August 14, 2017· 38 min

The Biggest Lesson Investors Should Have Learned From the Crisis

Orality
Model
71%
Oral-dominant (speeches, podcasts, storytelling)

Speaker Breakdown

HostTracy Alloway(1,567 words)
M:93%
HostJoe Weisenthal(642 words)
M:29%
GuestMark Dow(4,815 words)
M:27%

Oral Indicators

Agonistic32%
literally, completely, very
Engagement70%
you, our, your
Memory Aids100%
listen, now, so
Repetition100%
know (66x), people (54x), it's (53x)
Parallelism90%
And I'm Tracy Alloway...., So, Tracy, I'm a little worrie..., And so every day, it's gonna b...
Sound Patterns40%
30 question(s), alliteration: "markets move", alliteration: "barclays brief"
Formulaic Phrases3%
i mean

Literate Indicators

Hedging8%
could, maybe, relatively
Passive Voice7%
were then, were perpetuated, be even
Abstract Nouns18%
investment, recommendation, department
Subordination8%
since, because, until
Sentence Length41%
Avg: 15.2 words/sentence
Word Complexity46%
investment, analyze, anticipate
Academic Markers4%
according to
Impersonal Style30%
522 personal pronouns found
Descriptive Style88%
literally, completely, really

Description

It's been 10 years since the start of the credit crunch that eventually led to the global financial crisis. For many investors, the events of 2007 to 2008 shook their entire understanding of how markets are meant to work. In this week's episode of the Odd Lots podcast we speak to Mark Dow, a global macro trader and financial blogger, as well as a former economist at the U.S. Treasury and the International Monetary Fund. He walks us through some of the most important lessons that investors should have learned from the crisis, including why central bank stimulus efforts haven't had as much of an effect on the real economy, and why oil matters much less to the world than it once did. We also take a brief interlude to learn how a macro manager analyzes U.S. jobs numbers as they come out. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.