There is a temptation in every market cycle to believe that the current leaders will remain the leaders forever. I understand why. When a handful of mega-cap companies dominate headlines, generate extraordinary returns, and seem embedded in every aspect of modern life, it becomes difficult to imagine a future in which their influence fades. Investors begin treating market leadership as a permanent condition rather than a temporary advantage. I have seen this pattern repeat throughout financial history. The names change. The technologies change. The industries change. But the underlying psychology remains remarkably consistent. Each generation convinces itself that its dominant companies are fundamentally different from every dominant company that came before them. And each generation eventually discovers that market leadership, like everything else in business, has a lifecycle. That lifecycle is what fascinates me most as an investor. While many people focus on identifying today's ...
I have a favorite financial tradition. It happens every year. Sometimes every quarter. Occasionally every week. Wall Street confidently declares something impossible. Then the impossible happens. Then the same people who declared it impossible explain why it was actually obvious all along. It's one of the greatest magic tricks ever invented. Not because it fools me. Because it keeps fooling everyone else. I've spent enough time watching markets to realize that Wall Street's greatest asset isn't forecasting. It's storytelling. The ability to create narratives after the fact that sound inevitable. The ability to take chaos and present it as destiny. The ability to make yesterday's certainty disappear without leaving fingerprints. And nowhere is that more obvious than when Wall Street changes its mind. Which, despite appearances, is practically a full-time occupation. The Market's Memory Is About Three Weeks Long One of the first things I lear...