How Rockefeller Built His Trillion Dollar Oil Empire - YouTube

Channel: Business Casual

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When you look at the wealthiest men alive today, topping the charts are tech billionaires
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like Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates.
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But actually, the wealthiest businessman to have ever lived died almost a century ago.
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In today’s video we’ll be looking at a business empire so vast that even after a
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hundred years of technological progress, no man has managed to overtake its founder.
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This is the history of Standard Oil.
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The origins of history’s greatest oil monopoly are actually pretty humble.
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It all starts in 1839 with the birth of John Rockefeller in upstate New York.
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He was the eldest son of a travelling merchant, who identified himself as a “botanic physician”,
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but in reality was selling the 19th century equivalent of homeopathic medicine.
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He would spend weeks away from home and in fact would have several children with another
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woman, who he decided to bring back home to his wife so they could all live together.
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In this very confusing household, John would grow up learning how to hustle people for
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the best deal possible and how to get the most out of every penny he got.
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His family would rarely stay in one place for long, and John would live this nomadic
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lifestyle ever since he was three years old.
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To help his mother, John would earn any money he could by raising turkeys or doing work
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for neighbors.
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His intelligence was put to good use when the family moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1854,
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where he got the chance to attend a proper school.
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But less than a year later, John dropped out in order to work as a bookkeeper at a local
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produce broker.
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He would earn $0.50 per day, which obviously wasn’t much at the time so he would help
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other companies on the side.
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But after two years of working there his bosses refused to give him a meaningful raise, so
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he decided to one-up them by starting his own produce brokerage.
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Thanks to his good reputation he got a loan of $4,000 which at the time was a huge sum.
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John started trading hay, grain and various meats, and in his first year he recorded sales
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of half a million dollars, of which he only got a small fraction as commissions, but still
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it was a huge success.
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Every bank in Cleveland was begging John to borrow money and he was barely 18 years old.
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But then, in 1859 something happened that would change his life forever.
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Just a hundred miles east of Cleveland, the first American oil well had been discovered.
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This marked the beginning of the Pennsylvania oil rush and within a year 4,500 barrels of
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oil would be produced.
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Now, back then oil wasn’t quite as valuable as it today; gasoline cars hadn’t been invented
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yet, but oil could still be processed into kerosene, which people would then use in lamps.
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John realized, however, that the biggest profits to be had weren’t in drilling for oil, but
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in refining it.
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He witnessed many people going bust before striking oil, so he knew that that business
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was too risky for him.
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Instead, he’d let others go through the hassle of finding the oil and he would just
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buy it off of them.
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John had to wait until 1863 for the government to build a rail line connecting the Pennsylvania
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oil fields to Cleveland.
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But when that line was built, John was ready for it with a long line of partners and banks
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ready to back him up.
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He also assembled a team of seasoned chemists and engineers, who not only optimized the
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refining process but also discovered various uses for the byproducts of refining petroleum.
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You see, the early refineries in Cleveland could only operate at about 60% efficiency,
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but John not increased that percentage, he also started selling all the byproducts, like
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paraffin wax, tar and naphtha.
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Within two years the Rockefeller refinery was worth over seventy thousand dollars and
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was among the largest in Cleveland.
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But John wasn’t done: in 1865 there were 26 competing refineries but within 5 years
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John had acquired all but 4 of them.
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By this point his business was getting too big to handle as a partnership, so in 1870
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he incorporated as Standard Oil of Ohio.
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To convince the few remaining competitors in Cleveland, John would simply invite them
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over and show them his books, revealing that he could operate at a loss far longer than
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they could stay solvent.
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In exchange for a good buyout price, John would offer his competitors positions in his
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own company, thus placing the brightest minds in the industry under his control.
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Of course, not everyone would give up immediately, and over time John eroded the price of oil
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and kerosene, sometimes by as much as 80%, in order to strangle competitors.
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Unsurprisingly, his strategy worked: by 1880 he had acquired refineries across the Northeastern
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US and was refining over 90% of the entire country’s oil production.
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At this point John was so powerful that he would invite the owners of the big rail companies
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and personally negotiate rebates for using their trains.
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But this practice of negotiating backroom deals really got the business world riled
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up.
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At the time (and still kind of today) most industrial goods were transported by rail,
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and many big industrialists got worried that John’s abuse of transportation rebates could
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result in similar monopolization in their industries.
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Over the next decade businessmen, politicians and the media would attack Standard Oil with
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increasing ferocity.
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Legislators in Ohio began drafting antitrust regulations to bring down Rockefeller, but
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he was one step ahead.
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In 1882 he reincorporated in New Jersey, this time creating the Standard Oil Trust, which
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in turn held stakes in over 40 local companies.
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Then, to showcase his success John built an impressive headquarters for his company on
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Broadway.
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This moment was the highpoint of Rockefeller’s Standard Oil: he owned 20,000 oil wells, 4,000
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miles of pipeline, and employed over a 100,000 people.
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But, his grip on the oil industry was loosening, both domestically and abroad.
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Massive oil deposits had been discovered in Russia and in Asia, and were being developed
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by the Rothschild family, which spared no effort in getting that oil to America.
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Worse yet, in 1890 the federal government passed the Sherman Antitrust Act, which finally
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gave politicians the teeth to go after the Standard Oil Trust itself.
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Of course, the complex legal structure behind all the companies was very difficult to investigate,
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which is why it the government couldn’t actually break up Standard Oil until 1911.
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By that point, however, John Rockefeller had already cashed in and was no longer actively
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managing the company.
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In the final 20 years of his company’s existence, it had paid out over half a billion dollars
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in dividends.
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By some estimates the true worth of Standard Oil at its peak was $1 trillion, so the breakup
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didn’t really come as a surprise to most people.
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In 1911 the Supreme Court found Standard Oil guilty of anticompetitive practices and broke
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the company up into 34 separate entities.
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Of course, John Rockefeller kept his stake in those companies until his death and in
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fact it turns out that the breakup was the most profitable event in his life.
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You see, over time many of those companies merged back with one another.
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Today, most of the Standard remnants are part of either ExxonMobil, Chevron or BP, which
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have since become incredibly large companies in their own right.
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John Rockefeller’s ownership of these successor companies made him the richest businessman
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to have ever lived, with an estimated net worth of $400 billion.
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Even today, no one has beaten Rockefeller in the leaderboard; not even Jeff Bezos himself
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seems likely to achieve that.
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But there’s one thing that Jeff Bezos does have that John Rockefeller never did despite
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all his money and that is access to Dollar Shave Club.
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Visit dollarshaveclub.com/businesscasual to become a member of a club so prestigious that
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not even John Rockefeller could get in.
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In any case, thank you for watching and huge thanks to all my patrons on Patreon.
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If you wanna support me on there you can get early access to future videos or HD versions
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of the soundtracks I use in Business Casual.
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Anyhow, we’ll see each other again in two weeks, and until then, stay smart.