The Finance Journal
📈 The Finance Journal: Your go-to for the latest financial news and trends. Contact: @CaptainJamesCook
Ko'proq ko'rsatish📈 Telegram kanali The Finance Journal analitikasi
The Finance Journal (@thefinancejournal) Ingliz til segmentidagi kanali faol ishtirokchi. Hozirda hamjamiyat 10 240 obunachidan iborat bo'lib, Iqtisodiyot & Moliya toifasida 11 726-o'rinni va AQSH mintaqasida 3 485-o'rinni egallagan.
📊 Auditoriya ko‘rsatkichlari va dinamika
невідомо sanasidan buyon loyiha tez o‘sib, 10 240 obunachiga ega bo‘ldi.
17 Iyul, 2026 dagi oxirgi ma’lumotlarga ko‘ra kanal barqaror faollikka ega. Oxirgi 30 kunda obunachilar soni -313 ga, so‘nggi 24 soatda esa -12 ga o‘zgardi va umumiy qamrov yuqori darajada qolmoqda.
- Tasdiqlash holati: Tasdiqlanmagan
- Jalb etish (ER): Auditoriya o‘rtacha 8.51% darajada jalb etiladi. Nashrdan keyingi dastlabki 24 soatda kontent odatda umumiy obunachilar sonining 4.69% ini tashkil etuvchi reaksiyalarni to‘playdi.
- Post qamrovi: Har bir post o‘rtacha 872 marta ko‘riladi; birinchi sutkada odatda 480 ta ko‘rish yig‘iladi.
- Reaksiyalar va o‘zaro ta’sir: Auditoriya faol: har bir postga o‘rtacha 3 ta reaksiya keladi.
- Tematik yo‘nalishlar: Kontent journal, federal, fed, powell, tariff kabi asosiy mavzularga jamlangan.
📝 Tavsif va kontent siyosati
Muallif resursni shaxsiy fikrni ifoda etish maydoni sifatida ta’riflaydi:
“📈 The Finance Journal: Your go-to for the latest financial news and trends.
Contact: @CaptainJamesCook”
Yuqori yangilanish chastotasi (oxirgi ma’lumot 18 Iyul, 2026 da olingan) sababli kanal doimo dolzarb va katta qamrovli bo‘lib qoladi. Analitika auditoriya kontent bilan faol hamkorlik qilishini, uni Iqtisodiyot & Moliya toifasidagi muhim ta’sir nuqtasiga aylantirishini ko‘rsatadi.
Ma'lumot yuklanmoqda...
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| 3 | David Magerman explains why trading the news is usually a losing strategy
Source: FGI
The Finance Journal 📈 | 224 |
| 4 | Advice from Charlie Munger:
The Finance Journal 📈 | 220 |
| 5 | Josh Friedman on the biggest investing mistake people make
Source: Bloomberg
The Finance Journal 📈 | 204 |
| 6 | Pretty straightforward. Declare a real crisis and go aggressively recruit the best people in the world to come build.
Let them bring capital, make hiring decisions, and figure out execution, exactly like America did when it pulled in German scientists after WW11.
It works because talent compounds faster than anything else. Those people create the companies, set the standards, attract more capital, and train the next wave of locals who learn from them and scale it themselves.
Because money follows talent, not the other way around. But Europe does the opposite every single day. It piles on regulations, drags out visas, keeps energy expensive and unreliable, and protects rigid labor rules that make fast hiring and scaling painful.
So the best people stay away or leave, capital goes elsewhere, and the gap widens one slow decision at a time. What Europe really lacks is in fact the will to actually fix its situation.
The Finance Journal 📈 | 750 |
| 7 | Diversification
The Finance Journal 📈 | 270 |
| 8 | Citadel's Ken Griffin says AI now powers roughly 25% of U.S. stock trading
Source: Bloomberg Originals
The Finance Journal 📈 | 278 |
| 9 | "There is no way you can live an adequate life without making mistakes."
- Charlie Munger
The Finance Journal 📈 | 496 |
| 10 | Larry Williams says the best traders don't let losses dictate their next move— they focus on the next opportunity instead
Media: Titans Of Tomorrow
The Finance Journal 📈 | 310 |
| 11 | Greg Smith says Goldman Sachs' culture is built on silence, with insiders rarely speaking publicly about what happens behind closed doors
Media: CBS News
The Finance Journal 📈 | 297 |
| 12 | Larry Fink believes inflation isn't just a temporary cycle... it's becoming structural. He argues that many investors still underestimate how this shift could reshape markets and long-term portfolio performance
Source: Saudi Future Investment Initiative (FII), October 2023
The Finance Journal 📈 | 285 |
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| 14 | About 250 years ago a quirky moral philosopher named Adam Smith discovered a chain of logic whereby the selfish desires of man would result in widespread prosperity.
It’s one of the greatest discoveries of all time. Here’s how it goes…
1. Selfish desire seeks wealth, status, security. No virtue required. This is the raw material, as unpromising as it sounds.
2. In a market with property rights, you can’t take, you must trade. Theft and fraud are policed, so the only legal route to someone else’s money is offering them something they want more. Self-interest is channelled through voluntary exchange. This is the crucial valve: the baker serves your bread not from benevolence, but because it’s how he gets paid.
3. Every voluntary trade creates value for both sides. Nobody trades unless they prefer what they’re getting to what they’re giving. So each transaction is positive-sum by construction. Wealth isn’t moved; it’s made.
4. Competition forces the selfish to serve better. You’re not the only one chasing that customer’s money. To win, you must offer more value, lower prices, or something new. Greed disciplined by rivalry becomes, functionally, service. The customer becomes the boss of every capitalist.
5. Prices emerge as signals of what people actually want. Millions of trades compress dispersed knowledge - scarcity, preference, urgency - into a single number. No planner needed. High prices shout “make more of this” and falling prices say “stop making this.” The cure for high prices IS high prices.
6. Profit directs capital toward unmet needs. Profit is the reward for spotting something people want but can’t get, and losses are the punishment for guessing wrong. Capital flows automatically toward solving problems and away from waste - a self-correcting search algorithm running on selfishness. The profit motive pulls the greedy person towards genuine service and efficiency.
7. The pursuit of advantage drives innovation. The only durable way to out-earn competitors is to do something new - create a better product, a cheaper process. Each entrepreneur trying to get rich makes the previous solution obsolete and the average person’s life better.
8. Specialisation and scale compound productivity. Competition pushes everyone toward what they do best; trade lets them exchange it. Output per person rises.
9. Rising productivity spreads as falling prices and rising wages. Competition doesn’t let producers keep the gains forever - they’re competed away to consumers. The luxuries of one generation (cars, flights, antibiotics, computing) become the staples of the next. The rich get richer, but the poor get richer too.
10. Prosperity becomes self-reinforcing and civilising. Wealth funds education, health, science, and even the welfare state that redistributes it. Commerce rewards trust, reliability, and cooperation with strangers (doux commerce).
A system built on self-interest ends up producing the most extensive cooperation network in human history: millions of strangers coordinating to put breakfast on your table.
The hockey stick after 1800: from $3/day for all of human history to a 30-fold rise in living standards wherever this system took hold is pure magic.
The Finance Journal 📈 | 2 543 |
| 15 | Investment banking can be an extraordinary career, says Jim Donovan... but only for those who can compete at the highest level
Source: The Making of an Investment Banker
The Finance Journal 📈 | 325 |
| 16 | Why some of Warren Buffett's earliest partners missed out on millions, in Buffett's own words
Source: Becoming Warren Buffett (HBO, 2017)
The Finance Journal 📈 | 328 |
| 17 | "Nobody buys a farm based on whether they think it’s going to rain next year. They buy because they think it’s a good investment over 10 or 20 years. It's the same with stocks. Think of stocks as a part ownership of a business. It's not that complicated." - Warren Buffett
The Finance Journal 📈 | 330 |
| 18 | Warren Buffett explains why being born in the U.S. was one of his greatest advantages
Source: Charlie Rose
The Finance Journal 📈 | 997 |
| 19 | Tony Robbins on why he prefers the S&P 500 over private equity
Source: Glenn Beck
The Finance Journal 📈 | 750 |
| 20 | The biggest scam humanity has collectively accepted as normal, according to Claude.
@aipost 🏴 | 384 |
