RJ Hamster
The Moral Case for Stock Investors
![]()
AN OXFORD CLUB PUBLICATION
Loyal reader since August 2025
SPONSORED
Seven stocks set to go SUPERNOVA??
Two BIG catalysts could drive a set of stocks higher in the coming days.
Both involve a brewing conflict between China and the United States.
And the President has said we will do “whatever it takes” to win this battle.
And this could result in trillions of dollars flowing into specific industries and stocks.
Go here for details on seven tiny stocks that could rise as much as 1,500% in the coming year.
EDITOR’S NOTE
Since 2000, out of every investment available, only TWO have beaten what Chief Income Strategist Marc Lichtenfeld calls “The 29% Account.”
This little-known opportunity has outperformed Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and thousands of other stocks… turning $1,000 into $556,454 over 25 years.
The big banks have known about it for decades. Now you can too.
– Nicole Labra, Senior Managing Editor
THE SHORTEST WAY TO A RICH LIFE
Why Shareholders Are Public Benefactors
Alexander Green, Chief Investment Strategist, The Oxford Club
When you buy or sell shares of a public company, your actions are almost certainly based on self-interest.
You want to buy a company at a good price. And you want to sell it at an even better price.
Yet many shareholders – perhaps most – don’t realize that they are actively promoting the public good when they act for personal financial gain.
Here’s how…
In a free enterprise system like ours, every transaction is based on mutually beneficial exchange.
The only way a business attracts customers – and makes money – is by enticing them to buy its products and services.
If they sell those products and services for more than they cost, they earn a profit.
And if they can’t, they don’t.
Not making a profit is more common than non-entrepreneurs realize. Most businesses close within five years of opening.
A profitable firm is the exception, not the rule. (Especially in the world of start-ups.)
Business owners – shareholders – eat the losses. They are also entitled to the profits if there are any.
Capitalism is not a zero-sum game where businesses gain at everyone else’s expense.
If you don’t want to work for a company, buy from a company, sell to a company or own its shares, you won’t.
SPONSORED
Investing Wizard Who Turned
$37K Into $2.7M in Just 4 Years
Makes His Next Big Move
He started from nothing and became a multimillionaire…
He’s now one of the most sought-after trading experts…
Yet he operates 858 miles from Wall Street.
And now, he’s revealing his No. 1 favorite strategy that targets MASSIVE weekly profits with just one stock ticker.SEE THE PROOF HERE
At a successful business, the incentives are aligned for everyone to benefit, not just the shareholders.
As I’ve written before, businesses focused solely on short-term profits don’t last long.
If they cut corners on quality, their customers will leave them.
If they bargain with your suppliers too hard, they won’t trade with them.
If they undervalue their employees, they will take their talents elsewhere.
It is in the best interests of business owners to make sure that all stakeholders – employees, suppliers, customers, and communities – are satisfied.
Yet the business and its assets do not belong to the other stakeholders. They belong solely to the shareholders.
(Many people lost sight of this a few years ago, when some of the world’s largest asset managers pressured firms to pursue not sales and earnings but various social responsibility objectives. Better known as ESG… or Environmental, Social and Governance. Fortunately, the pendulum is swinging back the other way.)
The best companies seek to maximize long term gains, not short term ones.
If this were not the case, they would not invest billions each year on equipment, factories, technology, research and development, marketing, employee benefits and so on.
Instead, they would distribute all that money to the shareholders, either in the form of dividends or share buybacks.
But they don’t. Because they expect their investments to pay off in even bigger profits down the road.
These investments require quite a bit of money, of course.
Every growing business is faced with essentially three choices: using their existing cash flow, borrowing or raising money in the equity markets.
Most young companies – and many fast-growing ones – don’t have enough excess cash flow to finance investments for future growth.
They can borrow, either from a bank or through a bond offering. But that means signing a contract to provide interest payments and a return of principal on specific dates.
If the business grows slower than expected, this can become a major problem, as more debt may need to be taken on or – in the worst case – the firm may have to be liquidated to satisfy creditors.
So many firms opt to raise money in the stock market instead.
The funds are raised in an initial public offering (IPO) or secondary offerings.
If you’re buying shares in the market, your money does not go to the company itself. Rather it goes to someone who is selling their shares.
You are not providing capital to the firm. You are providing liquidity to other shareholders, as you are again when you sell your shares.
Think about this for a moment…
Businesses provide us with virtually everything we want or need. They provide jobs and training for employees. They are sources of sales and profits for suppliers. And they pay billions each year in corporate taxes.
Who makes this possible?
You, the shareholder, who is willing to accept the risks and potential rewards of a business owner – and who provides liquidity for other investors.
So don’t buy into the mischaracterization that stock market investors are greedy and selfish. You’re a public benefactor!
Now… get out there and make some serious money.
Good investing,
AlexLeave a Comment
BUILD AND PROTECT YOUR WEALTH
Odd Monthly Event Could More Than Triple Your Money
Tenable: Is This Software Stock a Value Play?
Proof: New “One Ticker Payouts” (You Can Do This Weekly!)
When AI Spots What Human Traders Miss: Three Unrelated Stocks Signal Something Big
MORE FROM LIBERTY THROUGH WEALTH
How My Son Threw Away $1 Million at the Car Dealership
How to Invest Before the IPO Crowd Arrives
Three Ways to Earn Higher Returns in 2026
It’s Called “The Founder’s Edge” for a Reason
JOIN THE CONVERSATION
SPONSORED
The Ultimate Unicorn Investment
Out of 23,281 stocks… ONLY ONE is this wildly profitable and undervalued. It has more operating income than Chipotle, Hilton, or Airbnb. But its cheaper than any of them.
Get the story on this unicorn stock here.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to Liberty Through Wealth.
Liberty Through Wealth is published by The Oxford Club.
Questions? Check out our FAQs. Trying to reach us? Contact us here.
Please do not reply to this email as it goes to an unmonitored inbox.
Privacy Policy | Whitelist Liberty Through Wealth | Unsubscribe
© 2026 The Oxford Club, LLC All Rights Reserved
The Oxford Club | 105 West Monument Street | Baltimore, MD 21201
North America: 866.237.0436 | International: +1.443.353.4540
Oxfordclub.com
Nothing published by The Oxford Club should be considered personalized investment advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed personalized investment advice. We allow the editors of our publications to recommend securities that they own themselves. However, our policy prohibits editors from exiting a personal trade while the recommendation to subscribers is open. In no circumstance may an editor sell a security before subscribers have a fair opportunity to exit. The length of time an editor must wait after subscribers have been advised to exit a play depends on the type of publication. All other employees and agents must wait 24 hours after publication before trading on a recommendation.
Any investments recommended by The Oxford Club should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.
Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. The information found on this website may only be used pursuant to the membership or subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of The Oxford Club, LLC, 105 West Monument Street, Baltimore, MD 21201.
Ref: 000142349377