NETFIGO SCORE BATTLE

ORIGINAL DATA

Risk Appetite

Morgan Housel
4
Lark Davis
9

Contrarian Index

Morgan Housel
5
Lark Davis
5

Track Record

Morgan Housel
7
Lark Davis
5

Accessibility

Morgan Housel
10
Lark Davis
10

Time Horizon

Morgan Housel
Generational
Lark Davis
Medium-Term

AT A GLANCE

Morgan Housel
Lark Davis
$12 million
Net Worth
$5M+
American
Nationality
New Zealander
Collaborative Fund
Fund / Firm
Generational
Time Horizon
Medium-Term
4 / 10
Risk Score
9 / 10

INVESTING STYLE

Morgan Housel

Housel is a passive, long-term, index-fund investor in his personal portfolio. He's been transparent about this: he owns index funds, has no individual stock positions, and plans to hold essentially forever.

His approach is radically simple by design. He doesn't try to beat the market.

He doesn't time entries or exits. He saves a high percentage of his income, invests it in broad market index funds, and lets compounding do the work over decades.

What makes his perspective unique is the behavioral emphasis. He argues that the biggest risk in investing isn't a bad stock pick — it's panicking and selling at the bottom, or getting greedy and concentrating at the top.

The best strategy is the one you can actually stick with when everything goes sideways.

He writes about "tail events" — the idea that a small number of investments or decisions drive the vast majority of results. In venture capital, 1% of investments generate most of the returns.

In your career, a handful of decisions matter more than everything else combined. His investment philosophy is built around this: stay in the game long enough for the tail events to work in your favor.

Lark Davis

Davis covers the full crypto market — not just Bitcoin. His content focuses on identifying altcoin opportunities, understanding new blockchain projects, DeFi protocols, and layer-2 ecosystems.

His strategy is higher risk than Bitcoin-only: he looks for early-stage projects with high upside potential and significant downside risk. He has been transparent about both wins and losses in his portfolio.

He advocates dollar-cost averaging into positions and taking profits during bull markets — lessons he admits he learned the hard way during the 2018 bear market.

FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY

Morgan Housel

Housel's philosophy centers on the gap between knowing and doing. His core insight: financial success is not a hard science — it's a soft skill.

How you behave matters more than what you know.

Key principles: First, wealth is what you don't see. Rich people have nice things.

Wealthy people have freedom. The distinction matters because spending to look rich is the fastest way to not be wealthy.

Second, compound interest is unintuitive. Warren Buffett made 99% of his wealth after age 50.

The math makes sense on paper, but emotionally, waiting 30 years for the payoff is almost impossible for most people. That's why behavior beats knowledge.

Third, room for error is the most important financial concept. No plan survives reality perfectly, so the best plans have huge margins of safety built in.

That's why he holds more cash than an optimizer would recommend — it's not about maximizing returns, it's about surviving surprises.

Fourth, no one is crazy. Everyone makes financial decisions based on their unique life experience.

A person who grew up during the Depression invests differently than someone who came of age in the '90s boom. Understanding this makes you less judgmental and more effective.

Lark Davis

His philosophy is that crypto represents the biggest wealth transfer opportunity of his generation. He believes in holding Bitcoin as a base position and using a portion of the portfolio for higher-risk altcoin exposure.

He has said his biggest financial lesson was not taking profits during the 2017-2018 bull run — a mistake he actively advises his audience to avoid repeating.

RISK TOLERANCE

Morgan Housel

Very conservative in practice. Housel keeps a higher cash allocation than most financial advisors would recommend.

His reasoning: cash isn't about returns, it's about independence. Having cash means you never have to sell stocks at the worst time, never have to take a job you hate, and never have to make desperate financial decisions.

He's talked about keeping enough cash to cover several years of expenses — far more than the standard 3-6 month emergency fund. He considers this the price of sleeping well at night.

He doesn't use leverage. He doesn't make concentrated bets.

He accepts lower potential returns in exchange for the near-certainty of not blowing up. His risk philosophy in one sentence: "The ability to do what you want, when you want, for as long as you want, is the highest dividend money pays."

Lark Davis

Davis has been public about holding altcoins that went to zero and investing in projects that turned out to be fraudulent or simply failed. He does not hide the losses.

His risk management has evolved directly from those mistakes: he now advocates taking partial profits at every major price milestone, maintaining Bitcoin as a core position, and treating altcoins as a speculative sleeve rather than a primary strategy. The lesson he repeats most often from 2018: not taking profits during euphoria is itself a high-risk decision — most people just don't recognize it as one until prices have already collapsed.

THE PLAYBOOK

Morgan Housel

Housel lives well below his means — and he's clear that this is a deliberate choice, not deprivation. He drives a modest car, lives in a normal house (by wealthy-person standards), and doesn't display wealth publicly.

He's said that his savings rate is high not because he's frugal, but because he's found that the things that make him happy don't cost much.

He invests consistently and automatically. No timing, no active management, no checking his portfolio daily.

He's said he spends maybe 15 minutes per year thinking about his investments.

He gives generously — both to charity and through his writing, which he provides for free on the Collaborative Fund blog. He sees writing as a form of giving: sharing ideas that help people make better financial decisions.

Lark Davis

Lives in Thailand with low overhead costs. Has spoken about the power of geographic arbitrage — earning in dollars and crypto while living somewhere with a lower cost of living.

He exercises consistently, says a healthy body supports a clear financial mind, and advocates for a simple, mobile lifestyle. Does not flaunt luxury publicly.

BIGGEST WIN

Morgan Housel

"The Psychology of Money" is the defining win. Five million copies sold.

It became one of the bestselling personal finance books in history, up there with "Rich Dad Poor Dad" and "The Intelligent Investor." It made him independently wealthy from book royalties alone — which is ironic for a book that argues money is more about behavior than income.

The book also elevated his platform to a level where he can influence how millions of people think about money. He's not just a writer anymore — he's essentially a public intellectual on the topic of financial behavior.

Lark Davis

Building one of the largest crypto education YouTube channels in the world during the 2020-2021 bull run. His coverage of DeFi and altcoin projects during that period — when those sectors exploded in value — brought him the majority of his audience and income.

His Wealth Mastery community grew substantially during that period.

BIGGEST MISTAKE

Morgan Housel

Housel has been honest about the limits of his own approach. He's acknowledged that his ultra-passive, high-cash strategy will underperform in raging bull markets.

During the 2020-2021 boom, when everything from meme stocks to crypto was printing money, his boring index fund approach looked pedestrian.

He's also noted the irony of writing a bestselling book about financial behavior while acknowledging that knowing the right thing to do doesn't make it easy. He's admitted to moments of doubt during market downturns — the same emotional reactions he writes about so clearly.

The difference, he says, is having a plan that doesn't require you to be emotionally perfect.

Lark Davis

In 2021, Davis faced significant controversy when it emerged he had been paid to promote certain crypto projects to his audience without clearly disclosing the payments. He issued an apology and said he had followed what he believed were disclosure norms at the time, but the episode damaged his reputation and became one of the most-cited examples of undisclosed crypto influencer promotions.

He also, like most altcoin-focused analysts, saw his portfolio take brutal losses in the 2022 bear market.

CAREER HIGHLIGHTS

Morgan Housel

Morgan Housel grew up in a middle-class family in the Pacific Northwest. He's been private about his early life, but what matters is what he did with it: he became one of the most widely read financial writers of his generation without managing a hedge fund, running a TV show, or having a famous last name.

He started at The Motley Fool as a financial columnist in 2007 — right before the financial crisis. Writing about markets during the worst crash since the Great Depression gave him a front-row seat to how people actually behave with money when fear takes over.

That experience shaped everything he's written since.

At the Motley Fool, he won the Best in Business Award from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers twice. He was also a two-time finalist for the Gerald Loeb Award, the highest honor in financial journalism.

His columns stood out because they didn't focus on stock tips — they focused on why people make terrible decisions with money even when they know better.

In 2016, he joined Collaborative Fund as a partner. The firm is a venture capital fund investing in companies focused on the future of consumption and health.

His role is less about picking stocks and more about thinking and writing — he's essentially the firm's philosopher-in-residence.

Then came "The Psychology of Money" in 2020. The book became a monster.

Over 5 million copies sold. Translated into 50+ languages.

It spent years on bestseller lists. The premise was deceptively simple: financial success isn't about intelligence or knowledge — it's about behavior.

How you handle fear, greed, ego, and patience determines your financial outcome more than any spreadsheet ever will.

He followed it with "Same as Ever" in 2023 — a book about the things that never change in human behavior and markets. Less focused on money specifically, more on the patterns of history and psychology that repeat regardless of the era.

Lark Davis

Lark Davis is a New Zealand-born crypto educator who built his brand primarily on YouTube, starting around 2018. He focuses on cryptocurrency analysis with an emphasis on altcoins, DeFi, and emerging blockchain projects — not just Bitcoin.

His channel "Crypto Lark" grew to over a million subscribers, making him one of the most followed retail crypto educators in the world. He also built a paid subscription community, Wealth Mastery, where he publishes deeper research.

He has lived in Thailand for years, part of a wave of digital nomad crypto educators who operate internationally.

COMPANIES & ROLES

Morgan Housel

Collaborative Fund is where he works — a venture capital firm that invests in companies at the intersection of technology, sustainability, and health. He's a partner but his primary contribution is thinking and writing, not deal sourcing.

The firm uses his writing as a platform to attract entrepreneurs and LPs.

He doesn't run a personal fund or manage outside money. He's an investor in the sense that he invests his own money, but he's not managing other people's portfolios.

His writing is his main product. His Collaborative Fund blog posts get millions of reads.

His books have sold over 5 million copies combined. He's one of the few people in finance who became wealthy primarily through writing about money, not managing it.

Lark Davis

Crypto Lark YouTube channel (1M+ subscribers). Wealth Mastery (paid research subscription).

Books: "Cryptocurrency Revolution" (authored). Based in Thailand.

EDUCATION

Morgan Housel

Housel graduated from the University of Southern California. He studied economics, which gave him the analytical framework, but he credits his writing ability — not his economics degree — as the skill that actually built his career.

He didn't go to business school, didn't get an MBA, and didn't do a Wall Street training program.

Lark Davis

Largely self-taught in crypto and financial markets. No formal finance credentials.

BOOKS & RESOURCES

Morgan Housel

A Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton Malkiel

The book that made the case for index fund investing decades before it became mainstream

He also cites Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman as foundational for understanding how cognitive biases drive financial decisions.

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Lark Davis

As an Amazon Associate, Netfigo earns from qualifying purchases. Book links above may be affiliate links.

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