Explore every episode of the podcast The Morgan Housel Podcast
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| How We Used to Live (Levittown, Progress, and Expectations) | 24 Apr 2025 | 00:21:35 | |
Thanks to my friends at Ramp -- the best expense accounting system I've seen. For more check out ramp.com/morgan. | |||
| Tariffs, Trust, Risk, and Regret | 16 Apr 2025 | 00:15:31 | |
Thanks to my friends at Ramp -- the best expense accounting system I've seen. For more check out ramp.com/morgan. | |||
| A Few Things I'm Pretty Sure About | 21 Feb 2025 | 00:16:41 | |
A collection of things I've been thinking about lately that I hope you find valuable regardless of your profession. Thanks to my friends at Eight Sleep. Check out eightsleep.com/morganhousel for more. | |||
| Tails, You Win | 07 Feb 2025 | 00:15:37 | |
A story about how tails drive everything, and why the vast majority of your success in investing and in life will come from just a few of the things you do. Thanks to my friends at Ramp -- the best expense accounting system I've seen. For more check out ramp.com/morgan. | |||
| All The Different Ways Your Life Could Have Turned Out | 29 Jan 2025 | 00:19:34 | |
Everyone knows one version of the world -- the one that's actually happened. But that's just one of infinitive possibilities that could have occurred. I asked ChatGPT to write different versions of how my life could have ended up, and was stunned by the results. I'd be you'd have the same experience. | |||
| Minimum Levels of Stress | 24 Jan 2025 | 00:12:49 | |
Most people – and definitely society as a whole – seem to have a minimum level of stress. They will never be fully at ease because after solving every problem the gaze of their anxiety shifts to the next problem, no matter how trivial it is relative to previous ones. | |||
| What I Learned In 2024: A Tale of Tails | 23 Dec 2024 | 00:13:28 | |
A look at the big story dominating this year: tails drive everything, and everything from businesses to careers either work extraordinarily well, or not at all. | |||
| The Most Important Financial Skill: Getting The Goalpost to Stop Moving | 18 Dec 2024 | 00:20:43 | |
A look at why so many Americans think the best was better than it was: People in the past may have been poorer than we are now, but they probably did a better job keeping their expectations in check. | |||
| Experts From a World That No Longer Exists | 06 Dec 2024 | 00:13:10 | |
The world evolves faster than people's beliefs do. This episode looks at the need to change your mind, and why it's so difficult to do so. | |||
| Universal Laws of the World | 27 Nov 2024 | 00:18:28 | |
A few laws from random sciences that almost certainly apply to your own -- regardless of what you do for a living. | |||
| Why Pessimism Sounds So Smart | 15 Nov 2024 | 00:16:46 | |
If you're a student of history, you know that most things have gotten better for most people over time. But read the news and what do you hear? Pessimism, pessimism, pessimism. | |||
| Rare and Powerful Skills | 04 Nov 2024 | 00:15:42 | |
A few easy-to-overlook skills that are so vital in today's world. | |||
| My Thoughts on Tariffs, Economic History, and the Market Decline | 08 Apr 2025 | 00:28:42 | |
Thanks to my friends at Eight Sleep. Check out eightsleep.com/morganhousel for more. | |||
| My Favorite Book: An Astounding Look at How Fast the World Can Change | 22 Oct 2024 | 00:36:49 | |
This episode digs into one of my favorite books of all time: The Big Change by Frederick Lewis Allen. Written in 1952, it's a remarkable look at how quickly the world can change, with so many profound insights that I find relevant today. | |||
| This Was Never Easy: A Brief History of Nostalgia | 10 Oct 2024 | 00:22:40 | |
There's a Russian saying that I love: "The past is more unpredictable than the future." It explains so much about nostalgia, and the twisted ways we all view the economic past. | |||
| Everything In Life Is Cyclical | 04 Oct 2024 | 00:13:37 | |
A lot of mistakes in life come when you think risk is something caused by external forces, when in fact the weight of your own success is enough to pull you down without any outside help. | |||
| Do It Your Own Way | 27 Sep 2024 | 00:14:05 | |
The ultimate success metric is whether you get what you want out of life. But that’s harder than it sounds because it’s easy to try to copy someone who wants something you don’t. | |||
| A Few Little Ideas And Short Stories | 12 Sep 2024 | 00:14:49 | |
Some of the most interesting stuff I've come across lately. | |||
| Cumulative vs. Cyclical Knowledge | 29 Aug 2024 | 00:13:13 | |
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 | 25 Jul 2024 | 00:14:17 | |
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. | |||
| I Have A Few Questions | 01 Jul 2024 | 00:14:25 | |
A few important money and life topics to make you ponder. | |||
| Quiet Compounding | 17 Jun 2024 | 00:07:34 | |
"Nature is not in a hurry, yet everything is accomplished,” said Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu. Giant sequoias, advanced organisms, towering mountains – it builds the most jaw-dropping features of the universe. And it does so silently, where growth is almost never visible right now but staggering over long periods of time. It’s quiet compounding, and it’s a wonder to see. I like the idea of quietly compounding your money. Just like in nature, it’s where you’ll find the most impressive results. | |||
| History's Seductive Beliefs | 11 Jun 2024 | 00:17:51 | |
My deepest forecasting belief is that you can better understand the future if you focus on the behaviors that never change instead of the events that might. And those behaviors have a common denominator: They follow the path of least resistance of people trying to simplify a complex world into a few stories that make sense and make them feel good about themselves. Simple stories, feel-good stories. Those are some of history’s most seductive beliefs, and they always will be. Here are a few that stick out. | |||
| Reasonable vs. Rational | 02 Apr 2025 | 00:16:04 | |
The most impactful idea to me personally in my book: My theory is that most investment models maximize for risk-adjusted returns, but in the real world every investor wants to maximize for sleeping well at night and being proud of themselves in a complicated world. Thanks to my friends at Eight Sleep. Check out eightsleep.com/morganhousel for more. | |||
| Lazy Work, Good Work | 24 May 2024 | 00:09:32 | |
The most productive work you can do often looks like the laziest -- but it can be hard to accept that because of how the workplace has changed over the last 100 years. | |||
| The Long Run Is Just A Collection of Short Runs | 13 May 2024 | 00:08:59 | |
Every great idea can be taken too far. It's important to recognize that the long run is just a collection of short runs, and capturing long-term growth means managing the short run effectively enough to ensure you can stick around for a long time. | |||
| The Best Financial Advice I Know (What I Want My Kids To Learn) | 06 May 2024 | 00:10:36 | |
I wrote letters to both of my kids the day before they were born. | |||
| Realistic Personal Finance Hacks | 25 Apr 2024 | 00:10:03 | |
Hacks are hard because shortcuts rarely exist. Prizes take time and effort. The personal finance industry – filled with advice that sounds and feels good without moving the needle – needs to recognize this. These aren’t fun hacks, but no one said this was easy. | |||
| Lucky vs. Repeatable | 11 Apr 2024 | 00:08:38 | |
Luck plays such a big role in the world. But few people want to talk about it. If I say you got lucky, I look jealous. If I tell myself that I got lucky, I feel diminished. | |||
| No One Is Crazy | 05 Apr 2024 | 00:14:08 | |
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 | 28 Mar 2024 | 00:11:46 | |
A few of the best and most insightful things I've read lately. | |||
| Accountable to Darwin vs. Accountable to Newton | 18 Mar 2024 | 00:14:33 | |
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. | |||
| The Dumber Side of Smart People | 08 Mar 2024 | 00:13:38 | |
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. | |||
| How to Engage With History | 28 Feb 2024 | 00:10:48 | |
This episode discusses my take on what you should pay attention to when reading 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. | |||
| Fees vs. Fines: The Cost of Admission in Investing | 28 Mar 2025 | 00:12:21 | |
One of my favorite psychology studies showed that if you know a reward is coming, but you don't know exactly when, you are susceptible to losing your mind. Isn't it so similar in investing? Thanks to my friends at Ramp -- the best expense accounting system I've seen. For more check out ramp.com/morgan. | |||
| Compounding Optimism | 14 Feb 2024 | 00:12:02 | |
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 | 01 Feb 2024 | 00:12:45 | |
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. 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 | 17 Jan 2024 | 00:12:33 | |
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. | |||
| Active vs. Passive Learning | 05 Jan 2024 | 00:11:38 | |
There are two big ways to learn: Passive learning: You let your mind wander with no intended destination. You read and learn broadly, talk to people from various backgrounds, and stumble haphazardly across topics you had never considered but spark your curiosity, often because it’s the topic you happen to need at that specific time of your life. I can’t be alone in realizing that most of what I’ve learned in life has come from passive learning. | |||
| Respect Each Others’ Delusions | 22 Dec 2023 | 00:08:47 | |
One sentence that knocked me off my feet when I read Will and Ariel Durant’s The Lessons of History was: "Learn enough from history to bear reality patiently, and respect one another’s delusions." I love that so much. The key here is accepting that everyone is deluded in their own unique way. You, me, all of us. When you realize that you – the good, noble, well-meaning, even-tempered, fact-driven person that you are – have views of how the world works that are sure to be incomplete if not completely wrong, you should have empathy for others whose deluded beliefs are obvious to you. I am such a fan of Daniel Kahneman’s observation that we are better at spotting other people’s flaws than our own. | |||
| The 10 Most Important Financial Skills | 12 Dec 2023 | 00:15:31 | |
My wife recently bought me an old book. It's called The Mathematical Theory of Investment. It was written in 1913 and it's as dry and boring as it sounds (but the old weathered cover looks awesome on a bookshelf). | |||
| Expiring vs. Permanent Skills | 17 Nov 2023 | 00:15:14 | |
Expiring skills tend to get more attention. They’re more likely to be the cool new thing, and a key driver of an industry’s short-term performance. They’re what employers value and employees flaunt. Permanent skills are different. They’ve been around a long time, which makes them look stale and basic. They can be hard to define and quantify, which gives the impression of fortune-cookie wisdom vs. a hard skill. But permanent skills compound over time, which gives them quiet importance. When several previous generations have worked on a skill that’s directly relevant to you, you have a deep well of relevant examples to study. And when you can spend a lifetime perfecting one skill whose importance never wanes, the payoffs can be ridiculous. Anything that compounds over decades usually is. This episode discusses a few permanent skills that apply to many fields. | |||
| My New Book, Same As Ever: A Guide to What Never Changes | 07 Nov 2023 | 00:15:07 | |
My new book, Same as Ever: A Guide to What Never Changes, is out today. Books are hard, a multi-year slog from start to finish. But I’m excited for you to read this. I think it’s the best writing I’ve ever done. And it was fun to write! My hope is that you enjoy reading it half as much as I enjoyed writing it. My first book, The Psychology of Money, was really about how you, the individual behave. Same As Ever is about how we, the collective, behave, and what we keep doing over and over. It’s 23 short stories about what never changes in a changing world. I’ve been thinking about this book for my entire career. I’ve always been skeptical of forecasts, because the world’s track record on predicting the next recession, the next election, or the next technology is so bad. That should draw you to the question: What’s never going to change? What do we know for certain is going to be part of our future? | |||
| Justifying Optimism | 30 Oct 2023 | 00:12:39 | |
All optimistic beliefs can be dangerous because they’re so comforting, so easy to accept without asking further questions. Hope often masquerades as optimism when you think things will improve only because the alternative is too scary to contemplate. | |||
| Little Flaws | 21 Oct 2023 | 00:10:32 | |
Daniel Kahneman says, "The long-term success of a relationship depends far more on avoiding the negative than on seeking the positive." | |||
| Beautiful vs. Practical Advice | 20 Mar 2025 | 00:13:13 | |
I heard a phrase recently: “Magazine architect.” It’s a derisive term architects use for their colleagues who design buildings that look beautiful, grace magazine covers, and win awards, but lack functionality for the tenants. The same is so true for financial professionals. If you are looking for practical advice, beware hiring an artist whose goal is to be praised should be, too. Thanks to my friends at Ramp -- the best expense accounting system I've seen. For more check out ramp.com/morgan. | |||
| A Few Laws of Getting Rich | 12 Oct 2023 | 00:18:28 | |
Measuring wealth is easy. You just count it up. Measuring some of the downsides of wealth is so much harder and more nuanced. They can be so nuanced and hard to measure that many people won’t even believe they exist. A downside to wealth? How could that possibly be? Let me propose that the absurdity of talking about the downside of wealth is part of why wealth doesn’t tend to make people as happy as they thought it would. When the benefits of money are so obvious but the downsides are so subtle, the downsides you didn’t anticipate can be more jarring than the benefits you expected. I want more money, of course. Almost everyone does, albeit for different reasons. This is not an anti-wealth list -- just a collection of subtle downsides that are easy to ignore, and so common you may as well call them the only true laws of getting rich. | |||
| Death, Taxes, and a Few Other Things | 06 Oct 2023 | 00:18:09 | |
My new book, Same As Ever, comes out in a month. | |||
| Respect and Admiration | 27 Sep 2023 | 00:11:31 | |
Just after my son was born I wrote a few things I thought he’d find helpful as an adult. One of them was: Eight years later I still believe this to be true, and I might even double down. | |||
| Trying Too Hard | 18 Sep 2023 | 00:13:41 | |
A truth that applies to almost every field is that it’s possible to try too hard, and when doing so you can get worse results than those who knew less, cared less, and put in less effort than you did. | |||