Imagine an investor so disciplined, so unflappable, that financial panics—the very events that wipe out fortunes—were his personal shopping sprees. Picture a banker so conservative that he didn't just survive the Civil War era's financial chaos; he thrived in it, strengthening his empire while others crumbled. That man was Moses Taylor (1806-1882). Long before warren_buffett advised investors to be “greedy when others are fearful,” Moses Taylor was living that mantra. He wasn't a stock market gunslinger or a speculative wizard. He was a meticulous, tight-fisted, and brilliantly patient businessman who started as a sugar merchant and ended as one of the wealthiest men in America, controlling a vast network of banks, railroads, and industrial companies. Think of him as the original contrarian. While others were caught up in the speculative manias of the 19th century, Taylor was on the sidelines, waiting. When the inevitable crash came, sending stock and bond prices plummeting, he would calmly step into the wreckage. With cash he had patiently accumulated, he would buy up control of fundamentally sound businesses—railroads with irreplaceable tracks, coal mines with proven reserves, and banks with solid loan books—for pennies on the dollar. His primary vehicle was City Bank of New York (a predecessor to today's Citigroup), which he ran with an iron fist and an unyielding focus on risk management. His strategy wasn't complex, but it required superhuman discipline:
Moses Taylor is not just a historical figure; he is a foundational lesson in value investing. He demonstrated that the greatest wealth is often built not in booms, but in the subsequent busts, by those with the cash, courage, and foresight to act.
“The time to buy is when there's blood in the streets.” - Baron Rothschild. 1)
Studying Moses Taylor is like discovering a lost chapter of Benjamin Graham's The Intelligent Investor, written 75 years earlier and demonstrated through action rather than text. His entire career is a powerful illustration of value investing's most sacred principles. For a modern value investor, his legacy is a source of both inspiration and practical strategy. 1. The Embodiment of Crisis Investing: Taylor's playbook was tailor-made for market downturns. During the Panics of 1837 and 1857, when credit dried up and investors fled in terror, Taylor's City Bank, flush with cash, became a lender of last resort. But he didn't just lend; he acquired. He would take ownership stakes in struggling but viable businesses, effectively buying premier assets at liquidation prices. This is the absolute essence of contrarian value investing: recognizing that the market's emotional price during a panic is often wildly disconnected from a company's long-term intrinsic value. 2. Margin of Safety in its Purest Form: Benjamin Graham taught that the “margin of safety” is the central concept of investment. Moses Taylor practiced this religiously. When he made loans, he demanded collateral worth far more than the loan itself (often a 25-30% buffer). When he bought companies, he was buying them for a fraction of their tangible asset value. This obsession with a safety buffer protected him from errors in judgment and the wild uncertainties of the 19th-century economy. He wasn't trying to predict the future; he was insulating himself from it. 3. The Ultimate Buy and Hold Strategist: Taylor was the polar opposite of a modern-day trader. When he acquired a major stake in a company like the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, he was in it for the long haul. He saw himself as a permanent owner of a business enterprise, not a temporary holder of a stock certificate. This long-term time_horizon allowed the true value of his assets to compound over decades, ignoring the short-term noise of the market. He wasn't concerned with quarterly earnings; he was concerned with the railroad's strategic position and cash generation over the next 20 years. 4. A Master of the Circle of Competence: Taylor didn't invest in everything. He stuck to what he knew inside and out. His expertise began in trade (sugar), which gave him a deep understanding of finance and logistics. This led him to banking. His understanding of trade routes and industrial needs led him to railroads and coal. He never ventured into speculative ventures he couldn't personally analyze and understand. This intense focus allowed him to accurately assess the risks and potential rewards within his chosen fields, a discipline that modern investors often neglect in their chase for the “next big thing.” By studying Taylor, a value investor learns that these principles are not just academic theories. They are time-tested, battle-hardened strategies that have built immense fortunes for over 150 years.
While you can't replicate his Gilded Age environment, you can absolutely apply his core principles to modern investing. He provides a “playbook” for building resilient, long-term wealth.
Following this playbook means your portfolio will likely look very different from the mainstream. You may hold more cash than others for long periods. You might be buying stocks in unloved, “boring” industries while everyone else is chasing tech darlings. You will be acting during market panics when the prevailing media narrative is screaming “SELL!” The result is not quick, adrenaline-fueled gains. It is the slow, methodical, and resilient compounding of wealth. It is a strategy designed to protect your downside first and let the upside take care of itself. It is, in short, the intelligent way to invest.
One of Taylor's most famous investments, the Atlantic Telegraph Company, seems at first to contradict his conservative nature. It was a high-tech, venture-capital-style project led by the visionary Cyrus Field, aiming to lay a telegraph cable across the Atlantic Ocean. The project was plagued by failures, with cables repeatedly snapping and millions of dollars lost. So why would a risk-averse investor like Taylor get involved? Because he applied his value principles even to a speculative venture.
The venture ultimately succeeded in 1866, and the investors, including Taylor, made a fortune. The story is a powerful lesson: value principles are not just for buying “boring” companies. They can be applied to any investment, even high-risk ones, to manage downside and tilt the odds of success in your favor.
Adopting Moses Taylor's mindset can be a powerful antidote to the short-termism of modern markets. However, it's crucial to understand his methods in today's context.