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The Rudd Report



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Articles > Past Issues > 2009 > July 2009 > The Rudd Report

The Rudd Report

The new investment gospel according to Venice financial guru Lauren Rudd.

Author: Molly Sinclair McCartney
Photographer: William S. Speer



Syndicated Sarasota financial columnist and commentator Lauren Rudd seems the most unlikely of financial experts. He doesn’t put his own money in the market, writes his column for free and wants to put all his cash in a farm for unwanted horses, a money pit if there ever were one.  


And yet the blunt-talking, Wall Street-savvy Rudd, 64, has millions of readers across the country, based on the number of hits on his Web site and the publication of his weekly Streetwise column in newspapers such as the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and other smaller papers across the country.  

“Lauren is an excellent writer,” says Herald-Tribune business editor Matt Sauer. “He distills complex ideas down into simple-to-understand prose.”

Rudd describes his column as a “bare-fisted, no-holds-barred and no-mercy-shown look at Wall Street, while at the same time often providing you with the merits of investing in a particular company.” In addition to the weekly column, he writes a daily MarketView for his Web site (ruddreport.com).

Offering both columns for free could be seen as a smart way to market his brand, but Rudd says it’s more a gesture of gratitude with a bit of ego thrown in. “This is payback for the success I have had in my life, to be very blunt,” he says. “I also enjoy writing, and there is some egotistical satisfaction when you open the paper and there is your column.”

Rudd’s interest in investing goes back two generations to his grandfather, whose investments kept his family afloat after they had to flee from Russia during the revolution. And his father, Irving Rudd, founded Rudd and Company and had a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. “As a hobby, he taught graduate students investment analysis at American University in Washington D.C., and I took all his courses,” Lauren Rudd says. “I started investing when I was about 12 years old, and I have been working or delving into the investment world ever since.”

Rudd received degrees in economics and computer science and did two years of graduate work in economics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. After graduation, he went from computer science to sales and marketing and then worked as a consultant analyzing AT & T Bell Laboratories’ investments and acquisitions.

In 1985, he launched Rudd Capital Management and The Rudd Report, a newsletter that offered investment analysis and advice. When the stock market crashed in 1987, “people began asking me for advice,” Rudd says. In what he describes as an effort to help the average investor, Rudd proposed writing a weekly investment column for the Trenton Times. “They weren’t interested at first, but I kept harping at them, and finally in July 1988 they said I could have a column on a trial basis,” he says.

In 1995, he renamed his company Savannah Capital Management (he had moved to Savannah, Ga.) and began specializing in doing research reports for corporations and managing money for individual investors. The business was going well, but in 2002, when his mother needed help caring for his ailing father in their retirement home in Venice, Rudd moved to Venice to help. His father passed away in May 2003, but his mother, Ulrica (Rikki) Rudd, is now an energetic 96-year-old who just returned from a trip to Peru. A stickler for good writing, she still critiques her son’s column when she sees it in the Herald-Tribune. “Once in a while there is a sentence that is a little clumsy,” she says.

After 13 years of flying solo, Rudd recently joined Sarasota’s Day Hagan Asset Management. “I had been with corporations in the past, and I had played the corporate game,” he says. “I knew what it was like, and I was done with that. My viewpoint always has been that if I want to screw up my life, I can do it myself. I don’t need any assistance.”

But his thinking began to change after he met Art Day and Don Hagan and learned more about the model they use for investing. According to Rudd, the Day Hagan model interprets changing market conditions and adjusts an individual’s portfolio by “overweighting areas with the greatest probability of success and underweighting areas of weakness.”

He says the traditional strategy of buying the stock of quality companies and holding that stock indefinitely no longer works “because technology, combined with greed and a plethora of exotic financial instruments, has changed the entire character of Wall Street.” Investors now need to follow the economy and rebalance their portfolios at least quarterly, and the Day Hagan model helps investors do just that, he says.

“I don’t want to quote a specific number, but I have brought many clients, representing multimillions of dollars in investments to Day Hagan, and the clients are exceedingly happy,” he says.

Rudd maintains two offices now, one at Day Hagan and one in the comfortable Siesta Key home he shares with Diane Rubin, a woman he met through Match.com in November 2006. Also sharing the house are his two Italian greyhounds and her Chinese crested powderpuff, Poochos. (Rudd has three grown children from his previous four marriages: Jeremiah, 39, is an economist at the Federal Reserve. Michelle, 37, is a veterinarian in the Maryland suburbs outside Washington, and Lael, 35, is a rocket scientist in Long Beach, Calif.) The Siesta Key home is filled with books and family memorabilia, and the garage holds a Harley-Davidson and an Obama for President sign, which was posted on the front lawn last fall for a few days until the neighborhood association ordered them to take it down.

Rudd also lectures around the country and is working on a proposal for McGraw Hill to write two books on investment analysis. Locally, he appears most Thursdays on SNN Local 6 television. He also teaches basic and advanced investment analysis at the Venice Community Center and starting in January will teach two six-week courses on economic leaders and ideas at Pierian Spring Academy, a Sarasota adult education program.

And while investing in the market is off limits to Rudd because it is a conflict of interest with writing the newspaper columns, he does have another investment in mind.  

On his third date with Diane, he took her to a horse show in Tampa, where they bought a $50 raffle ticket. The next day they learned they had won a six-month-old horse. Now their goal is to buy a Kentucky horse farm that will accommodate unwanted horses and provide a summer home for their three grandchildren.

“We have picked out the farm we want,” Rudd says, “but we don’t want to drain our cash right now, given the current economy. It would be an unwise move.”

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