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The Rise of the CAT Bond.

In late August of 1992, tens of thousands of passengers sat in their cars in what was one of the worst traffic jams the country had ever seen. Miles of cars lined up along the Interstate 95 highway in Miami-Dade county desperately trying to escape the destruction behind them. As hurricane Andrew made landfall, the governor of Florida warned South Florida residents to either evacuate their homes or board their windows and prepare for the worst hurricane the state had ever expe

The Reincarnation of Electric Transportation

In the late 1800s, two of the world’s most famous inventors, Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla, were each engrossed in radical new devices that they hoped would change the lives of everyone living then, and everyone to live subsequently. Edison, the more famous of the two, would go on to be much more successful in this feat than his distant apprentice Tesla. Edison arguably changed the world more than any man before him with his invention of the incandescent light bulb, and whil

How Inflation Impacts Everyone

During a discussion I had with a friend about current economic conditions and excessive money printing, he asked in a satirical manner “has anything that bad ever really happened because of inflation?”  ​ “Have you ever heard of something called World War II?” I quipped back. ​ While not the direct cause, hyperinflation across Weimar Germany greatly exacerbated the anger the german population had towards the banking system, which at the time was run largely by Jewish citizens

The Rise of Lithium Valley

The term Silicon Valley was born from a computer science journalist by the name of Don Hoefner in an article written for one of his local electronics publications. With the term he aimed to describe the multitude of companies whose products were made possible by their electronic transistors of which silicon was the main element. Not until the 1980s, though, did the term alter from a scarcely used word to a commonality in the jargon of the electronics industry. The popularity

Is Buffett's Baby In Danger?

On the week of December 6th 1951, thousands of financial professionals received in their mail that week’s issue of The Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Within the issue, an article entitled The Security I Like Best, written by an Omaha born Columbia graduate by the name of Warren E. Buffett, appeared on page 24. The article, which was part of a weekly series of stock recommendations, covered a small insurance company located in Washington D.C. named Government Employees In

Has Inflation Already Arrived?

For almost the entirety of the 20th century, the most essential decision posed upon the U.S. investor was that between the purchase of common stock in publicly held corporations and of fixed income securities, namely corporate and government bonds. The widely acknowledged dean of security analysis, Benjamin Graham, devoted an entire textbook, and in fact an entire life’s work, to intelligently deciding between these two investment vehicles. ​ What Graham could not have reason

Seize It Boldly

January 1st, 2020 marked the second time that Charlie Munger lived through the 20s. As it happens, it was also the man’s 96th birthday. Just 4 years later he would have turned 100 years old, though, unfortunately, he passed away just weeks before reaching this centennial feat. In the days following his death, business papers were full of stories of the man who so nearly made it to 100. But, for all intents and purposes, he did live to 100, in the same way John D. Rockefeller

How to Build a Hypochondriac

Give them ready access to all the possible diseases known by science. Along with access to the world’s diseases, it’s important to also provide gruesome detail on the potential risks of having certain diseases. Put them in a society which benefits financially off fear. Flood their TVs, smartphones, and computers with ads describing newly discovered diseases accompanied by (conveniently) a drug that will help to treat that disease. In crafting the advertisement, ensure that sy

Steve Jobs tried to buy them in 1982. How Adobe became a software giant.

In the 1990s corporations across America started to look for solutions that would allow them to transmit electronic documents among people within their organization as well as to their customers and suppliers. Up until that time there were no standardized methods for sending and storing digital records and dozens of software companies were competing to find the answer. The solution came when in 1993 Adobe introduced what it called a Portable Document Format, or PDF, which qui

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