meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Stansberry Investor Hour

The 'Father of Modern Finance' Talks Today's Economy

Stansberry Investor Hour

Stansberry Research

America, How, To, Crash, Money, Learn, Stansberry, Income, Research, Debt, Stocks, Porter, Business, Realestate, Banking, Investment, American, Investing, Invest, Howtosave, Sjuggerud, Ferris, Eifrig, Jubilee, Buck, Sexton, Market, Bonds, Churchouse, Savings, Options, Lashmet

4.4677 Ratings

🗓️ 11 August 2025

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this week's Stansberry Investor Hour, Dan and Corey welcome Eugene Fama to the show. Eugene is a Nobel Prize-winning economist and widely recognized as the "father of modern finance."

Eugene kicks things off by talking a bit about his efficient-market hypothesis, whether he believes it's still relevant in today's economy, and how passive investing plays a role in all this. He also discusses what it's like winning a Nobel Prize, the impact of his five-factor model on investing and the rise of factor-based funds, rationality versus irrationality, and the importance of luck in markets. (0:34)

Next, Eugene argues against a New York Times article claiming that a PhD in economics won't bring affluence or prestige anymore, laments the lack of new breakthroughs in financial theory/modeling, and comments on the modern competitive environment in economics that didn't exist 60 years ago. Things then take a more personal turn, and Eugene talks about his how he discovered his love of economics and what he wanted to focus his research on. (16:28)

Finally, Eugene shares what it was like in Chicago back when the city was the epicenter of financial research, including his experience working with some other notable economists. After that, he gives his opinion on market bubbles. Speaking about the dot-com era, he says that the total value created from the industry is a big part of international wealth today, so it can't be considered a mistake. And he closes things out with a conversation about uncertainty in making predictions. (30:34)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the Stansberry Investor Hour. I'm Dan Ferris. I'm the editor of Extreme Value

0:04.9

and The Ferris Report, both published by Stansberry Research. And I'm Corey McLaughlin, editor of the

0:11.6

Stansberry Daily Digest. They were talking with a Nobel Prize winning economist Eugene Fama.

0:19.2

You heard that right. We are talking with the one, the only Eugene Fama, You heard that right.

0:21.0

We are talking with the one, the only Eugene Fama, the father of modern finance.

0:26.1

Let's not waste another second.

0:27.7

Let's do it.

0:28.3

Let's talk with Gene Fama.

0:29.7

Let's do it right now.

0:34.5

Welcome to the show.

0:35.7

Thanks for being here.

0:37.3

Thank you. So I wanted to the show. Thanks for being here. Thank you.

0:39.3

So I wanted to just mention the first time I ever heard your name, Gene, and, you know,

0:46.3

according to the Financial Times and some other folks, you're the most famous economist in the world,

0:51.3

so I should have heard of you perhaps sooner. I knew you would say that.

0:55.0

I knew you'd react like that. But this book I read maybe 25, almost 30 years ago, called

1:01.6

The New Finance, the case against efficient markets, right on chapter one, page one, mentions

1:07.9

a study by Eugene Fominckin, Ken French, voted the best article published

1:13.9

in the Journal of Finance in 1992.

1:16.9

And I found it later, I learned more about you and found it a bit ironic that the guy

1:21.7

whose name is associated so much with the efficient market hypothesis was mentioned as the the author of a study where he was

1:31.1

saying he's against the efficiency of markets.

...

Transcript will be available on the free plan in 15 days. Upgrade to see the full transcript now.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Stansberry Research, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Stansberry Research and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.