Kennon-Green & Co. Fiduciary Financial Advisor, Wealth Management, Global Value Investing


How Quincy, Florida Became a Town of Secret Coca-Cola Millionaires

In the 1920s and 1930s, a banker named Pat Munroe in the small town of Quincy, Florida noticed that even during the depths of the Great Depression, otherwise impoverished people would spend their last nickel to buy a glass of Coca-Cola.  With good returns on capital, and a once-in-a-century valuation so low that the business was trading for less than the cash in the bank, “Mr. Pat”, as he was called, encouraged everyone he knew to buy an ownership stake in the firm.  He would even underwrite bank loans, backed by Coca-Cola stock, for his responsible depositors to encourage people to acquire equity.

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An Inside Look at the Site’s Demographics: A Breakdown of the Readers

As promised several months ago, we implemented demographic tracking on the site to the list of other abilities we have and are now collecting data.  Using one popular source, which will improve over time as a bigger sample is developed, the trend that is showing up everywhere is evident.  It should only get better as more data points are put into the pool, so I’m excited to see who, exactly, is reading.

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A Study In Paradox: Leona Helmsley Illustrates That Destructive Traits Such as Narcissism Can Sometimes Lead to Fantastic Life Results

This is the second in a three-part post on narcissism; the topic du jour for our mental model study. We’ve been talking about narcissism for the past few days and one interesting thread that comes up throughout history is that narcissism, despite being horribly destructive and disruptive, can work, in rare situations, in the favor…

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