New info shows Handel was a shrewd investor in an era of shaken markets
With the strains of the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel's Messiah still ringing from Easter Sunday (it was the recessional at Baltimore's wonderfully neo-deco Cathedral of Mary Our Queen, where I caught a service), it's cool to discover that the composer was even shrewder than we thought. In a fascinating story from BBC News, a business writer details how he came across a 1723 ledger in the Bank of England archives that sheds fresh light on how early and wisely Handel was immersed in the business of investments while living in England, even when markets were risky and unsettled. Nice to know that the guy's counterpoint was as carefully considered as his finances, enabling him to, um, handle a fortune.






