The Finance Journal
📈 The Finance Journal: Your go-to for the latest financial news and trends. Contact: @CaptainJamesCook
Показати більше📈 Аналітичний огляд Telegram-каналу The Finance Journal
Канал The Finance Journal (@thefinancejournal) у мовному сегменті Англійська є активним учасником. На даний момент спільнота об'єднує 10 291 підписників, посідаючи 11 458 місце в категорії Економіка та фінанси та 3 481 місце у регіоні США.
📊 Показники аудиторії та динаміка
З моменту свого створення невідомо, проект продемонстрував стрімке зростання, зібравши аудиторію у 10 291 підписників.
За останніми даними від 09 липня, 2026, канал демонструє стабільну активність. Хоча за останні 30 днів спостерігається зміна кількості учасників на -374, а за останні 24 години на -13, загальне охоплення залишається високим.
- Статус верифікації: Не верифікований
- Рівень залученості (ER): Середній показник залученості аудиторії становить 6.02%. Протягом перших 24 годин після публікації контент зазвичай збирає 4.24% реакцій від загальної кількості підписників.
- Охоплення публікацій: В середньому кожен допис отримує 620 переглядів. Протягом першої доби публікація в середньому набирає 437 переглядів.
- Реакції та взаємодія: Аудиторія активно підтримує контент: середня кількість реакцій на один пост – 2.
- Тематичні інтереси: Контент зосереджений навколо ключових тем, таких як journal, federal, fed, powell, tariff.
📝 Опис та контентна політика
Автор описує ресурс як майданчик для висловлення суб'єктивної думки:
“📈 The Finance Journal: Your go-to for the latest financial news and trends.
Contact: @CaptainJamesCook”
Завдяки високій частоті оновлень (останні дані отримано 10 липня, 2026), канал підтримує актуальність та високий рівень охоплення публікацій. Аналітика показує, що аудиторія активно взаємодіє з контентом, що робить його важливою точкою впливу в категорії Економіка та фінанси.
Триває завантаження даних...
| Дата | Залучення підписників | Згадування | Канали | |
| 10 липня | 0 | |||
| 09 липня | 0 | |||
| 08 липня | +3 | |||
| 07 липня | +1 | |||
| 06 липня | +1 | |||
| 05 липня | +2 | |||
| 04 липня | +9 | |||
| 03 липня | +5 | |||
| 02 липня | +30 | |||
| 01 липня | 0 |
| 2 | Ray Dalio warned of debt crisis in 1980
Source: Summit, 2019
The Finance Journal 📈 | 58 |
| 3 | Jim Simons' first-ever trade? Soybeans — a crop he'd never even eaten
Source: The Man Who Solved the Market* by Gregory Zuckerman; IESE Business School interview with Jim Simons
The Finance Journal 📈 | 197 |
| 4 | “Calling someone who trades actively in the market an investor is like calling someone who repeatedly engages in one-night stands a romantic.” - Warren Buffett
The Finance Journal 📈 | 201 |
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| 6 | Warren Buffett’s First Ever Interview from 1962
The Finance Journal 📈 | 457 |
| 7 | Charlie Munger on why comparing today’s tech leaders to the Nifty Fifty isn’t as simple as it seems
Source: A Lesson on Elementary, Worldly Wisdom As It Relates to Investment Management & Business
The Finance Journal 📈 | 244 |
| 8 | "My largest positions aren’t the ones I think I’m going to make the most money from. My largest positions are the ones where I don’t think I’m going to lose money."
- Joel Greenblatt
The Finance Journal 📈 | 241 |
| 9 | Warren Buffett explains why some of his earliest partners missed out on millions
Source: Becoming Warren Buffett (HBO, 2017)
The Finance Journal 📈 | 315 |
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| 11 | “If you pay people not to work and tax them when they do, don’t be surprised if you get unemployment.”
— Milton Friedman
The Finance Journal 📈 | 2 164 |
| 12 | Keynesian stimulus has never worked, and never will, and the record proves it. Every. Single. Time.
Start with the New Deal. Roosevelt tripled federal spending between 1933 and 1940, and unemployment still sat at 14.6 percent in 1940. Seven years of pump-priming bought a decade the economists call the Great Depression.
Japan tried the same trick. Through the 1990s Tokyo ran ten separate stimulus packages, poured trillions of yen into bridges and roads to nowhere, and drove public debt above 130 percent of GDP by 2000. The reward was the Lost Decade, then a second one.
Then came 2009. Obama and his advisers promised the $831 billion stimulus would hold unemployment under 8 percent. It hit 10 percent in October 2009. They spent the money anyway on shovel-ready projects that the president himself later admitted were not shovel-ready.
You see the pattern? Politicians take resources out of the productive economy through taxes and borrowing, hand them to whoever has the best lobbyists, and call the shuffle "growth." They count the spending. They never count what the money would have built if the private sector had kept it.
Frédéric Bastiat explained this in 1850 with the broken window. The stimulus crowd still hasn't read him. The government cannot spend you into prosperity. It can only move wealth around and skim off the top.
The Finance Journal 📈 | 642 |
| 13 | Lyn Alden: "The best product Coca-Cola ever sold was their bonds, not their Coke."
Coca-Cola borrows at 2-3% while the money supply grows at 7%. They then use that cheap debt to buy scarcer assets.
Governments do it. Corporations do it. Wealthy individuals do it. Everyone is shorting the currency...
Except the people at the bottom.
They can't access cheap debt and "are getting the full damage of the inflation" on their wages and savings.
The Finance Journal 📈 | 359 |
| 14 | Paul Graham on noticing your life before it's gone:
The Finance Journal 📈 | 937 |
| 15 | Henry Kravis's actual advice if starting from zero:
Buy a small business → install a great operator → acquire more → let it compound
Media: World Economic Forum
The Finance Journal 📈 | 331 |
| 16 | ❗️ Peter Thiel: "There's only one company making money in the AI boom, that's Nvidia. Everybody else is losing money."
And it all traces back to one stupid decision in 1993.
"You should not be asking this question about meta or openai or any of these things. You should really be focusing on the Nvidia question, the chips question"
"Nvidia got started in 1993. That was the last year where anybody in their right mind would have studied electrical engineering over computer science"
"94, Netscape takes off. It's probably a really bad idea to start a semiconductor company even in '93"
"But the benefit is there was going to be no one would come after you. No talented people started semiconductor companies after 1993 because they all went into software"
"Their monopoly power, I think it's quite strong because of this history I just gave you, where none of us know anything about chips"
@aipost 🏴 | 289 |
| 17 | Dr. David Paul on why retail traders keep getting stopped out:
Source: Market Makers Playbook (2024)
The Finance Journal 📈 | 400 |
| 18 | 🗣Lyn Alden: "The best product Coca-Cola ever sold was their bonds, not their Coke."
Coca-Cola borrows at 2-3% while the money supply grows at 7%. They then use that cheap debt to buy scarcer assets.
Governments do it. Corporations do it. Wealthy individuals do it. Everyone is shorting the currency...
Except the people at the bottom. They can't access cheap debt and "are getting the full damage of the inflation" on their wages and savings.
The Finance Journal 📈 | 775 |
| 19 | ⚠️Ayn Rand's most important lesson: Production comes before distribution. You cannot divide a pie nobody baked.
Every politician inverts that order. They argue over who gets what slice, how to tax the baker, how to redistribute the flour, as if the loaf simply materialized like manna. Rand called this out for what it is. Wealth is created by specific people doing specific things: Hank Rearden smelting metal, John Galt building a motor. Take those people away and you're left with committees drafting memos about fairness while the lights go dark.
The entrepreneur is not a parasite skimming off labor. He directs scarce resources toward their most urgent uses, and he eats the loss when he guesses wrong. No bureaucrat carries that risk. This is what Ludwig von Mises spent his career proving in denser prose.
Rand's villains aren't cartoon capitalists. They're the moochers who demand the moral sanction of their victims: the industrialist who lobbies for a subsidy, the intellectual who calls envy "social justice." She hated the crony as much as the commissar.
The Finance Journal 📈 | 798 |
| 20 | “Rockefeller would focus on the highest priority.
When he gets into the oil refining business it has no barriers to entry.
It costs $1000 to start a refinery and only requires a few people to run it.
And one thing he notices is that transportation is the largest expense. It costs more to ship a barrel of oil, than to refine it.
So if transportation is your highest priority that means the location of your refinery is key.
The site that he chose was genius. He selected a location that was next to both the railroad and on the banks of a river. Why? Shipping by water was 50% cheaper than shipping by rail.
If something is your top priority you should spend the majority of your time thinking about how to develop an edge there.”
The Finance Journal 📈 | 704 |
