Prøve GULL - Gratis
BRANNAN'S BLUEPRINT ON DALAL STREET
Mint Mumbai
|January 20, 2026
In India's capital markets gold rush, can 'shovel companies' be the shining bets?
One segment enjoying a dream run on Dalal Street is stock exchanges. The BSE's shares jumped 50% in 2025.
His name never crops up in modern investment literature, and yet in a more clear-eyed world, Samuel Brannan would have been anointed the patron saint of market acumen. Or at least would have chapters dedicated to him in business school textbooks. Brannan was a prominent businessman and Mormon preacher whose name is inextricably linked with one of the defining episodes of the 19th century—the great California gold rush.
Legend has it that one crisp morning early in 1848, some customers walked into a store operated by Brannan in Sacramento, California. After making their purchases, they stunned Brannan and the store employees by paying for the goods in gold! Upon enquiries, Brannan learnt that the customers worked for a landowner and they had stumbled upon gold deposits at a small settlement about 36 miles northeast of Sacramento.
Ever the sceptic, the 28-year-old Brannan decided to go to the spot himself and verify the claims. Once there, he found the news to be true and learned that “there was more gold than all the people in California could take out in 50 years.”
Brannan was, quite literally, standing on a huge gold mine. But what he did next ranks among the most counterintuitive moves in modern financial history. Instead of plunging into the nascent gold rush himself, he hurriedly set up a store selling picks, shovels, pans and other supplies. To stoke the frenzy, he famously paraded through San Francisco streets waving a vial of gold, shouting, “Gold! Gold! Gold! Gold from the American river!”
Denne historien er fra January 20, 2026-utgaven av Mint Mumbai.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
UPI loans soon, credit card-style
India's retail payments body, the National Payments Corporation of India, is in talks with lenders to roll out credit lines as low as ₹5,000 on the Unified Payments Interface (UPI), banking on credit card-like interest-free periods and regulatory clarity to boost uptake, according to two people close to the development.
3 mins
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
TRUMP 2.0: ONE YEAR OF TWISTS AND TURNS
Since returning to office in January 2025, Donald Trump has used many tools-from tariffs to tighter borders and military interventions-many of which have hit India significantly.
3 mins
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
IMF cautions on AI, raises India outlook
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has sounded a warning note on the exuberance in artificial intelligence, cautioning that a failure to achieve productivity gains could curb investments, slam markets and radiate across the world through tightening financial conditions.
4 mins
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
BRANNAN'S BLUEPRINT ON DALAL STREET
In India's capital markets gold rush, can 'shovel companies' be the shining bets?
9 mins
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
China's lithium moves may hit Indian EV cos
Costlier batteries due to Beijing's export sop cut may push up EV prices
3 mins
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Our Gaza calculus
Should India join the Board of Peace for Gaza being set up by the US? This decision would hinge on what it implies for India's strategic autonomy.
1 min
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Discoms swing to profit. Why there is more to worry
India's power distribution companies or discoms, reeling under high debt and operational losses for years, swung to profits in fiscal 202425. Mint explains the current financial health of the discoms and the factors behind their revival:
2 mins
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
China population falls as birth rate drops to lowest since 1949
A decade after ending China's longtime one-child policy, the country’s authorities are pushing a range of ideas and policies to try to encourage more births—tactics that range from cash subsidies to taxing condoms to eliminating a tax on matchmakers and day care centres.
1 min
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
BUDGET SHOULD AID GROWTH WITH FISC CONSOLIDATION
India’s real and nominal GDP growth rates for 2025-26 are estimated at 7.4% and 8.0%, respectively, according to the National Statistics Office’s first advance estimates.
3 mins
January 20, 2026
Mint Mumbai
India-EU summit likely to seal FTA, defence pacts
European Council and European Commission heads will be chief guests on Republic Day
1 mins
January 20, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

