Humphrey Yang on Stock Market Basics for Beginners
Humphrey Yang frames investing as a long‑term system: broad index funds, tax‑advantaged accounts, and patience outperform fear, cash, and stock picking.
Humphrey Yang frames investing as a long‑term system: broad index funds, tax‑advantaged accounts, and patience outperform fear, cash, and stock picking.
Ramit Sethi explains how to change your finances in six months by defining your rich life, automating your money, and fixing the behavioural gaps that derail most plans.
Mohnish Pabrai explains why copying proven models and waiting for asymmetric bets is the fastest path to financial freedom
Why budgeting fails for so many people and how zero-based systems and debt elimination actually restore cash flow.
Nischa explains why financial freedom depends on systems, not salary and how to build one in under an hour.
This episode breaks down how Warren Buffett generated extraordinary early returns through concentration, activism, and creative capital allocation.
William Bernstein argues that investors don’t fail because markets are chaotic, but because portfolios ignore human psychology. The real goal isn’t getting rich it’s surviving the moments that break compounding.
Jay Shetty argues that money amplifies self‑worth, not the other way around and why skills, service, and forgiveness drive real abundance.
Why almost all stock market wealth comes from a tiny minority of companies and what that means for investors.
JL Collins explains why financial literacy improves when investing is kept boring, simple, and emotionally disciplined