John Maynard Keynes became the acting Chairman of National Mutual Life Assurance Society in 1921 until his resignation in 1938. Each year, an annual meeting was held in London, where Keynes spoke at length about National Mutual, among other topics.
The time period makes it unique. Britain was recovering from World War I. Markets in Britain and the U.S. were changing. Then the ’29 Crash and Great Depression hit. Of course, we all know how that turned out.
But Keynes didn’t. His speeches offer not only his annual assessment of the events but his thoughts on National Mutual’s investment policy in the midst of it all.
Luckily, The Times of London printed his speeches in full after each annual meeting.
In the very first speech, Keynes lays out the difficulties of investing in an environment with a growing list of new investment “opportunities” and the importance of having an investment policy. Continue Reading…

Since 2009, the stock market returned almost 15% annually. That’s a great return. It’s an even better return considering most people believed it was impossible in 2009…2010…2011…2012…
Henry Singleton is known as one of the best capital allocators ever. He took advantage of the market’s enthusiasm for Teledyne shares during the late ’60s conglomerate craze to buy up companies.