A Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton Malkiel
Learn time-tested investing strategies and how to navigate market unpredictability for long-term financial success.
A Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton Malkiel offers a time-tested guide to investing. Malkiel traces the history of financial bubbles and common money mistakes to show that market unpredictability has always existed. With practical advice on long-term investing, the book is a comprehensive resource for both new and experienced investors.
Investing Foundations
- Foundational Principles
- Investing → Buying assets for long-term income or appreciation
- Speculation → Buying assets for short-term gain
- Markets are unpredictable in the short term
- Past performance does not predict future performance
- Experts can’t consistently beat randomness
- Greed is the defining feature of every financial bubble
- Intrinsic value is ignored in favor of hype
- Price surges are emotional, not fundamental
- Bubbles can last years – but always correct
- Most don’t escape before the crash
- Making money in the market isn’t hard
- Hardest part → resisting speculation
- Speculators consistently lose over time
- Big innovations don’t auto-justify the early frenzy
- Key question: Can the industry generate and sustain profits?
- Buy & hold diversified portfolios for the long-term
Early History
- Tulip Mania (Holland, 1593-1637)
- Became a status symbol; rare bulbs were worth extreme prices
- Reframed as “investments,” drawing in the general public
- People leveraged homes, land, and savings to buy
- A sailor ate a bulb, mistaking it for an onion → jailed for a felony
- Prices rose 20x in January
- Prices fell 20x in February
- Bulbs became nearly worthless, selling for the price of onions
- South Sea Bubble (London, 1711-1720)
- South Sea Company had little experience but grand public image
- Promised to take on Britain’s national debt; the King invested
- Stock price flew from £130 to £1,000
- Dozens of “bubble companies” formed, many fraudulent
- Directors secretly cashed out
- Stock collapsed to below £100
- Credit crisis nearly erupted
- Parliament banned new stock issuance for over 100 years
- Great Depression (1921-1954)
- Stocks surged 150-400% in 18 months
- Some stocks rose 10-15% in a single day
- Margin buying exploded
- Pools traded between themselves to create fake demand
- Public rushed in at inflated prices
- Pools sold out during the frenzy
- Sept 5, 1929: “Babson Break” → major stocks fell 6-9%
- Oct 24: market down 11%, volume tripled
- Oct 28: margin calls triggered 13% drop
- Oct 29: record trading, Dow fell another 12%
- By November, the DOW had fell 50%
- 3 years later, blue-chip stocks were down over 95%
- Market didn’t reach new highs until 25 years later
1960s – 1990s
- Tronics Boom (late 1950s-early 1960s)
- Hype around anything electronic
- American Music Guild renamed Space-Tone → stock rose 600%
- P/E ratios for IBM, Texas Instruments, etc reached 80+
- Record number of new stock issuances
- Ended with Flash Crash of 1962 – the S&P 500 fell 22.5%
- Conglomerate Boom (1960s)
- Companies boosted EPS by acquiring other companies
- Automatic Sprinkler Corp: sales up 1,400%+ thru acquisitions
- Litton cut expectations after a decade of ~20% annual growth
- Triggered a broad selloff – prices fell 40%
- FTC investigations → further crashes → merger regulations
- Story Stock Craze (late 1960s)
- Funds chased narratives over fundamentals
- Hype and fraud were common
- NSMC (Cortes Randell): Learjet, castle, yacht, golden clubs
- Stock hit $35 with P/E of 117 – collapsed to $0.87
- Nifty Fifty Era (1972-1980)
- Shift to “safe” blue chips (Kodak, Xerox, McDonald’s, Disney)
- Viewed as “one-decision” stocks
- No company could meet the extreme expectations
- P/E compression: Sony (92 to 17), McDonald’s (83 to 9), Disney (76 to 11)
- Return of New Issues (Biotech & Microelectronics Boom)
- Similar to the 1960’s tech boom
- Tech names popped (e.g., Muhammad Ali Arcades International)
- 1 share + 2 warrants sold for 1¢… still 333x intrinsic value
- Small company and IPO stocks fell ~90%
- Japanese Bubble (1955-1992)
- Real estate values increased 75x – 20% of global wealth and 2x entire world’s stock markets
- Real estate of Tokyo was priced the same as the entire US
- Imperial Palace value = all of California
- Stock prices rose 100x, exceeding US stock market
- NTT worth more than AT&T, IBM, Exxon, GE, and GM combined
- Bank of Japan raised interest rates
- 1989 peak ≈ 40,000
- 1992 low ≈ 14,309 (63% drop)
- Market only just now recovered to its peak in the 2020s
2000s
- Dot-com Bubble (late 1990s-2000)
- Capital poured into internet startups
- Added internet-sounding names → stock rose ~125%
- New metrics replaced fundamentals (“eyeballs,” clicks, cable laid)
- Investor expectations reached 15-25%+ annual returns
- NASDAQ tripled from late 1998 to March 2000
- P/E ratios commonly exceeded 100
- Cisco’s growth, if sustained, would have surpassed entire economy
- TheGlobe.com went $9 → $97 on Day 1 with no revenue or profit
- Largest stock-market wealth destruction in history
- Lost GDP of Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, & Russia
- Amazon: $75.25 → $5.51 (-92.7%)
- Priceline: $165 → $1.80 (-98.9%)
- JDS Uniphase: $297.34 → $2.24 (-99.2%)
- Housing Bubble (2000s)
- Homeownership was largest asset for most Americans
- Banks sold mortgages to investment banks
- Originators didn’t care about default risk (they didn’t hold the loans)
- Banks bundled mortgages into mortgage-backed securities
- Ratings were based on claim priority, not loan quality
- Demand surged → home prices doubled
- Prices fell → millions owed more than home value (negative equity)
- Defaults and foreclosures surged
- Crushed consumer spending
- Credit markets seized up → deep recession
