
Happy Monday from Your Survival Guy. What a weekend. Weather-wise a rainout, which is a shame because it was Newportโs Concours & Motor Weekโcelebrating the history of sportsmanship and motoring.
Here was the forecast Sunday morning: โGale Warning in Effect through Monday Morning, at 7:02am EDT Sunday Oct. 2, 2022. Northeast winds 25 to 30 knots with gust up to 40 knots, seas 6 to 9 feet, a chance of showers, mainly this morning.โ
Not exactly the weather you want to showcase your million-dollarโand then someโcollectible automobile. (Check out a classic interview from September 2019 with Chairman Jay Leno, yes that Jay Leno, below.)
When it comes to investing, by the way, the road less traveled is the one we all imagine weโre on. Making that a reality sometimes means you need to stick to your guns and do nothing. Donโt get pushed into the wrong lane of traffic.
When you invest in times like these, I want you to be paid to be in stocks in the form of dividends and interest with bonds. Donโt beat yourself up over prices. Theyโre opinions. It turns out opinions can be dead wrong. Look at some of the tech highflyers, priced for perfection. Turns out, they have a few problems under the hood.
I want you to be a prize-winning collector, not a predictor of the direction of interest rates, for example. Thatโs cheap. Thatโs not collecting value over a lifetime of work. โOh, rates are going upโ as if itโs the only opinion. Did you sell your house when its value was down and pack up the family? I didnโt.
Action Line: Speculators are horses out of the barn. Theyโre emotional beasts. Investing separates the pack into winners and losers. If you need a better jockey, give Your Survival Guy a call.
P.S. I like this interview with Jay Leno, Mr. Car Guy, by David Zivian of Mensbook, that I read while waiting out the storm. Enjoy.
The inaugural Audrainโs Newport Concours & Motor Week, Oct. 3-6 in Rhode Island, promises to be one of the great automotive enthusiast events of the year (audrainconcours.com). As it will be held on and around Rough Point, the spectacular estate of the late tobacco heiress Doris Duke, itโs fitting that three of her vehicles will be on display, alongside a Koenigsegg Jesko, the Bugatti Chiron and a customized Porsche 356 Outlaw. Fitting, too, that comedian and car aficionado Jay Leno will serve as chairman for the bash. We caught up with him as he was heading east.
MBYour show, Jay Lenoโs Garage, just turned five years old. It still seems like itโs your new show.
JLYeah, thatโs better than being the old worn out show I guess. So I’ll take it.
MBTell us about the Newport event
JLย This will be a big one. Itโs funโitโs a concours. And Newport is the perfect place because you’ve got all of these luxury brands and you’ve got all of these giant mansions to lease for events. Itโs just fun.
MBAnd youโre keeping the next generation excited.
JLย Whenever I go to car shows I always let kids sit in the cars and get behind the wheel and do all that kind of stuff. The idea of, โHey, you kids get out of here,โ you know I donโt like that. And, something new, we have a class called 30 under 30 which is people 30 years of age or under who restored or fixed up a car for under $30,000. It is rather expensive to restore cars, so if kids can do it themselves with a certain amount of elbow grease and self starter knowledge, that makes it a little more fun.
MBYou have about 188 cars and 163 motorcycles yourself. I have to ask:ย Do you have a favorite?
JLNo, no. If I had a favorite I wouldn’t have all of those cars. There are some of course that are very valuable and there are cars that I just like because they are technically interesting. I’ve got steam cars, I’ve got gas turbines, I’ve got electric. I guess for lack of a better phrase itโs sort of the history of transportation, you know?
MBย Is there still a holy grail out there for you?
JLNoโbecause I buy the story as much as I buy the car. You know, a car that has had one owner for 50 years and things like that. A lot of times I buy cars I am not particularly interested in but the story is so good.
MBย Itโs funny how that works.
JLย I had Paul Allen the Microsoft guy at the garage. He just passed away. He was worth like $58 billion dollars or some crazy thing but his dream car was a โ73 Buick Electra. His dad had one and he and his dad would drive around in that thing so he was always looking for one of those to buy. Itโs a bit like Rosebud inย Citizen Kane,ย you know? The car brings back some nostalgic feeling or some part of your life.
MBย Itโs that way for a lot of people.
JLย For most people. When I was a kid they said the Mustang would never be a collectible car because they built over a million of them in the first year. Well thatโs why itโs collectible: People have memories they want to relive. We Americans are funny that way. When something comes out we all can’t wait to go buy it, then we tire of it, then we throw it away and then 20 years later we pay a fortune to get it back again.
MBย Jerry Seinfeld has a car show as well. Is there some kind of affinity with comedians and cars?
JLย Actually itโs just me and Jerry, when you think about it. It just happens to be two comedians who like cars. Most comedians I know don’t know anything about cars. Itโs just a coincidence. Seinfeld and I are best friends. He’s a Porsche guy.
MBAnything youre on the lookout for right now?
JLNo, its sort of whatever sort of catches your eye. Thatโs the beauty of it. For example I had this old lady call me. She had a โ53 Hudson Hornet, 4 door, and she wanted to sell it and I said โOh, Iโve already got a Hudson Hornet, Iโve got a 51.โ She goes, โOh. Well, we bought this new and my husband and I drove my kids around andit was the only car we had. He died in โ96. Can you just come look at it? โ And I said, โOk, you’re the original owner? Can I ask how old you are?โ And she said, โ96.โ So I went out to see her. No hearing aid, no glasses. The car is in the garage, four flat tires. She goes, โWould you buy it? Would you give me $5,000?โ I said ok. So I dragged it back to my garage and start to restore it and it takes about 2 years. I thought, let me call that lady and see if she is still around.
MBSo sheโd be 98. Good grief.
JLI call, she says โHello?โ And I said, โDo you want to go for a ride in the car?โ and she says, โOh yeahโbut I got to get my hair done,โ and I said ok. And then she says to me, โCan I bring the kids?โ And I went, โYeah. Sure. How old are the kids?โ Well the kids are 72 and 74. OK. So I get out there and the two kids have got her blindfolded standing in the driveway. I pull in and she’s touching the car and it feels so smooth. And she takes the blindfold off and sees itโs all finishedโyou know,the chromeโs all done and the upholstery all done and all that. And she starts crying.
MB
And so you go for a ride?
JLย She puts the two kids in the back. The 72- and 74-year-olds.We’re driving along and she’s telling stories and the two kids in the back start poking each other, and she just turns around and starts whacking the crap out of them. “I told you kids!” and she’s punching them in the head and the three of them are having the time of their lives laughing.The kids told me that when they were teenagers they were so ashamed that their dad had a 15-year-old car that they would make their dad drop them off on the corner and then they would walk the rest of the way to school so the other kids wouldn’t see them.
MBThatโs just a beautiful story.
JLย Itโs the only car the family ever had. She finally lived to be 104.And I still see the kids, you know. They come around every now and then.
Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย



