• Thought of the Day

    Thought of the Day

    2000: Diversified portfolios behave very differently than the individual assets in them, in much the same way that a cake tastes different from shortening, flour, butter, and sugar.

    –William J. Bernstein, The Intelligent Asset Allocator (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2000), p. xiv.

Today in Financial History

1995: Barings Bank, one of the oldest and most distinguished investment banks in the world, declares bankruptcy after rogue trader Nick Leeson loses more than $1.4 billion on unauthorized (and apparently unsupervised) trades in Japanese stock futures. The ultimate irony: Barings had nearly gone bust more than a century earlier on its speculations in Latin American bonds. Some people never learn.

Kimberly D. Krawiec, "Accounting for Greed: Unraveling the Rogue Trader Mystery, Oregon Law Review, Vol. 79

1987: Templeton Emerging Markets Fund, the first portfolio of emerging markets stocks for retail investors, is launched.

1555: The company typically considered the world's earliest modern corporation is chartered in London, England. Its 201 shareholders, led by explorer Sebastian Cabot, put up 6,000 pounds in shares priced at 25 pounds each. They call the company the "Marchants adventurers of England, for the discovery of lands, territories, iles, dominions, and seigniories unknowen, and not before that late adventure or enterprise by sea or navigation, commonly frequented." Understandably, this "busynes" soon goes by a shorter handle, the Muscovy Company or the Russia Company.

T.S. Willan, The Early History of the Russia Company, 1553-1603 (Manchester Univ. Press, Manchester, UK, 1968), p. 7.