The Morgan Housel Podcast – Details, episodes & analysis
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The Morgan Housel Podcast
Morgan Housel
Frequency: 1 episode/11d. Total Eps: 78

The Morgan Housel Podcast -- timeless lessons on wealth, greed, and happiness.
Recent rankings
Latest chart positions across Apple Podcasts and Spotify rankings.
Apple Podcasts
🇨🇦 Canada - business
31/07/2025#72🇬🇧 Great Britain - business
31/07/2025#68🇬🇧 Great Britain - business
30/07/2025#58🇨🇦 Canada - business
29/07/2025#72🇬🇧 Great Britain - business
29/07/2025#66🇨🇦 Canada - business
28/07/2025#83🇬🇧 Great Britain - business
28/07/2025#65🇬🇧 Great Britain - business
27/07/2025#97🇬🇧 Great Britain - business
26/07/2025#100🇬🇧 Great Britain - business
23/07/2025#86
Spotify
🇬🇧 Great Britain - trending
21/06/2025#166↘🇬🇧 Great Britain - trending
20/06/2025#122↗🇬🇧 Great Britain - trending
19/06/2025#147↗🇬🇧 Great Britain - trending
18/06/2025#197↗
Shared links between episodes and podcasts
Links found in episode descriptions and other podcasts that share them.
See all- http://www.ramp.com/morgan
15 shares
- http://ramp.com/
13 shares
- http://eightsleep.com/morganhousel
13 shares
- http://amzn.to/41CHgKM
4 shares
- https://amzn.to/3Xytu9i
2 shares
RSS feed quality and score
Technical evaluation of the podcast's RSS feed quality and structure.
See allScore global : 47%
Publication history
Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.
Cumulative vs. Cyclical Knowledge
Season 1 · Episode 49
jeudi 29 août 2024 • Duration 12:24
In some fields our knowledge is seamlessly passed down across generations. In others, it’s fleeting. To paraphrase investor Jim Grant: Knowledge in some fields is cumulative. In other fields it’s cyclical (at best).
Different Kinds of BS
Season 1 · Episode 47
jeudi 25 juillet 2024 • Duration 13:28
Jeff Bezos once said there are different kinds of smart. Distinguishing the various flavors is important because if you think smarts comes in just one form, you’ll miss dozens of other nuanced varieties.
BS is the same. It comes in countless forms, some harder to spot than others. False modesty, projecting, double standards, hypocrisy, tugging at heartstrings – these aren’t lies; they’re subtle forms of BS which is why they’re so prevalent.
No One Is Crazy
Season 1 · Episode 38
vendredi 5 avril 2024 • Duration 14:08
The fun part of behavioral finance is learning about how flawed other people can be. The hard part is trying to figure out how flawed you are, and what stories make sense to you but would seem crazy to others.
Smart Things Smart People Have Said
Season 1 · Episode 37
jeudi 28 mars 2024 • Duration 11:45
A few of the best and most insightful things I've read lately.
Accountable to Darwin vs. Accountable to Newton
lundi 18 mars 2024 • Duration 14:33
Woodrow Wilson was the only president with a Ph.D. in political science.
He came to office having thought more about how a government functions than most before him or since.
One of his complaints was that too many people in government held the belief that it was a Big Machine: that once you set up a series of rules you could take your hands off the wheel and let the government run on its own forever. They viewed government like physics, with a set of customs and laws that required no updating or second-guessing because they were believed to be precise and perfect as they were.
Wilson thought that was wrong. He viewed government as being a living thing that adapted and evolved.
I really don't care about politics. But he had a theory that I think is so important, and so applicable, to us ordinary people managing our money.
The Dumber Side of Smart People
vendredi 8 mars 2024 • Duration 13:38
Mae West said, “Too much of a good thing can be wonderful.” That might be true for some things – health, happiness, golden retrievers, maybe.
But in so many cases the thing that helps you can be taken to a dangerous level. And since it’s a “good thing,” not an obvious threat, its danger creeps into your life unnoticed.
Take intelligence.
How could someone possibly be too intelligent? How do you get to a point where you realize you could have been more successful if you had been a little dumber?
Let me share three reasons why.
And if you're looking for another podcast to listen to, check out The Rundown by my friends at Public.com. It's a quick five-minute listen that gets you all caught up on the latest in the stock market, the economy, and in crypto. Hope you enjoy it.
How to Engage With History
Season 1 · Episode 34
mercredi 28 février 2024 • Duration 10:48
This episode discusses my take on what you should pay attention to when reading history.
There’s a quote I love from writer Kelly Hayes who says, “Everything feels unprecedented when you haven’t engaged with history.”
It’s so true. History’s cast of characters changes but it’s the same movie over and over again.
To me, the point of paying attention to history is not the specific details of certain events, which are always random and never repeat; it’s the big-picture behaviors that reoccur in different eras, generations, and societies.
Compounding Optimism
Season 1 · Episode 33
mercredi 14 février 2024 • Duration 12:02
Let me share a little theory I have about optimism, and why progress is so easy to underestimate.
I’ll explain it in four parts.
A Few Thoughts on Spending Money
Season 1 · Episode 32
jeudi 1 février 2024 • Duration 12:45
Behavioral finance is now well documented. But most of the attention goes to how people invest. But the study of how you spend money might be far more interesting -- and practical. How you spend money can reveal an existential struggle of what you find valuable in life, who you want to spend time with, why you chose your career, and the kind of attention you want from other people.
There is a science to spending money – how to find a bargain, how to make a budget, things like that.
But there’s also an art to spending. A part that can’t be quantified and varies person to person.
Information That Would Get Your Attention
Season 1 · Episode 31
mercredi 17 janvier 2024 • Duration 12:33
There’s obviously a hierarchy of information. It ranges from life-changing good to life-changing disastrous.
That got me thinking: What would be the most interesting and useful information anyone could get their hands on?
Years ago I asked that question to Yale economist Robert Shiller. “The exact role of luck in successful outcomes,” he answered.
I loved that answer, because nobody will ever have that information. But if you did, your entire worldview would change. Who you admire would change. The traits you think are needed for success would change. You would find millions of lucky egomaniacs and millions of unlucky geniuses. The fact that it’s impossible to possess this information doesn’t make it useless – just thinking about how powerful it would be to have it forces you to ponder a topic that’s important but easy to ignore.
Keeping the idea that the most interesting information doesn’t have to be realistic – it can be impossible-to-obtain, magical-wish thinking – here are three other things that would get your attention.