“Is it possible that a young Man at present could pass his
Time better, than in reading the History of Stocks, and knowing by what secret
Springs they have sudden Ascents and Falls in the same Day?
Could he be better conducted on his Way to Wealth, which is
the great Article of Life, than in a Treatise dated from Change-Alley by an
able proficient there?
NOTHING COULD BE MORE USEFUL, THAN TO BE WELL INSTRUCTED IN
HIS HOPE AND FEARS; TO BE DIFFIDENT WHEN OTHERS EXALT, AND WITH A SECRET JOY
BUY WHEN OTHERS THINK IT THEIR INTEREST TO SELL.”
(SIR RICHARD STEELE, ~1695) {My caps}
I think Graham and Buffet would agree with the capped
statement.
Steele was a proponent of the “Castles in the Air” theory –
that stocks have no intrinsic value and are simply the product of investor
psychology.
Steele also talked about the link to the height and
extravagance of ladies’ headdresses, which peaked the year the 1695 London
stock market collapsed, just as hemlines rose during the 1920’s stock market
boom.
Basically, fashionable style, like a speculative movement,
is subject to a popular consensus and follows a trend until it reached a point
of extravagance, from which it can only retreat, (Chancellor, Devil Take the
Hindmost).
I thought it interesting that some people were thinking
about investor psychology, long before Psychology itself existed as a science,
and that social and cultural behavior was influenced by stock market exuberance
or decline – and vice versa!
Ladies Hemlines fell after the 1929 Crash too!
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