An interesting phenomenon: looking back over more than 100 years of UK stock market history, the most stable performers and the highest returns have actually come from alcohol-related companies. The same is true in the US; if not for the Prohibition that lasted over a decade in the 20th century disrupting the rhythm, alcohol stocks would have long been the strongest sector.
What does this tell us? It indicates that the logic of "drinking and medicine" is not our exclusive insight but a consensus across global markets.
A careful review of 200 years of financial history reveals a pattern: the assets that can truly grow long-term and withstand cycles are often those that remain unchanged in this ever-changing world. In simple terms, human basic needs—these are always there.
This is also why compound interest is so powerful. Steady and stable growth over time can accumulate incredible strength. The smartest way to make real money in investing is to steadfastly hold high-quality assets that grow alongside human long-term development. This is not some profound theory; it is a truth repeatedly validated by the market.
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NftDeepBreather
· 01-14 07:48
Haha, human instincts never go out of style; that's the best moat.
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just_another_wallet
· 01-11 08:54
Human nature never goes out of style; this is the best investment logic.
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ApeWithAPlan
· 01-11 08:53
Human nature never changes, and this is the most profitable logic.
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Tokenomics911
· 01-11 08:51
Haha, selling alcohol is truly brilliant; human nature never changes.
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SorryRugPulled
· 01-11 08:40
This logic makes no sense. Human nature never changes, and essentials like alcohol, tobacco, and cigarettes are just printing money.
An interesting phenomenon: looking back over more than 100 years of UK stock market history, the most stable performers and the highest returns have actually come from alcohol-related companies. The same is true in the US; if not for the Prohibition that lasted over a decade in the 20th century disrupting the rhythm, alcohol stocks would have long been the strongest sector.
What does this tell us? It indicates that the logic of "drinking and medicine" is not our exclusive insight but a consensus across global markets.
A careful review of 200 years of financial history reveals a pattern: the assets that can truly grow long-term and withstand cycles are often those that remain unchanged in this ever-changing world. In simple terms, human basic needs—these are always there.
This is also why compound interest is so powerful. Steady and stable growth over time can accumulate incredible strength. The smartest way to make real money in investing is to steadfastly hold high-quality assets that grow alongside human long-term development. This is not some profound theory; it is a truth repeatedly validated by the market.