approval. So she's being exposed to a very unique set of childhood
experiences that very few people on the planet in history would be exposed to. And as a result,
it's going to change the way she thinks about work and what she's naturally interested in. So at this time, New York is experiencing a financial boom. They send her,
their daughter to New York. It doesn't stipulate how, how long. My estimation is like for maybe
like a summer, maybe three, maybe half a year. So think three to six years, three to six months,
right? While she's there though, you know, they're trying to introduce her as like a lady of society
and to be like trained in etiquette and other stuff.
Hedy was not interested in that at all.
And so this is what the book says about it.
It says, Hedy was focused on expanding her fortune.
The debutante's world held little attention for her.
She may have enjoyed dancing
and she may have indulged in gossip,
but she had no taste for frothy teas, no craving for fussy clothes, no liking for luxuries that money could buy.
Hedy hungered for money itself.
So she winds up going back to New Bedford after a few months.
She cuts her trip early.
She does have a little bit of money to invest at this time.
She's still rather young.
But she, you know what's funny?
I didn't realize going into the book.
It's a biography of Hedy Green, no doubt. But it also is like a brief history of all the different
financial crises that she lived through. So let me, I have a list of economic crises that she,
that the book talks about, that we, that are kind of instructive in understanding why she was able
to accumulate so much money, right? She becomes the richest woman in the world. So let me just list some of them. Panic of 1857,
Panic of 1866, The Long Depression, which lasted from 1873 to 1896 and had a bunch of different
panics within that. That includes the Panic of 1873, the Panic of 1884, the Panic of 1890,
the Panic of 1893, and in the 1900s the panic of 1901 and the panic
of 1907 and so these are almost like uh characters like additional support like supporting cast in
the book as well i've told you in the past i find it fascinating to go back and read
about times of like great human struggles sometimes that's war a lot of that time for
me is like financial crisis and the book almost repetitive. And you just realize it's the whole
thing that we talk about all the time, that history doesn't repeat, human nature does.
And this book is a, it's, you know, it's a quick read. It's like 300 pages, maybe seven,
eight hours, something like that, maybe nine. But it, it's, it was enlightening to me to see this,
this, this affirmation. i feel that that that statement that
i just said that history doesn't repeat human nature does to be fundamentally true and when
you study these panics and when the book lays it out you know and they don't go into too much
detail but they give you a nice overview of what's happening and you you it's a great illustration
for that idea all right so let me jump back into my notes okay so at this point in the book heady
heady's essentially about to learn some very
old lessons about human behavior during booms and busts. And she's a quick learner and she uses this
to advantage her entire, entire life. So it talks about more railroads slipped as confidence fell.
And for a few months, Wall Street trading primarily in railroad stocks ran gloomily off the tracks.
But if speculators who had bought on margin remember
her dad just told her never borrow a cent ever so when there's gonna be a panic where most banks are
failing and most businesses are going underwater the family business that has gone over multiple
generations was fine because they had no debt so it says but if speculators who had bought on
margin were forced to sell their shares to cover their losses shrewd investors like
commodore vanderbilt so there's cornelius he's popping up again and speculators like jay gold swooped up the stocks at low prices heady rotten the reason i'm reading this to you is because
this next sentence hetty robinson would later do the same so she was a master at studying what
happened before her so she wouldn't make the same mistakes and it's funny to me because this book
has it mentions i don't, probably like 10 different people
that I've already done episodes for Founders on
and a bunch that I'm gonna do in the future.
So obviously I've done two on Cornelius Vanderbilt.
If you haven't gone and listened to him,
I would recommend going back and listening to him.
All right, so now we're at the panic of 1857,
and I wanna tell you a little bit
about what Hedy learned from it.
So it says, and then the bubble burst.
Towards the end of 1857, the news from the Ohio Life Insurance
and Trust Company
leaked the first bits of air.
Its New York branch
had embezzled millions of dollars.
The bank had borrowed funds
from other New York institutions
in order to lend money
to railroad builders
and speculators in railroad stocks.
The overextended railroads
had borrowed millions of dollars
from Ohio Life
and could not pay them back.
A few clever men like Russell Sage, a future role model for Hedy, not only did she learn from him,
she winds up, even though he's much older than her, she winds up becoming friends with him
because she thought he was so smart. A few clever men like Russell Sage, a future role model for
Hedy, kept substantial amounts of cash on hand and used it to buy stocks at rock bottom prices.
This is happening in the 1800s. We just saw Warren Buffett do the exact same thing 10 years ago.
Like this literally happens over and over again. It's so funny that humans, that for some reason,
a small select of humans just cannot learn from history. And this, what I'm reading to you here,
this is the general blueprint. What's happening in 1857 is the general blueprint that she's going
to follow her whole life. It happens over and over again. She takes advantage of the fact that people don't learn
from history and that she did. All right. So it says, we just talked about a few clever men like
Vanderbilt and Sage. Hey, they had a bunch of cash. JP Morgan told his son there was a good
lesson to be learned from other people's greed and good bargains to be found in the aftermath.
In future times, Hedy would always keep cash available and use it to
buy when everyone else else was selling so this is important not only if you're going to invest it
but for your business as well your personal finance as well you should have a giant buffer
in your personal finances you should have a giant buffer in your business for this exact reason
much later uh warren buff i just said this but i'm running over the author's point here much later
warren buffett would do the same warren's actually mentioned a bunch of times in this podcast, in this book. And again, I'm going to point out one
of the most important sentences in the book. So the author just gave us a bunch of examples of
people that buck the trend and did not allow themselves to be compromised by the inevitable
financial booms and busts that are going to happen in your lifetime, right? So this sentence is important. Most people watch their money wash away in the flood.
You don't want to be like most people. This panic of 1857 affects New Bedford as well. I just said
this. New Bedford is the richest city per capita in the world at the time. But at the end of 1857,
as people switched to kerosene, the price of whale oil seeped down and the New Bedford Bank went
under. Edward Robinson,
that's her father, who made it a practice never to borrow, kept his business buoyant.
Now I want to get to explicit. This is a very, very interesting idea. How Hedy's family thought
about money explicitly. So the background here is the family has a multigenerational
history of passing the inheritance and the business onto the eldest
son. And then their job is like, you better die with more money than we're giving you. And you
better pass that along. Right? So it says at this time, it wasn't, Hedy wasn't sure if she was going
to inherit the money. And I'll tell you more about kind of this double crossing that her dad does to
her because he's like, yeah, you'll get it. You'll get it. Okay. So it says Hedy appealed to her
father for the, for her share in the inheritance the howland fortune which
is her grandfather's last name uh which had gone from her great-grandfather to her grandfather
to her mother should now go to her the only direct living heir but edward insisted he know how to
invest the money make it grow not only that this is where i mean about this is a unique way of
how heady's family thought
about money he had the responsibility to increase it until his death then he reminded his daughter
he would turn the money over to her for her to do the same so that's what she thinks the plan for
her life is right so at this time she goes to school she goes to boarding school for four years
she'll take a few classes but really she's educated in the family and in the family business, which is, again,
it's very rare in the day and age that we're in another great idea from history.
So this is some more lessons Hedy learns while she's working with her father.
At his request, she worked closely with him on his portfolio of stocks, bonds, and real
estate, and on his shipping businesses, which demanded extensive daily attention to commodity
prices and futures trading, shipping rates, banking rates, worldwide credit, and politics. After years at his side, Hattie felt more than competent to analyze
the news, assess the financial markets, and keep her father abreast of changes. Now, her father
dies. Let me read this to you, and then I'm going to read the note I left to myself because I didn't
understand what was happening at the time in the book. Now I realize it later. All right, so his father dies.
The will is announced, and it's not good.
She would receive the income but not control of the principal.
Hedy was crushed, diminished by a sweep of a pen.
Her father was dead, and most of her money would be managed by others.
Once again, she felt betrayed.
For years, she had apprenticed at her father's side.
For years, she had shown her father how skillful she was in finance. For years, she had provediced at her father's side. For years, she had shown her father how skillful she was in finance.
For years, she had proved she was smart as any man.
Yet gone was the respect she had thought she had earned.
So the note I left myself was, wait a minute.
Did she build her entire empire off of the investment income, not the principal?
Which is what, you know, the generations before would have done.
They would have given the entire principle to the to the person to the air which is in her
case uh which is in this case was heady and she does which makes her story remarkable in the sense
that wait a minute she built an entire empire just off of investment income well imagine what she
could have done with her skill set and the entire principle she winds up suing the people the people
that her father uh leaves to manage the investments were were in Hedy's opinion, incompetent. So she
winds up going, I think, multiple decades fighting them. I don't know if she ever gets control. I
can't remember that, unfortunately. I don't think she does. But it's pretty remarkable when you
think about it like that. All right. So now we're going to see the way her mind works. And this is
where she's saying that what she has arrived at is the secret of all successful businesses.
In this case, we're around the Civil War. at the time of the civil war they the u.s government was
issuing these things called greenbacks so in today's day and age you might have heard like
greenbacks as a slang for like money the money we use now at the time it was a very specific type of
currency currency issued by the u.s government not backed by anything to finance the civil war
they only did it for like i read the wiki i just read the wikipedia page i
think it was like three different instances where they printed the money over like five or ten year
period it was it was a very short experiment so anyways this is we're gonna see the basic mo that
heady uses his entire life and i think a lot of where when i thought about it at the end of the
book i was like what did claude pick away from this i think like claude was known first of all he had some of the best investment returns uh of all time he did it rather
simply he focused on uh you know it was him his wife and an apple ii computer and they were out
competing like you know people mutual funds with hundreds of researchers and stuff he kept things
simple watch his cost and then he consolidated most of his money and thinks he knew well
heady did the same thing.
You know, she really focused on, she loved having mortgages,
loved investing in government bonds, and loved railroads.
So this is an example of that.
The devastation of the South, the high debt caused by the war,
and the disarray of the Union created a stormy picture.
Many people viewed the country's economy as doubtful.
Seeing chaos around the corner, they worried about the stability of government
and refused to pay face value for greenbacks. Instead, they rushed to gold. The more the public
discounted paper money, pushing it down as low as 50 cents on the dollar, the more Hedy bought.
This was the start of the contrary investing she followed for the rest of her life,
buying when everyone was selling and selling when everyone else was buying. Quote from Hedy, I buy when things are low and nobody wants
them. I keep them until they go up and people are crazy to get them. Remember, she did this by
herself. She was an individual financier. Think about how crazy that is. And part of the reason
you're able to do that and just part of the reason Claude was able to do that with his wife is because
you have to keep it simple. He says that is, and this is going back to Hedy's quote, so I keep them until they go up and people
are crazy to get them. That is, I believe, the secret of all successful businesses. Now, around
this time, she winds up getting married to another businessman. He's about 13 or 14 years older than
her. He made a lot of money in the Far East. For some reason, they have to go to London to something
to do with her business.
So they lived there for seven years.
And so I want to talk about a little bit how she worked.
And this is her years in London.
So it says, Hedy had her own business to attend to,
concentrating on investing the interest from her father's trust fund.
So that's what I was telling you earlier.
Like Andrew Carnegie, who cried, Eureka, here's the goose that lays the golden egg, when he discovered the power of dividends.
Hedy had already learned the magic of compound interest now she used her money to buy high yield to earn
a high yield paid in gold on civil war bonds okay so now these are some direct examples of what
she's investing in uh even better she could reinvest those dividends to earn more and all
the time she was compounding her return now Now, this is really interesting. In the
book, there's actually a historical precedent for what she's doing, right? She's making money on
civil war bonds. Most people do not want to invest in that because they think it's, you know,
the country could be ripped apart. You have a high chance of losing your money. Now, the historical
precedent for this that surprised me. So you know John Adams, right?
The second president of the United States.
His wife, Abigail, was actually a really successful investor using ideas that we see Hedy doing,
what, 75 years later?
It says, Abigail Adams, who had bought state notes, that's what they were called, after
the Revolutionary War, when there was little confidence in the new government, found out
the value of depreciated
bonds. So it's exactly what's happening with Hedy, right? Against the objections of her husband,
John, who put his money in land, Abigail used her money to buy the bonds, which increased far more
in value than her husband's real estate. I thought that was hilarious. I want to tell you about that.
All right, let's go back to Hedy. Hedy increased her share of railroad stocks and Jewish treasury
bonds. We see her, you know, starting to lay the foundation of what she's going to do her whole life.
The bonds would prove to be an outstanding investment.
And now we're going to get some words from Hedy.
I started out by buying government bonds, Hedy said, describing her first year in London.
Using the gold she received as interest, she bought the bonds at a discount and earned a solid dividend.
Only a small group.
Now, here's also the key to Hedy.
She, like Claude Shannon, like Warren Buffett, like Ed Thorpe, she would collect a lot of
information. And here's the weird thing about life. If you just read more and you're reading
the right stuff, that puts you ahead of so many other people. Humans are unbelievably lazy.
Like it's shocking. And the fact is like Hedy read more
and studied more than other people.
That's in part to her success.
Like that's a really low bar.
That's not, you know,
you're not running marathons every day.
You're not picking up boulders.
Like you're just absorbing information that's helpful.
I don't understand.
I really have a hard time understanding
why people wouldn't do that.
So now I'm going to,
let me tell you why I just gave you that opinion.
It says, only a small group of investors had access to as much information as Hedy did
on the railroads and their maze of lines.
Her transatlantic connections, her insistent research, her in-depth questioning, and her
constant reading helped her decipher the complicated financial code and decide which rails to invest in and which one to avoid.
In one day of that year, I added a clean $200,000 to my bank account.
That's the most money I ever made in one day, she boasted.
$200,000 in late 1860s money.
That's crazy.
By the end of the year in London, her profits reached $1.25 million.
The opportunities were enormous for those with the stomach to take the risk. So actually the
time it'd be the late 1860s, early 1870s, because this is a huge run-up before the panic of 1873.
So I want to tell you a little bit about the panic of 1873. Then we're going to talk about
what she did during that. All right.
It says suddenly something snapped and the machinery stopped.
So this is one of the first financial panics where it was like the contagion couldn't be
isolated to like one city or one country.
It says a Vienna banking house broke under the weight of too heavy a load of Missouri,
Kansas, and Texas securities, followed by another carrying too much of Canada Southern.
These are railroads.
The financial organism winced like a leviathan with a harpoon in its vitals.
As the spasms spread from stock exchanges to banks and from banks to investors, from Istanbul to Stockholm, from Edinburgh to Alexandria, the world crouched in pain.
The wounds had come from speculation.
More on the panic of 1873.
With panic growing on Wall Street, the storm turned into a tidal wave.
Twenty brokerage firms shuttered their doors.
Hordes of people rushed to withdraw their funds from the banks.
When it was clear that no one was willing to buy at any price,
the stock exchange in New York closed its doors and kept them closed for 10 days.
Now we're going to get more on the Panic of 1873 and another example of that quote.
History doesn't repeat, human nature does.
The Panic of 1873 was preceded by an era of gigantic railroad and investment speculations,
which were the principal causes of the Panic.
The speculation in land was enormous all over the country.
Prices in real estate were multiplied beyond all precedent.
You could say the same thing in the run-up in the early 2000s, right?
The obligations incurred in building the railroads
and in this real estate speculation were too enormous to be sustained,
and when it came time to settle up,
people suddenly found themselves unable to resolve their obligations
and became insolvent.
So it's the opposite of a margin of safety.
They're leveraged.
They're up to their eyeballs in debt.
And then it turns the other way.
They're fragile and they're going to break.
People that are robust or even anti-fragile like Hedy Green are going to thrive.
Which one do you want to be?
Across the panorama of history, the same potent forces that have driven men to war and devastation have also driven them to financial destruction.
Another one of the most important sentences in the book.
The markets may change, the methods may be revamped, but as long as human beings are propelled by greed and ego, they are doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past.
Okay, now we got to Hedy's response to the Panic of 1973.
At this time, when stocks were abandoned, Hedy wanted to trade.
I believe in getting in at the bottom and out at the top.
How many times did she repeat that in the book?
She often said,
I like to buy railroad stock or mortgage bonds.
When I see a good thing going cheap
because nobody wants it,
I buy a lot of it and tuck it away.
Remember, don't forget that greenback investment
I just talked about.
That's almost 10 years before we are in the book
and it's gonna turn her way in a very,
like she's gonna make a lot of money
on it because of what she just said i just buy it and tuck it away uh for heady the decline in the
market offered an opportunity for the future heady was a fearless pit bull charging into the sloth of
frantic bears she had a pile of cash when others were scouring for pennies she also had a deft
mind and a colossal courage to push against the crowd she was very much just like henry singleton
nearly every single person i've covered like they're not going to write a book about your mind and a colossal courage to push against the crowd she was very much just like henry singleton
nearly every single person i've covered like they're not going to write a book about your
life if you just follow conventional wisdom it's like hey this this person was born this person
lived never had a unique thought in their life and then they died no one read that book you have to
eventually eventually develop like trust in your own judgment after you put the work into trust
your own judgment and then act on that judgment have faith in yourself heady has extreme faith in herself
and we see that over and over again so she had the courage to push the against the crowd just said
that now it was far easier to lose money than it was to make it and isn't this statement always
true and that's probably why so many successful entrepreneurs and investors are resourceful instead of wasteful.
So it's easier to lose money than to make it.
Now we're going to see our boy Commodore Vanderbilt.
Even Commodore Vanderbilt had been badly hurt on the day of the crash.
But what's the difference?
Why was he able to still survive this crash and then leave?
How much money did he leave to his like his kids or whatever?
So it says even commoner Vanilla badly hurt on the day of the crash
Most of his railroad stocks had plummeted and some of the firms he did business with were forced to close
But Vanderbilt bought his stocks in cash and was able to wait out the market
His followers who risked their money on 10% margin were racing to cover their losses
And now we're gonna get some advice from Commodore Vanderbilt.
Nearly 100, what, how long is this?
150 years, something like that, after he said it.
When a friend complained, he replied,
If you had bought 100 shares instead of 1,000, you could have held on,
never being too great a hurry to get rich.
Like Hedy, he bought his railroads for the long haul.
So in the aftermath of the panic of 1873
this is when her investment in greenbacks paid off she had to wait almost 10 years for this though
the following year after the economy failed to improve congress legislated to strengthen the
system of you of uh to strengthen the system by backing u.s dollars with gold those like Hedy
who had held on to their discounted greenbacks but after the Civil War were now flush with wealth.
And around this time she has kids
and this is advice that she tells her kids over and over again.
I've already said it at the beginning, but it's important.
Watch your pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves.
Now, I'm skipping over, obviously, you know, these are not summaries.
This is just, to me, the things I want to to remember the most important ideas that I got from the book
So i'm going to skip over vast parts of this
She's married. She's two kids. Her husband is like the opposite of heady. He's a speculator
He makes a lot of money then he goes broke makes a lot of money and then goes broke and he doesn't learn
I'm reading his these stories in the book. I'm like doofus. what are you doing here? How many times are you gonna make the same mistake over
and over again? And so her husband had the ability to get rich, but as we've talked about in the past,
getting rich requires one set of skills. Staying rich requires another set of skills. You have to
master both, right? Hedy mastered both. Her husband mastered one. And this is going to cause
the end of the relationship. Hedy would not divorce. She thought, you know, you get married, you get married for life, but they started living
separately. They reunited and were on like, you know, kind of friendly and unpleasant terms and
spent more time together at the end of their lives. But she could put up a lot of stuff and
you'll see here, but he essentially stole money from her and she was not willing to put up with
that. So it says Hedy went in and saved him three or four times, said a stockbroker friend, meaning she'd essentially give a personal
bailout. She would lecture him about the chances he was taking, but time after time, the turn in
the market confirmed his judgment. He disobeyed her once too often though, and she got rid of him.
I'll tell you when this happens, but first I want to get to something else.
I want to tell you why. So we know like what she liked, right?
Government bonds, mortgages, real estate, railroads. Why? Like these are the benefits.
This is the benefits Hedy saw in investing in railroads at this time. And there's probably
parallels to say the internet and other things that are enabled by the internet today, right?
So when I read this to you, don't be so fixated on she's describing railroads.
Take railroads out and think of other things that have these same characteristics, and you
could probably find an area that you want to invest your time and energy, right? So the railroad
revolution raced ahead and America sped with it. Hedy Green put her money in the race. The railroad's
dynamic potential, their promised return on capital, their unregulated operation, and their untaxed profits provided infinite possibilities for financiers.
Since the end of the Civil War, Hedy had been investing in, among others, the Reading Railroad,
Rock Island Railroad, Connecticut River Railroad, and the Louisville National Railroad.
Now, that's why she liked railroads, right?
But another aspect of her personality is she had the ability to keep her mouth shut, which is so rare.
And she purposely hid what she was doing because she didn't want people to follow on, and she also hated being hounded for money.
So it says, the note I left myself is Hedy moved in silence, which I think is smart.
Hedy's investments were not always known.
She purchased property under fictitious names, bought stocks
under other identities, and was praised by shrewd observers for how closely she held
her positions. Not only that, if you keep quiet about what you're doing, it might be
a good way to know that you're doing it for the right reasons. There's some dynamic in
human beings where we do, sometimes, well not sometimes, all of us are guilty of this,
myself included, we do things for the wrong wrong reasons meaning we do things to impress other people and that's probably not a good that usually those are
not the best decisions in your life so at least heady's making these decisions not so other people
think she's so smart because she thought they were the best investments all right so now she
switches banks she switches banks because her husband winds up owing the bank seven hundred
thousand dollars and she goes to to do a transaction like She's like, oh, that $500,000
you're looking for, Hedy, isn't there anymore because your husband pledged that as collateral.
That is going to be, is like the last, you know, the straw that broke the camel's back
in their relationship. But before I get there, I want to tell you this observation that her
new banker has, which I love. So she says she switches banks, right? This is the new bank's president after meeting Hedy.
And keep in mind, Hedy is transferring over $25 million in assets to him at this time.
And so his last name is Williams.
And he says, Williams greeted his new customer with all the courtesy and respect
to a woman of her wealth.
Now, this is the most important part.
I have observed, he's telling other people, you know, she comes in, she looks like, you know, this is the most important part. He's telling other people,
she comes in, she looks like, you know, she doesn't care about clothing. She just looks
like a normal person. And so after he meets with her, he has to tell her colleagues. He's like,
listen, I've observed that many a tattered garment hides a package of bonds and that
gorgeous clothing does not always cover a millionaire. So what is he saying there?
That a lot of times people that you think look rich spent all their money looking rich.
They don't have assets.
It's a facade.
They're like a peacock.
Hedy's like an owl.
She hides her strength.
It's surprising when you see how adept she is.
And so the first part of that sentence is really describing Hedy.
I've observed that many a touted garment
hides a package of bonds.
Yeah, bonds worth $25 million.
Okay, so I just told you her husband bought stock on margin.
I don't know if I told you that,
but just to know it off myself,
obviously when things go the other way,
the investment went below zero.
And so now he owes money to the bank he doesn't have.
So they take her $500,000
account at collateral. And he did this without her permission or knowledge. And that's just not good.
So it says he stood by her at funerals, sworn for her in lawsuits, advised her in finance,
and fathered her children. But in the end, he had crossed the line. She could live with his
philandering, his drinking, his philandering. She caught him cheating on her because she hired a,
she thought she noticed he was too nice to women,
so she hired a private investigator.
And all she said was that he told her everything she needed to know about her husband.
So she lived with his philandering, his drinking, his card playing, and his chancing speculations.
But she could not tolerate something far worse.
Edward, so her husband and her father have the same first name,
Edward had betrayed her.
He had risked her money for his own return.
He had squandered some of her wealth,
and in doing that, he had cost her some of her worth.
Hedy bade him a fond farewell.
This is a description of how she would work.
She scoffed at the offer of a private office
and instead chose a seat at an empty desk or sat on the floor.
So she's working out of the bank where she keeps all of her money and her assets so she
doesn't have to pay for an office space.
She promptly went to work.
She clipped her coupons for dividends, read her newspapers thoroughly, scoured trade papers,
perused periodicals, checked pertinent journals.
Essentially, those are all different descriptions that she
read uh this is what i was talking about earlier probe the men in the office and converse with her
male colleagues she she she said in the book that she really loved that uh so many men respected her
intelligence that every day people would like visit and try to pick her brain stuff so she was
very uh proud of that um when she had read, quizzed, grilled, interrogated, and investigated enough,
when she had studied the cost, analyzed the assets, and dug through the debts,
when she had found the answers to suit her, when she knew the true worth of a company and understood
its weaknesses, when she was satisfied that its basic values were sound and its assets strong,
that the downside risk was capped, they say low, but I use the word cap, and the upside high.
Then she invested her money.
So that's a description of how she's working.
This is what she preferred most,
and it's not going to be a surprise to you.
She much preferred common people
to the stuffy socialites of the upper class,
even though she belonged to the upper class.
What she preferred most was her work.
She loved digging up the dirt on businesses,
and she loved the nitty-gritty of finance.
I have a head for numbers, she said.
They light up and tell me a story.
Something interesting about Hedy, too, that surprised me.
She was nomadic.
So it says, she was used to shuttling between places.
She moved like a nomad from boarding houses to flats to hotels, from Brooklyn to the Bowery,
Hempstead to Hoboken, changing her
name, evading the press, the public, and also the taxman. Like thousands of New Yorkers then and now,
she escaped city and state taxes by refusing to establish a residence. Where she lived mattered
little to her. Her days were a whirlwind of transactions. At night, all she wanted was refuge.
More important issues occupied her thoughts.
I want to tell you a little bit about what it was like to negotiate with Hedy Green and how
she makes a quick $368,000 profit. She gets a visit from some railroad men. She goes,
the two men from the Richard Terminal made her an offer that seemed too good to refuse.
She had bought the stock of the railroad at $70. Now it was selling at $100. The officers of the railroad offered to buy her 6,400 shares at $115.
So that's $15 above market, obviously.
Hedy wrinkled her nose at the cash and declared she would be willing to sell,
but only if they paid her more.
She would accept the deal at $125 a share.
They declined and left.
They soon appeared again.
This time they said that if
she would agree to support their candidate for president of the railroad, they would sign a
contract secured by collateral to buy her shares at $125. Oh no, she sniffed, dismissing their bid.
She couldn't do that. Their offer was not in cash. Oh, and if you want my vote, you have to pay me $130 per share.
Further negotiations led to her triumph. In true Hedy style, she sold her stock for $127.50.
Oh, this was hilarious. Let me read this quick paragraph to you and then tell you
what is the context. What surprised Hedy, what surprised them was not that Hedy took the
train to save money. Rather, it was that she had secretly acquired far more shares of Reading
Railroad than anyone knew. She was a rare person who could hold her tongue. And they sheepishly
had to admit that she managed her business far better than most men. So what they're talking is
she shows up at like a stockbroker.
She shows up with a million dollars of stock in Reading Railroad.
And for some reason or another, it has to be transferred from New York to like Pennsylvania or something.
I don't remember what it was.
And she's like, well, how much are you going to charge me to transfer the stock?
And they're like, $100.
And she went ballistic.
And she's like, why would I do this?
I could pay $4 round trip and do it myself so that's what she did so this she's traveling around a
million dollars of the stock to save 96 it's just hilarious to me oh i love this idea so she has
like a young son at the time he's probably in his early 20s something of that and she wanted him
remember she's a firm believer in investing in real and
railroads at this time. And she wanted her son to make money from railroads. But first she thought
that he had to understand railroads at their most fundamental level. And I go all the way back to
the podcast I did on the Sam Zemuri. I think the book is like the fish that ate the whale.
If you haven't listened to it, you got to listen to it. It's fantastic The air read the book too and he his famous quote, you know
He made he was a penniless immigrant and wind up becoming fabulously wealthy just by studying the banana industry for god's sake
But the quote in the book he's like listen if you know your your business from a to z
There's no problem. You can't solve so he heady is trying to instill her son with that wisdom
He's like well, you can't you'll be more successful if you actually know the railroad industry, right?
So with railroads propelling the country,
she wanted him at the forefront,
but she knew he needed an education
in how the railroads functioned
before he could captain his future along the track.
The time had come for him to see his operations
from the inside.
Limping along the tracks with his new cork leg,
he had to have one of his legs amputated above the knee, he toiled as a section hand and foreman on the Connecticut River
Railroad, weeding and clearing the track, running a locomotive, and eating lunch with the working
men. A quick student, he learned the ways of the railroad and after several months gained an
understanding of the process. From there, he was sent to Cincinnati where he worked as a
superintendent and then as a managing director of the Ohio and From there, he was sent to Cincinnati, where he worked as a superintendent
and then as a managing director
of the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad.
There's some more.
Well, I'll go back to her son later.
This was interesting about her personality.
She had a high disdain for self-indulgent socialites,
which is interesting,
because if you think about it,
even though her Quaker family,
they weren't into drinking and, and, and, and being
wasteful, they did like still, they, you know, they're blue bloods.
They were, they were rich.
And this is, but she didn't, she didn't like the idle rich.
She respected people that had authentic achievement, right?
People that made, that knew the value of dollar made their own money.
Even if they inherited some of it.
Like they did something with it.
There's a lot of people where they just,
they got money from their relatives and they just sat and they partied all the time.
Hedy was not, she did not respect those people.
So her daughter's about to marry one of these people.
It winds up not working out,
but this is, I thought it was interesting.
So this is what her daughter,
this is her talking about her daughter's potential husband,
who's an heir to a family fortune.
She says, I found that your young man
is very nice and proper, Hedy told her daughter. But if it wasn't for his father, the world wouldn't know a thing about him.
He has never earned a dollar and doesn't know the value of money. Hedy had only disdain for
self-indulgent socialites. With that, Hedy went back to business. Others might fritter away their
time and money on the conspicuous consumption of the Gilded Age, but she had scores to settle,
buildings to buy, and railroads to run. I want to introduce you, remember we always talk about
books or original links. This is going to be Collis Huntington. He's going to be on the
Futures episode of Founders. If you don't know who he is, you probably know one of his partners,
Leland Stanford, the founder of Stanford University. Anyways, Collis and Hedy did not
like each other. They were competitors. They went up meeting.
This is her threatening to kill him, actually.
I wanted to include this.
She offered him a seat in some friendly conversation.
But when he made threats against Ned, that's her son,
Hedy flashed her steely eyes and said,
up until now, Huntington, you've dealt with Hedy Green, the businesswoman.
Now you're fighting Hedy Green, the mother.
You harm one hair on Ned's hair, excuse me, one hair on Ned's head, and I'll put a bullet
through your heart. With that, she reached for the gun that she kept on her desk. Huntington ran out
the door. Okay, now I want to go back to Ned because she gives really great advice. I always
say like if you want to get good advice from somebody and they have kids, ask them the advice
they'd give their children. And this is advice she gave her son. Years of his mother's training had
taught him to study every aspect of the subject, from the condition of the road beds, the state of the
rolling stock, to the rates to charge for freight. So he's just talking about like how detail-oriented
she was, right? But he was sometimes too nervous to make a decision and telegraphed Hetty for advice.
You were on the ground, she answered. Mind your own business. Once when he was visiting his mother,
she told him about the new Bedford whaling captain,
whose two sons served as officers on his ship.
They carried the titles and wore the uniforms, but stood aside while their father did all the work.
When their father died, the two young men tried to steer the ship, but without experience, they lost control.
The boat ran aground and all was destroyed.
The message was clear.
Ned had to learn how to take command.
I sent you to Texas to learn the railway business,
Hetty said.
I can't teach you by telegraph from New York.
She wanted him to learn from his own mistakes.
Now, this is a description of the Gilded Age.
And this happens over and over again in the
booms and busts of the period. But it says, companies whose stocks had skyrocketed collapsed
when their lack of capital was revealed. Money became so tight that short-term interest rates
had soared to as high as 75%. One of the most heavily traded stocks in the exchange could not
get credit and declared insolvency. The market plunged.
Investors panicked. The Gilded Age, like other areas of avarice, opulence, and easy credit,
burst from gluttony. So when I read that one sentence, I really thought about something I read
from one of the founders of Hewlett Packard, David Packard. That podcast, I think it did back on like,
it might be podcast number 32. I can't remember at the moment, but he said something I never forget about. He's like, and he learned this
from growing up in the Great Depression. He says most companies, more, excuse me, more companies
die from indigestion than starvation. The Gilded Age, they, gluttony is indigestion. It's not
starvation. And it actually surprising to most people that it kills more companies than starvation.
All right.
She has an interesting strategy.
She owned a lot of land.
This is her strategy investing in land.
Like John Jacob Astor, almost a century earlier,
her strategy on land was to let the weeds grow while others planted flowers.
When the flowers bloomed and the surrounding property increased in market price,
the value of her land went up too.
Now, why would she do that?
Because she says, and most importantly, to Hedy, as unimproved property, it stayed untaxed.
Now, I've skipped ahead in her timeline.
She's older now.
And I'm going to update you about a typical workday for Hedy.
Although it changes somewhat, it remains rather consistent.
So this is probably 20 years after the other part I just read
where they're explaining a typical workday for her.
So it says, she sat down at her desk and began her business.
Four times a day, the letter carrier bought stacks of mails to the bank.
She's working at a chemical bank at the time.
This is where all her assets are.
Hedy read the letters, scanned the tabloids and broadsheets,
sifted through piles of papers, checked the amounts of coupons to clip, tracked her lawsuits, decided which railroads, real estate, and bonds to buy or sell, and oversaw the scores
of payments on loans and mortgages to collect. This is one of the most important sentences of
the book to me. She used her intelligence to increase her wealth, her independence to live
as she wished, and her strength to battle anyone who stood in her way.
And then I thought to myself, what more could we all want?
Use our intelligence to increase our wealth, use that wealth to buy the independence to live as we wish, and the strength to battle and overcome any objections that get in the way of that.
This is something I admire about her.
This is very hard to do, in my opinion. I have a really hard time turning it off. She apparently did not have that problem. At the
end of another long day, she parted from the bank, leaving behind the feel of crisp new bills,
the sounds of bonds being clipped and her concerns over finance. Business never disturbs me after
business hours, she said. I never worry about things. I do the best I can every day as I go along.
So this time, where are we? We're in like the, now we're 1901. Okay. I want to introduce you to another person that's going to be a future founders episode. His name is John Gates. He's
known as bet a million gates. Let me tell you a little bit about him. John Gates was a smooth
talking barbed wire salesman turned daring entrepreneur. And he led the merger mania that's about to occur here.
In 1898, he combined seven factories in Illinois into the Consolidated Steel and Wire Company.
Two months later, he sold that business to another firm. He starts another business. He says he was not satisfied. He wanted to cash in on his assets by selling stock to the public.
With his salesman's showmanship and with the help of banks that underwrote the issue,
the new company offered shares at a market price of $24 million. Wall Street gobbled it up like
cotton candy. Okay. So this is a time in American history, American business history,
where there's a huge amount of consolidation. Hedy did not like that. By 1901, hundreds of
small businesses were folded into huge conglomerates. The number of companies within those fields shrunk from 1,800 to fewer than 200.
As a result, America rose to become the world's largest supplier of copper,
cotton, corn, coal, steel, iron, and oil.
But its position came at a high cost to the country.
Prices were fixed and politicians were paid off.
This is crony capitalism that I think is disgusting.
Chauncey DePue, elected to
the Senate in 1899, later admitted under oath that the Equitable Insurance Company had paid
him a substantial annual retainer while he was a legislator. To Hedy's fury, the small businessmen
who made up much of the American economy could not compete and were sidelined. One or two people
controlled entire industries. They are ruining the chances
of the people, Hedy said. So there's this huge boom that's going to happen right before it busts
in the panic of 1907. So this is how Hedy maintained the composure during the run-up before
the panic of 1907. It's actually really interesting. So it says, in the frantic heat of the market,
Hedy kept a cool head. She attributed her success chiefly to her basic rule,
always buying when everyone wants to sell and selling when everyone wants to buy. heat of the market, Hedy kept a cool head. She attributed her success chiefly to her basic rule,
always buying when everyone wants to sell and selling when everyone wants to buy.
Along with her unruffled outlook and good judgment, her fierce focus, endless reading,
and intensive research all helped her penetrate the complexities of the market.
Determining when stocks were cheap demanded the thorough knowledge of their history,
their dividend-paying possibilities, and what they had sold in the past, she said. If one can buy a good thing at a lower cost than it has ever been
sold for, he may be fairly sure of getting it on the cheap. So what does she do, right? She tells
you, she's just, I'm going to take the opposite of what everybody else is doing. That's my general
thesis in investing is what she's telling us. So at this time, there's a huge boom. She owns a lot
of real estate. She's like, oh, this is strange. I think it's time to convert real estate to cash. This
happens to a boom before the bust. The cost of land skyrocketed around the country as people
raced to buy up real estate in cities, towns, and rural communities. Inevitably, the cost of
borrowing the money to buy the land rose precipitously. While others bought, Hedy sold.
I saw the handwriting on the wall, she later said. Every real estate
deal which I could possibly close up was converted into cash. Could you imagine? You have that she
has this huge gains from this huge real estate bubble, right? Gets out before it bursts. Then
the financial markets are going to burst too. And now what's she left with? Piles and piles of cash.
She turns one win into another win into another win let's go heady all right uh so what's
happening uh at this time people are becoming uh what's gonna happen i mean we you know what's
gonna happen people that are over leveraged are gonna go bankrupt and heady and they're gonna
sell their assets to heady for pennies on the dollar banks are excuse me black clouds hung
over the debtors many had little choice but to divest their holdings heady watched as the rich
men arrived they arrived chemical bank uh wanting to talk to her. They sought her out to sell off
their possessions. As rates rose, more and more of the solidest men in Wall Street, she said,
from financiers to businessmen came to call, begging. It's a hell of a word that she's using
there, right? Begging to unload everything from palatial mansions to automobiles they came to me in droves she recalled she knew a panic was inevitable this is right
that's amazing so that's like you know right before uh the bubble burst this also reminds
me of this interview i i listened to or watched or listened to i don't remember but uh warren
buffett was saying you know right right after the financial financial panic or I guess the run-up to the financial pandemic in 2007,
you know, got tons of calls. Hey, can you do this? Can you invest in this money in this bank? Boom,
boom, boom. And a bunch he turned down, some he didn't, but the same thing's playing out over and
over again for those wise enough to sit on mounds of cash. And then this part was just funny because
this is humans. We have to like,
we're all temporary beings.
Like we have to enjoy this ride
that we're on.
And I find the behavior
of human beings curious.
Yes, but also funny.
This part is funny.
It's not funny
because it causes like pain,
but it's a ridiculous belief.
Like people should know better.
The bankers during the pandemic,
right before the panic of 1907, it says the bankers weren't worried it had become a cardinal doctrine in american
banking circles that panics like those of 1893 and 1873 and 1873 would never again be witnessed
in this country that's that's a ridiculous statement now this is heady reflecting reflecting
on the panic of 1907 it's it humorous. I didn't explain that correctly.
It's humorous, the idea that we're so arrogant in what we think we know about a world that's
way too complex for our tiny little human brains to understand that we think that we could ever
cure. We've now entered the age where there's never going to be any more financial booms and
busts. That's ridiculous. Hedy reflected on the panic of 1907.
Hedy believed the trade, the problems could be traced to another source. There's one reason why
we have hard times. Well, there's probably multiple reasons, but this is her reason.
Money easy coming and easy going. American children are not taught how to save money,
but how to spend it. These are all direct quotes from her. Everything they want,
give it to them as long as you know the price of the credit. That's the policy of the modern
mother. And she's raising nation of spendthrifts
whose one thought is to get what they want when they want it, regardless of cost.
Essentially, she's saying they're just not disciplined financially.
And then there's like this herd-like tendency for humans to react all the same way in booms and busts.
And Hedy makes money just by going against the herd.
This is very interesting.
So now she's much older.
She's so old that Hedy's son is having to kind of run her business and keep track of investments.
So she hands out her son.
She hands him out.
I love this idea of negative advice, right?
I think it's usually, in many cases, more beneficial than positive advice.
What does Charlie Munger say?
He's like, me and Warren are not trying to be smart. We're just trying to not be stupid.
That's negative advice. So she, she didn't like, she could tell her son anything. She didn't tell
him do this, do this. She says, avoid this. When you're running the business, avoid this. And here's
her list of don'ts. She handed out a list of don'ts. Don't cheat in our business dealings.
For sooner or later, your conscience will trouble you and you will war yourself into your grave. Don't fail to be fair in all things, business and otherwise. Don't
kick a man when he is down. Don't envy your neighbors. Don't overdress, whether you have the
means or not, because this causes envy. Kind of related, right? Don't fail to go to church, for the
church needs you and you need the church. Don't forget that riches dishonorably gained must be left behind someday and when you depart you will find the gates of heaven
doubly bolded against you
Don't forget to be charitable and don't falsify
This is more advice. So this is Hetty dies at 81 years old. This is when she's almost 80
I love advice from old people
I don't just think they
know more than we do because they've obviously had a lot more experience than we have. This is
really interesting. She says, when it comes to spending your life, there have to be some things
neglected. If you try to do too much, you can never get anywhere. I think that's good advice
for life. It's also good advice for in business. heady's gonna encourage you to be focused to not
like spread yourself too thin i think charlie munger and warren buffett would say the same
thing henry singleton would say the same thing andrew carnegie is the same thing this is over
and over and over again david ogrevy just over and over again you see this advice you just got
to figure out what that thing is that you want to focus on and no one can answer that question but
for you but you not only do i love advice from old people but i love the fact that like this is
there's another paragraph from her from when she almost,
she's almost,
she's at the end of her life.
And I think this is the single biggest important,
it's the most important thing is that she prized the life that she led.
And I think the key to a happy life is getting to the end of your life with
the least amount of regrets as possible.
And she goes,
I enjoy being,
I enjoyed being in the thick of things.
I like to have a part in the great movements of the world
and especially of this country.
I like to deal with big things and with big men.
Unlike society matron, she said,
I would rather do this than play bridge.
Indeed, my work is my amusement
and I believe it is also my duty.
And then finally, she passes away at 81 years old
and it says, a millionaire a hundred times over,
she had made her mark besides Carnegie and Morgan, Vanderbilt and Rockefeller,
but she was different. She was an enigma, a blue-blooded heiress who identified with the
common folk, an interloper, a female who triumphed in the male world of finance, an independent who answered to no one but herself,
a renegade, a misfit, just kidding, the book doesn't say misfit, I added that myself, but
she definitely was, a moneymaker who thumbed her nose at what money could buy, a pariah cast out
in her youth, the woman who had wandered all her life from place to place could rest in peace.
At long last, Hedy was home.
And that is where I will leave it.
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Thank you very much for listening, and I will talk to you next week.