i wonder if maybe you can talk through a bit about the importance of taking a long term view on investments, verses coning giving in to that often natural me jerk reaction. How can investors differentiate between good businesses in a turbulent market versus businesses that have actually taken a turn for a valid reason? And that's correlating to the stock price? Ye, those are two good questions i get to sakeo, i think, for for the first one. N now, it can sound kind o like the academic here comes the text book, but the idea is, look, patient capital.
The Federal Reserve could hike short-term interest rates to 4%, and that still might not be enough to cool inflation. Rich Lyons is the first Chief Innovation and Entrepreneurship Officer for the University of California, Berkeley. Before that, he spent a decade as the dean of Berkley’s Haas School of Business. He joined Motley Fool Contributor Rachel Warren to discuss: - How the Federal Reserve could hit a “hard break” with higher interest rates - A venture capital view about the future of crypto - How universities are creating a generational tailwind for the economy
Host: Rachel Warren Guest: Rich Lyons Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Dan Boyd, Brandon Gentry
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices