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the business of a local hotel, you will find the
grocer who supplies the bacon, the butcher
who supplies the meat, the wine merchant who
supplies the wine, and so on, are shareholders
in the company. Owing to lack of competition
for the contracts, the result naturally is that
the hotel is carried on at great expense, and the
shareholders suffer in consequence. This
matters little or nothing to the interested
shareholders who continue to make large
profits by their contracts ; but it hardly con
duces to the satisfaction of the disinterested
investor. Indeed, such a form of investment
is scarcely less dangerous than confining the
capital to be invested to one country, and
so speculating on that country’s future trading
prosperity.
In the next chapter we shall discuss a
practical scheme whereby an investor may so
widely distribute his investments over the
world’s area as to endow his capital with
the maximum stability of value.