By SIMON CONSTABLE
Matchmakers, or companies that connect members of one group with another group, live or die by slightly different economic rules than most firms. What’s more, such companies have made, and continue to make, huge inroads into our economy. They include names such as AirBNB, American Express, Uber, Apple, and Visa. For instance, AirBNB connects people with apartments to rent out with people who want to rent them. The company doesn’t own the real estate. Read more here.
Wednesday, July 6, 2016
WSJ: The Big Interview With Ron Paul
By SIMON CONSTABLE
My conversation with Dr. Ron Paul, while sitting in his Washington office.
My conversation with Dr. Ron Paul, while sitting in his Washington office.
WSJ: The Big Interview With Barton Biggs
By SIMON CONSTABLE
In which I speak with the late Barton Biggs
In which I speak with the late Barton Biggs
WSJ: The Big Interview With Jim Rogers
By SIMON CONSTABLE
My interview with Jim Rogers
My interview with Jim Rogers
Photo by Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, USA,
CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Tuesday, July 5, 2016
WSJ: The Big Interview With Nouriel Roubini
By SIMON CONSTABLE
In which I interview Nouriel Roubini about the economy.
In which I interview Nouriel Roubini about the economy.
Forbes: More Brexit Lies Dispelled
By SIMON CONSTABLE
It’s not surprising that most people are averse to change. But some of the worries people have about Britain leaving the European Union are wildly pessimistic. They paint a world so gloomy that even fantasy writers would have a hard time selling these ideas to publishers. The level of gloom simply wouldn’t be seen as realistic enough.
For instance, in a coffee shop one morning a young Frenchman asked me (I’m English) if he’d be able to visit Britain after the so-called Brexit (Britain’s exit from the E.U.). Read more here.
Forbes: How Wall Street Really Invests
By SIMON CONSTABLE
Anyone wanting the inside scoop on how investing really works could do a whole lot worse than to read the forthcoming book by my former colleague Spencer Jakab. He’s an editor at the Wall Street Journal, but more importantly he was once a top-rated Wall Street stock analyst.
The book, Heads I Win, Tails I Win, which is scheduled to be published next week, might better have been labeled ’Confessions of a Wall Street Stockpicker.’ But knowing Jakab as I do, that really isn’t his style because such a title hints at unbridled debauchery. That’s not the image he projects, either personally or in his writing.
Read more here.
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