Anne Scheiber: Difference between revisions

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| birth_date  = {{Birth date|1893|10|1}}
| birth_date  = {{Birth date|1893|10|1}}
| death_date  = {{Death date and age|1995|1|9|1893|10|1}}
| death_date  = {{Death date and age|1995|1|9|1893|10|1}}
| birth_place  = New York City, New York, U.S.
| nationality  = American
| nationality  = American
| occupation  = IRS auditor, investor
| occupation  = IRS auditor, investor
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'''Anne Scheiber''' (October 1, 1893 – January 9, 1995) was an American [[Internal Revenue Service]] (IRS) auditor and investor who, over the course of a 51-year retirement, transformed a modest $5,000 nest egg into a fortune of approximately $22 million. She accomplished this through a disciplined buy-and-hold investment strategy focused on dividend-paying stocks, without the use of options, leverage, or speculative techniques.<ref name="motleyfool">{{cite news |date=December 24, 2025 |title=A Tax Auditor's Secret to Building a $22 Million Fortune |url=https://www.fool.com/investing/2025/12/24/the-tax-auditors-secret-to-building-a-22-million-f/ |work=The Motley Fool |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Scheiber never earned a salary of more than $4,000 per year during her 23-year career at the IRS, never received a promotion, and lived frugally in a rent-controlled apartment in New York City for decades.<ref name="yahoo2023">{{cite news |date=December 19, 2023 |title='She ran rings around Warren Buffett': This IRS auditor secretly turned a $5K nest egg into a $22M fortune — here are the 3 simple strategies that made Anne Scheiber rich |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/she-ran-rings-around-warren-110000290.html |work=Yahoo Finance |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Upon her death at the age of 101, Scheiber surprised the world by bequeathing her entire $22 million estate to [[Yeshiva University]], specifically to fund scholarships for women at [[Stern College for Women]] who were accepted into the [[Albert Einstein College of Medicine]].<ref name="yu2007">{{cite web |title=Anne Scheiber's Generous Gift Helps Educate a New Generation of Healers |url=https://www.yu.edu/news/anne-scheibers-generous-gift-helps-educate-a-new-generation-of-healers |publisher=Yeshiva University |date=August 7, 2007 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Her story has become one of the most frequently cited examples of the power of compound interest, patience, and long-term dividend reinvestment in the history of personal finance.
'''Anne Scheiber''' (October 1, 1893 – January 9, 1995) was an American [[Internal Revenue Service]] (IRS) auditor and investor who, over a fifty-one-year retirement, transformed a modest $5,000 nest egg into a fortune of approximately $22 million through disciplined, long-term dividend investing. During her twenty-three-year career at the IRS, Scheiber never earned more than $4,000 per year and was never promoted, an experience she attributed in part to gender discrimination and antisemitism.<ref name="nyt">{{cite news |date=1995-12-02 |title=About New York; A Quiet Auditor Leaves Yeshiva a Fortune |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231022200602/https://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/02/nyregion/about-new-york-a-quiet-auditor-leaves-yeshiva-a-fortune.html |work=The New York Times |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> She lived reclusively in a rent-controlled apartment in New York City, spending minimally and reinvesting virtually all of her dividend income. Upon her death at the age of 101, Scheiber stunned the financial world and the academic community by bequeathing her entire estate—valued at $22 million—to [[Yeshiva University]], specifically to fund scholarships for women at Stern College for Women and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.<ref name="yu2007">{{cite web |title=Anne Scheiber's Generous Gift Helps Educate a New Generation of Healers |url=https://www.yu.edu/news/anne-scheibers-generous-gift-helps-educate-a-new-generation-of-healers |publisher=Yeshiva University |date=2007-08-07 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Her story has since become one of the most frequently cited examples of the power of compound interest and patient, buy-and-hold investing, with several commentators noting that her annualized returns over five decades rivaled or exceeded those of professional fund managers.<ref name="yahoo2024">{{cite news |date=2024-09-05 |title=The IRS Auditor Who Beat Warren Buffett At His Own Game |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/irs-auditor-beat-warren-buffett-110614004.html |work=Yahoo Finance |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


== Early Life ==
== Early Life ==


Anne Scheiber was born on October 1, 1893, in New York City.<ref name="nyt1995">{{cite news |date=December 2, 1995 |title=About New York; A Quiet Auditor Leaves Yeshiva a Fortune |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231022200602/https://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/02/nyregion/about-new-york-a-quiet-auditor-leaves-yeshiva-a-fortune.html |work=The New York Times |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> She grew up in an era when professional opportunities for women were severely limited, and the barriers she encountered throughout her working life would later shape both her investment philosophy and her philanthropic decisions. Scheiber came from a modest background and was one of several siblings. Her brother was an accountant, and it was partly through observing his career and the financial world around her that she developed an early interest in money management and taxation.<ref name="people1995">{{cite news |title=Angel in Disguise |url=https://people.com/archive/angel-in-disguise-vol-44-no-25/ |work=People |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Anne Scheiber was born on October 1, 1893, in the United States.<ref name="nyt" /> Little is publicly documented about her earliest years, though available accounts indicate she came from a modest background and was one of several siblings. Her brother was a certified public accountant, and it was through observing his work and career that she developed an early interest in finance and tax law.<ref name="people">{{cite news |title=Angel in Disguise |url=https://people.com/archive/angel-in-disguise-vol-44-no-25/ |work=People |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Scheiber grew up in an era when women faced substantial barriers to professional advancement, particularly in government and finance. She was Jewish, and later in life she expressed the belief that both her gender and her religion had contributed to systemic discrimination she experienced during her career at the IRS.<ref name="nyt" />


Details of Scheiber's childhood and family life remain sparse in the public record, consistent with the intensely private nature she maintained throughout her life. What is known is that she grew up in New York City during a period of significant social and economic change, including the expansion of the federal government and the establishment of the modern income tax system following the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913. These developments would directly shape her professional career, as the newly created federal income tax necessitated a growing workforce of auditors and examiners at the Internal Revenue Service.
Despite these obstacles, Scheiber pursued higher education and professional credentials at a time when relatively few women did so. She earned a law degree, which she obtained by attending night school while working during the day.<ref name="yahoo2023">{{cite news |date=2023-12-19 |title='She ran rings around Warren Buffett': This IRS auditor secretly turned a $5K nest egg into a $22M fortune — here are the 3 simple strategies that made Anne Scheiber rich |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/she-ran-rings-around-warren-110000290.html |work=Yahoo Finance |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Her legal training, combined with her natural aptitude for numbers and analysis, equipped her with the skills she would later use both in her career as a tax auditor and in her private investment activities. The combination of a legal education and deep familiarity with the tax code would prove instrumental in her approach to building wealth through tax-efficient investing strategies.


Scheiber's early years were marked by the kind of thrift and self-reliance that would later define her investment approach. Growing up in a working-class environment, she learned to live within her means—a discipline she maintained with remarkable consistency for over a century of life.<ref name="yahoo2022">{{cite news |date=August 17, 2022 |title=The Story of the Greatest Mom and Pop Investor Ever |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/story-greatest-mom-pop-investor-191107126.html |work=Yahoo Finance |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Scheiber never married and had no children.<ref name="nyt" /> She maintained a private and reserved disposition throughout her life, characteristics that would become more pronounced during her decades of retirement. Her personal frugality, which later became a central element of her public story, appears to have been a lifelong trait rooted in her modest upbringing and reinforced by her experiences during the Great Depression and other periods of economic hardship.
 
== Education ==
 
Scheiber attended law school at night while simultaneously holding employment during the daytime hours.<ref name="yahoo2023" /> She successfully completed her legal studies and earned a law degree, an accomplishment that was relatively uncommon for women in the early twentieth century. Her legal education provided her with a detailed understanding of tax law, corporate structures, and financial regulations—knowledge that she applied both professionally as an IRS auditor and personally as an investor. Her brother, who worked as a certified public accountant, may have also served as an informal source of financial education and mentorship during her formative years.<ref name="people" />


== Career ==
== Career ==
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=== Internal Revenue Service ===
=== Internal Revenue Service ===


Scheiber spent 23 years working as an auditor for the Internal Revenue Service. During her tenure, she never earned a salary exceeding $4,000 per year and never received a single promotion despite her competence and longevity in the role.<ref name="yahoo2023" /> The lack of advancement has been attributed by multiple sources to the gender discrimination that was pervasive in the federal workforce during the early and mid-twentieth century. Women in government agencies routinely faced barriers to promotion and pay increases, and Scheiber's experience was emblematic of these systemic inequities.<ref name="people1995" />
Anne Scheiber joined the Internal Revenue Service as an auditor and worked there for twenty-three years.<ref name="nyt" /> During her tenure, she reviewed the tax returns of individuals and businesses, gaining an intimate understanding of how wealthy Americans earned, invested, and preserved their money. This experience proved formative: by examining the financial activities of affluent taxpayers, Scheiber developed a keen awareness of which investment strategies generated reliable, long-term wealth and which were speculative or unsound.<ref name="fool2025">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=2025-12-24 |title=A Tax Auditor's Secret to Building a $22 Million Fortune |url=https://www.fool.com/investing/2025/12/24/the-tax-auditors-secret-to-building-a-22-million-f/ |work=The Motley Fool |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
 
Despite these professional frustrations, Scheiber's work at the IRS provided her with a unique and consequential education. As an auditor, she spent years examining the tax returns of wealthy Americans, gaining firsthand insight into how fortunes were built, maintained, and—in some cases—lost. She observed the investment strategies of the affluent, studied corporate financial statements, and developed a sophisticated understanding of how the tax code affected investment returns.<ref name="yahoo2024">{{cite news |date=September 5, 2024 |title=The IRS Auditor Who Beat Warren Buffett At His Own Game |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/irs-auditor-beat-warren-buffett-110614004.html |work=Yahoo Finance |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This knowledge would prove instrumental when she began managing her own portfolio.


Scheiber retired from the IRS in 1944 at the age of 51.<ref name="vocal2020">{{cite web |title=How Anne Scheiber Made $22 Million Investing in Dividend Growth Stocks |url=https://vocal.media/trader/how-anne-scheiber-made-22-million-investing-in-dividend-growth-stocks |publisher=Vocal Media |date=August 29, 2020 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> By the time she left government service, she had accumulated approximately $5,000 in savings—a sum that, while not trivial for a woman of her income level, was far from extraordinary. She also had a small IRS pension. It was with these limited financial resources that she embarked on what would become one of the most remarkable individual investment careers in American history.
Despite her competence and dedication to her work, Scheiber never received a promotion during her entire career at the IRS.<ref name="yahoo2023" /> Her salary never exceeded $3,150 per year during most of her career, reaching a maximum of approximately $4,000 annually by the time she retired.<ref name="nyt" /> She later attributed this stagnation to discrimination based on both her gender and her Jewish heritage, a claim that was consistent with the well-documented systemic biases present in many American government agencies during the mid-twentieth century.<ref name="nyt" /> The experience of being overlooked and undervalued left a lasting mark on Scheiber. She became deeply distrustful of institutions and developed an independent, self-reliant approach to financial planning that would define her retirement years.


=== Investment Strategy ===
Scheiber retired from the IRS in 1944 at the age of 51.<ref name="vocal">{{cite web |title=HOW ANNE SCHEIBER MADE $22 MILLION INVESTING IN DIVIDEND GROWTH STOCKS |url=https://vocal.media/trader/how-anne-scheiber-made-22-million-investing-in-dividend-growth-stocks |publisher=Vocal Media |date=2020-08-29 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> At the time of her retirement, she had accumulated approximately $5,000 in savings—a modest sum even by the standards of the 1940s.<ref name="fool2025" /> She also had a small annual pension from her government service. With no spouse, no children, and no expectation of inheritance, Scheiber faced the prospect of funding what could potentially be a very long retirement on extremely limited resources.


After retiring in 1944, Scheiber devoted herself full-time to managing her investment portfolio, a pursuit she would continue for the next 51 years until her death in 1995. Her approach was built on several core principles that, while straightforward in concept, required extraordinary patience and discipline to execute over half a century.<ref name="motleyfool" />
=== Investment Career ===


'''Buy and hold.''' Scheiber's foundational strategy was to purchase shares of high-quality companies and hold them for extremely long periods, often decades. She avoided the temptation to trade frequently, recognizing that transaction costs and taxes eroded returns over time. Her experience at the IRS had given her a deep appreciation for the impact of capital gains taxes, and she structured her portfolio to minimize taxable events by simply not selling.<ref name="yahoo2024" /> This tax-efficient approach allowed her gains to compound largely uninterrupted by tax obligations.
Upon retiring in 1944, Scheiber committed herself to investing her $5,000 in savings in the stock market. This decision came at a time when the memory of the 1929 stock market crash and the Great Depression remained fresh in the American consciousness, and many ordinary citizens remained wary of equities.<ref name="fool2025" /> Scheiber, however, had the advantage of having spent over two decades scrutinizing the financial records of wealthy taxpayers. She had observed firsthand that patient ownership of high-quality stocks—particularly those of well-established companies that paid regular dividends—was among the most reliable paths to wealth accumulation.<ref name="fool2025" />


'''Dividend reinvestment.''' A central element of Scheiber's strategy was the reinvestment of dividends. Rather than spending the income generated by her stock holdings, she systematically reinvested dividends back into additional shares. Over time, this reinvestment created a powerful compounding effect. As her share count grew, so did her dividend income, which in turn purchased more shares, creating an accelerating cycle of wealth accumulation.<ref name="vocal2020" /><ref name="motleyfool" />
Scheiber's investment approach was grounded in several core principles that she adhered to with extraordinary discipline over the next fifty-one years:


'''Focus on quality companies.''' Scheiber invested in well-known, established companies with strong brands and reliable earnings. Her portfolio included major blue-chip stocks and well-known consumer brands. She favored companies that she understood and that had demonstrated consistent performance over long periods.<ref name="yahoo2023" /> By concentrating on companies with durable competitive advantages, she reduced the risk of catastrophic losses that could have derailed her long-term compounding.
'''Buy and Hold Strategy:''' Scheiber was an unwavering buy-and-hold investor. Once she purchased shares in a company she believed to be fundamentally sound, she held them for years, often decades, regardless of short-term market fluctuations. She did not attempt to time the market and rarely, if ever, sold her holdings.<ref name="fool2025" /> This approach allowed her investments to compound over extraordinarily long time horizons. By avoiding frequent trading, she also minimized transaction costs and the tax consequences of realizing capital gains—a consideration that, given her expertise as a former tax auditor, was likely deliberate and calculated.<ref name="yahoo2023" />


'''No leverage or speculation.''' Scheiber did not use margin, options, or any form of leverage in her investment approach. She did not chase speculative investments or attempt to time the market. Her strategy required no special connections, no insider information, and no sophisticated financial instruments—just patience, discipline, and time.<ref name="motleyfool" />
'''Dividend Reinvestment:''' A central pillar of Scheiber's strategy was the reinvestment of dividends. Rather than spending the dividend income her stocks generated, she consistently plowed it back into additional shares. Over time, this created a powerful compounding effect, as each reinvested dividend generated its own future dividends, which were in turn reinvested. This snowball effect, sustained over more than five decades, was arguably the single most important factor in transforming her initial $5,000 stake into a $22 million fortune.<ref name="vocal" /><ref name="fool2025" />


'''Tax efficiency.''' Having spent 23 years auditing tax returns, Scheiber understood the tax code better than most professional investors. She recognized that unrealized capital gains were not taxed, and that holding investments for long periods deferred tax liabilities indefinitely. This understanding informed her reluctance to sell, even when positions had appreciated significantly. The result was a portfolio that grew largely free of the tax drag that diminishes the returns of more active investors.<ref name="yahoo2024" />
'''Focus on Quality Companies:''' Scheiber favored shares in large, well-established companies with strong brands, consistent earnings, and a history of paying and increasing dividends. Her portfolio reportedly included holdings in companies such as Schering-Plough, Coca-Cola, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and other major corporations.<ref name="yahoo2023" /><ref name="vocal" /> She gravitated toward companies whose products she personally used or whose business models she understood, an approach that paralleled the investment philosophy later popularized by Warren Buffett's dictum to invest in what you know.<ref name="yahoo2024" />


=== Portfolio Performance ===
'''Tax Efficiency:''' Scheiber's deep knowledge of the tax code, gained through her career at the IRS, informed her investment decisions. By holding stocks for the long term rather than trading frequently, she minimized her capital gains tax liability. The buy-and-hold approach meant that most of her gains remained unrealized—and therefore untaxed—for decades, allowing the full power of compounding to work unimpeded.<ref name="yahoo2023" /> This tax-efficient strategy was a sophisticated element of her approach that many professional investors of her era did not employ as consistently.


The results of Scheiber's approach were extraordinary by any measure. Starting with approximately $5,000 in 1944, her portfolio grew to an estimated $22 million by the time of her death in January 1995.<ref name="motleyfool" /><ref name="yahoo2023" /> This represented an annualized return that has been compared favorably to the performance of professional money managers and even to that of [[Warren Buffett]], one of the most celebrated investors in history.<ref name="yahoo2024" /> Multiple financial commentators have noted that Scheiber's compound annual growth rate over her 51-year investment horizon placed her in rarefied company among individual investors.<ref name="yahoo2023" />
'''Extreme Frugality:''' Scheiber lived in the same rent-controlled apartment in New York City for decades, spending as little as possible on personal expenses.<ref name="nyt" /> She did not own a car, did not travel, and reportedly wore the same clothes until they were threadbare. Her rent-controlled apartment ensured that her housing costs remained minimal even as New York City real estate prices soared around her. By keeping her living expenses to an absolute minimum, she was able to reinvest nearly all of her dividend income and pension into her portfolio.<ref name="people" />


Her success was achieved during a period that included significant market turbulence, including the post-World War II adjustment, various recessions, the stagflation of the 1970s, the crash of 1987, and numerous other periods of market volatility. Scheiber's ability to hold through these downturns without panic-selling was a critical factor in her long-term results. Her buy-and-hold discipline meant that she captured the full benefit of subsequent market recoveries, while investors who sold during downturns often locked in losses and missed the rebounds.<ref name="yahoo2022" />
'''No Special Advantages:''' Commentators have repeatedly emphasized that Scheiber achieved her results without any of the advantages typically associated with wealthy investors. She had no special connections to Wall Street, no access to insider information, no significant inheritance, and no high salary. She did not use leverage, options, or any exotic financial instruments.<ref name="fool2025" /><ref name="globe2025">{{cite news |date=2025-12-24 |title=A Tax Auditor's Secret to Building a $22 Million Fortune |url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/markets/markets-news/Motley%20Fool/36781943/a-tax-auditor-s-secret-to-building-a-22-million-fortune/ |work=The Globe and Mail |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Her fortune was built entirely through the application of basic investing principles executed with exceptional patience and discipline.


=== Life During Retirement ===
Over the fifty-one years from 1944 to 1995, Scheiber's portfolio grew from $5,000 to approximately $22 million. This represented an annualized return that financial analysts have calculated to be in the range of 15 to 18 percent, a rate of return that compares favorably with many of the most celebrated professional investors of the twentieth century, including Warren Buffett.<ref name="yahoo2024" /><ref name="yahoo2022">{{cite news |date=2022-08-17 |title=The Story of the Greatest Mom and Pop Investor Ever |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/story-greatest-mom-pop-investor-191107126.html |work=Yahoo Finance |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The comparison to Buffett, while imperfect given differences in scale and methodology, has nonetheless become a recurring theme in popular financial journalism's treatment of Scheiber's story.<ref name="yahoo2024" />
 
Throughout her five decades of retirement, Scheiber lived with extreme frugality. She resided in a small, rent-controlled apartment in New York City, which she reportedly rarely left in her later years.<ref name="nyt1995" /> She lived alone and had few social connections. Neighbors and acquaintances had no inkling of the vast fortune she had accumulated. She wore old clothes, rarely spent money on luxuries, and maintained a lifestyle that gave no outward indication of her wealth.<ref name="people1995" />
 
Scheiber's frugality was not merely a personality quirk but an integral component of her investment strategy. By keeping her living expenses to an absolute minimum, she was able to reinvest virtually all of her dividend income rather than spending it on consumption. This discipline, maintained consistently over half a century, was a significant driver of her portfolio's growth. The difference between spending dividends and reinvesting them, compounded over 51 years, amounted to millions of dollars.<ref name="vocal2020" />
 
Her reclusive lifestyle also reflected deeper personal experiences. Scheiber harbored lasting resentment over the discrimination she had faced at the IRS, where she believed she had been denied promotions because she was a woman and Jewish.<ref name="people1995" /> These experiences contributed to a general distrust of institutions and a determination to achieve financial independence entirely on her own terms. She reportedly had little contact with family members in her later years and conducted her financial affairs with near-total secrecy.


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Anne Scheiber never married and had no children.<ref name="nyt1995" /> She lived alone in her rent-controlled apartment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan for decades. She was described by those who encountered her as intensely private and reclusive, particularly in the final years of her life.<ref name="people1995" />
Anne Scheiber lived an intensely private and reclusive life, particularly during her decades of retirement. She never married and had no children.<ref name="nyt" /> She resided in a rent-controlled apartment in New York City, where she remained for the duration of her retirement. The apartment, described in various accounts as modest and sparsely furnished, reflected her commitment to frugality above all else.<ref name="people" />


Scheiber's personal life was shaped in significant ways by the professional discrimination she experienced. She felt strongly that she had been overlooked and underpaid at the IRS because of her gender and her Jewish heritage, and this sense of injustice informed both her determination to build wealth independently and her ultimate decision to direct her fortune toward scholarships for women.<ref name="yahoo2023" /><ref name="yu2007" />
Scheiber had few social connections and was not known to have close friends during her later years. She was reportedly suspicious of others and deeply private about her financial affairs. Her neighbors and the few people who interacted with her had no idea that the elderly woman living so modestly in their building was sitting on a fortune worth millions of dollars.<ref name="nyt" /> She did not discuss her investments with others, and the full extent of her wealth was not known publicly until after her death.


She was known to spend considerable time reading financial reports and tracking her investments. Her apartment, modest in all other respects, contained stacks of financial documents and records related to her portfolio. Despite her wealth, she did not employ a financial advisor or portfolio manager, preferring to make all investment decisions herself.<ref name="vocal2020" />
Her reclusiveness appears to have been shaped in part by the professional disappointments she experienced at the IRS, where she felt she had been unfairly denied advancement.<ref name="nyt" /> This sense of injustice, particularly the feeling that she had been discriminated against as a woman and as a Jewish person, stayed with her throughout her life and influenced her decision about how to distribute her wealth after death.


Scheiber lived to the age of 101, dying on January 9, 1995. Her longevity was itself a factor in her investment success, as it provided an unusually long time horizon over which the power of compounding could operate.<ref name="yahoo2022" />
Despite her frugal lifestyle, Scheiber was an avid reader and maintained a sharp intellect well into her later years. She followed the stock market closely, reading financial publications and annual reports, and made her own investment decisions without the assistance of a financial advisor for most of her investing career.<ref name="yahoo2023" />


== Philanthropy ==
Anne Scheiber died on January 9, 1995, at the age of 101.<ref name="nyt" />


The most dramatic revelation of Anne Scheiber's life came after her death. When her will was read, it was discovered that she had bequeathed her entire estate—approximately $22 million—to [[Yeshiva University]].<ref name="nyt1995" /> The bequest was directed specifically to fund scholarships for women at [[Stern College for Women]] who had been accepted into the [[Albert Einstein College of Medicine]].<ref name="yu2007" />
== Recognition ==


The gift stunned Yeshiva University officials, who had no prior relationship with Scheiber and had not been aware of her existence. Scheiber had never attended Yeshiva University, nor had she been involved with the institution in any capacity during her lifetime. Her connection to the university appears to have been facilitated by Benjamin Clark, a lawyer and financial advisor who was associated with Yeshiva University and who had become acquainted with Scheiber in her later years.<ref name="nyt1995" /><ref name="people1995" />
=== Bequest to Yeshiva University ===


Scheiber's decision to direct her fortune toward scholarships for women reflected her own experiences with gender discrimination. Having been denied advancement throughout her career because of her gender, she chose to use her wealth to help ensure that future generations of women would have access to educational and professional opportunities that had been denied to her.<ref name="yahoo2023" />
The most dramatic revelation of Scheiber's life came after her death, when it was disclosed that she had bequeathed her entire estate—valued at approximately $22 million—to [[Yeshiva University]].<ref name="nyt" /> The donation was specifically directed to fund scholarships for women at Stern College for Women and at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, both affiliated with Yeshiva University.<ref name="yu2007" /> Scheiber's decision to leave her fortune to support the education of women was widely interpreted as a response to the gender-based discrimination she had experienced throughout her own career. By funding scholarships for women pursuing higher education and medical training, she sought to provide opportunities that she herself had been denied.<ref name="nyt" />


The Scheiber scholarships have had a substantial and lasting impact at Yeshiva University. By 2007, the fund was supporting multiple students annually. Helen Nissim of Los Angeles was among the Stern College graduates who benefited from the Scheiber scholarship fund, receiving support for her medical school education at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.<ref name="yu2007scholarship">{{cite web |title=Los Angeles Yeshiva University Graduate Receives Pioneering Medical School Scholarship |url=https://www.yu.edu/news/los-angeles-yeshiva-university-graduate-receives-pioneering-medical-school-scholarship |publisher=Yeshiva University |date=February 24, 2024 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The scholarships have continued to grow in value and reach, fulfilling Scheiber's intention of providing meaningful financial assistance to women pursuing careers in medicine.
The bequest was one of the largest individual gifts Yeshiva University had received at that time and had a transformative impact on the institution's scholarship programs. By 2007, the gift was already helping to fund full scholarships for Stern College graduates who had been accepted into the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, enabling young women to pursue medical degrees without the burden of significant educational debt.<ref name="yu2007" /> Recipients of the Scheiber scholarships have included students from across the United States, and the fund has continued to support new generations of women in medicine and other fields.<ref name="yunissim">{{cite web |title=Los Angeles Yeshiva University Graduate Receives Pioneering Medical School Scholarship |url=https://www.yu.edu/news/los-angeles-yeshiva-university-graduate-receives-pioneering-medical-school-scholarship |publisher=Yeshiva University |date=2024-02-24 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


== Recognition ==
=== Media and Financial Commentary ===


Although Scheiber was virtually unknown during her lifetime, her story gained significant public attention following her death and the disclosure of her bequest to Yeshiva University. A December 1995 article in ''[[The New York Times]]'' brought her story to national attention, detailing the remarkable contrast between her modest lifestyle and her enormous fortune.<ref name="nyt1995" /> ''[[People (magazine)|People]]'' magazine also profiled Scheiber, describing her as an "angel in disguise."<ref name="people1995" />
Scheiber's story attracted significant media attention following the disclosure of her bequest. ''The New York Times'' published a detailed profile in December 1995, and ''People'' magazine ran a feature on her life under the headline "Angel in Disguise."<ref name="nyt" /><ref name="people" /> In the years since, her story has been cited in numerous books, articles, and financial education materials as a case study in the power of long-term compounding, dividend reinvestment, and disciplined investing.


In the years since her death, Scheiber has become one of the most frequently cited examples in personal finance literature of what can be achieved through disciplined, long-term investing. Her story appears regularly in articles, books, and financial education materials as an illustration of the power of compound interest, dividend reinvestment, and the buy-and-hold strategy.<ref name="motleyfool" /><ref name="yahoo2022" />
Financial commentators have drawn comparisons between Scheiber's investment returns and those of Warren Buffett, with some noting that her annualized returns over five decades were comparable to or exceeded those of the famed Berkshire Hathaway chairman over similar periods.<ref name="yahoo2024" /> While such comparisons involve significant methodological caveats—Buffett managed vastly larger sums and operated in a fundamentally different investment context—the comparison has served to underscore the remarkable nature of Scheiber's achievement as an individual, self-directed investor with no professional training in money management.<ref name="yahoo2022" />


Financial commentators have drawn comparisons between Scheiber's returns and those of Warren Buffett, noting that her compound annual growth rate over 51 years was competitive with one of the most celebrated professional investors in history.<ref name="yahoo2024" /><ref name="yahoo2023" /> While such comparisons involve different starting points, portfolio sizes, and market conditions, they underscore the exceptional nature of Scheiber's achievement as an individual, self-directed investor working without professional assistance or institutional resources.
Her story has been featured by major financial publications including ''The Motley Fool'', ''Yahoo Finance'', and ''The Globe and Mail'', among others, often in the context of articles advocating for long-term, patient investment strategies accessible to ordinary investors.<ref name="fool2025" /><ref name="globe2025" /><ref name="yahoo2023" />
 
Her story has also been cited in discussions of gender discrimination in the workplace, as her career at the IRS exemplified the barriers that women faced in mid-twentieth-century America. The fact that she channeled her fortune into scholarships for women has given her story an additional dimension of significance beyond its financial implications.<ref name="people1995" />


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Anne Scheiber's legacy operates on multiple levels. In the realm of personal finance, she has become an enduring symbol of the principle that extraordinary wealth can be built through ordinary means—patience, discipline, frugality, and the systematic reinvestment of returns over long periods. Her story is cited by financial advisors, investment educators, and authors as evidence that successful investing does not require exceptional income, professional credentials, or access to sophisticated financial instruments.<ref name="motleyfool" /><ref name="vocal2020" />
Anne Scheiber's legacy operates on two distinct but interrelated levels: as a philanthropist who made a transformative gift to women's education, and as an exemplar of individual investment success achieved through patience, discipline, and the application of basic financial principles.


The specific investment principles that Scheiber employed—buying quality companies, holding for the long term, reinvesting dividends, minimizing taxes and transaction costs—have become foundational tenets of modern dividend growth investing. While these principles were practiced by other investors both before and after Scheiber, her story provides one of the most compelling real-world demonstrations of their effectiveness when applied with unwavering consistency over an extended time horizon.<ref name="yahoo2022" />
Her bequest to Yeshiva University has had a lasting and measurable impact. The scholarships funded by her estate have enabled dozens of women to pursue medical education and other advanced degrees without the financial barriers that might otherwise have prevented them from doing so.<ref name="yu2007" /><ref name="yunissim" /> In this respect, Scheiber's legacy directly addresses the inequities she experienced in her own professional life, creating opportunities for women in fields where they have historically been underrepresented.


At Yeshiva University, Scheiber's philanthropic legacy continues to grow. The scholarship fund she established has supported numerous women in their pursuit of medical education, removing financial barriers that might otherwise have prevented them from entering the medical profession. The fund represents one of the largest individual gifts in the university's history and has had a transformative impact on the institution's ability to support female medical students.<ref name="yu2007" /><ref name="yu2007scholarship" />
As an investor, Scheiber has become one of the most frequently cited examples in popular financial literature of what can be achieved through compound interest and a buy-and-hold strategy. Her story is regularly invoked in discussions of dividend growth investing, tax-efficient portfolio management, and the importance of starting to invest early and maintaining a long time horizon.<ref name="fool2025" /><ref name="vocal" /> The simplicity of her approach—buying shares in high-quality companies, reinvesting dividends, and avoiding unnecessary trading—has made her story particularly resonant with ordinary investors who may feel that wealth accumulation is beyond their reach.


Scheiber's story also serves as a commentary on the hidden lives of ordinary Americans and the assumptions that are often made about wealth and appearance. Her neighbors, who saw an elderly woman living in a modest apartment and wearing old clothes, had no conception of the fortune she had quietly accumulated. The revelation of her wealth after her death challenged conventional notions about who can be an investor and what an investor looks like.<ref name="nyt1995" /><ref name="people1995" />
Her story also serves as a commentary on the intersection of gender, institutional discrimination, and economic self-determination in twentieth-century America. Denied advancement in her government career, Scheiber found an alternative path to financial independence through the stock market—an arena where her gender and religion posed no formal barriers to participation. That she ultimately amassed a fortune many times greater than what she could have earned through a lifetime of salaried employment represents a form of vindication that she ensured would benefit others facing similar obstacles.<ref name="nyt" />


Perhaps most significantly, Scheiber's decision to direct her entire fortune toward the education of women transformed a life marked by discrimination and professional frustration into a lasting force for opportunity and equality. In doing so, she ensured that the institutional barriers she had faced would be, at least in part, dismantled for future generations.<ref name="yahoo2023" />
The continued prominence of Scheiber's story in financial media decades after her death testifies to its enduring power as a narrative about individual agency, patience, and the democratizing potential of stock market investing.<ref name="yahoo2022" /><ref name="yahoo2024" />


== References ==
== References ==
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Anne Scheiber
Born1 10, 1893
DiedTemplate:Death date and age
NationalityAmerican
OccupationIRS auditor, investor
EmployerInternal Revenue Service
Known forTurning $5,000 into $22 million through long-term investing; bequeathing her fortune to Yeshiva University

Anne Scheiber (October 1, 1893 – January 9, 1995) was an American Internal Revenue Service (IRS) auditor and investor who, over a fifty-one-year retirement, transformed a modest $5,000 nest egg into a fortune of approximately $22 million through disciplined, long-term dividend investing. During her twenty-three-year career at the IRS, Scheiber never earned more than $4,000 per year and was never promoted, an experience she attributed in part to gender discrimination and antisemitism.[1] She lived reclusively in a rent-controlled apartment in New York City, spending minimally and reinvesting virtually all of her dividend income. Upon her death at the age of 101, Scheiber stunned the financial world and the academic community by bequeathing her entire estate—valued at $22 million—to Yeshiva University, specifically to fund scholarships for women at Stern College for Women and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.[2] Her story has since become one of the most frequently cited examples of the power of compound interest and patient, buy-and-hold investing, with several commentators noting that her annualized returns over five decades rivaled or exceeded those of professional fund managers.[3]

Early Life

Anne Scheiber was born on October 1, 1893, in the United States.[1] Little is publicly documented about her earliest years, though available accounts indicate she came from a modest background and was one of several siblings. Her brother was a certified public accountant, and it was through observing his work and career that she developed an early interest in finance and tax law.[4] Scheiber grew up in an era when women faced substantial barriers to professional advancement, particularly in government and finance. She was Jewish, and later in life she expressed the belief that both her gender and her religion had contributed to systemic discrimination she experienced during her career at the IRS.[1]

Despite these obstacles, Scheiber pursued higher education and professional credentials at a time when relatively few women did so. She earned a law degree, which she obtained by attending night school while working during the day.[5] Her legal training, combined with her natural aptitude for numbers and analysis, equipped her with the skills she would later use both in her career as a tax auditor and in her private investment activities. The combination of a legal education and deep familiarity with the tax code would prove instrumental in her approach to building wealth through tax-efficient investing strategies.

Scheiber never married and had no children.[1] She maintained a private and reserved disposition throughout her life, characteristics that would become more pronounced during her decades of retirement. Her personal frugality, which later became a central element of her public story, appears to have been a lifelong trait rooted in her modest upbringing and reinforced by her experiences during the Great Depression and other periods of economic hardship.

Education

Scheiber attended law school at night while simultaneously holding employment during the daytime hours.[5] She successfully completed her legal studies and earned a law degree, an accomplishment that was relatively uncommon for women in the early twentieth century. Her legal education provided her with a detailed understanding of tax law, corporate structures, and financial regulations—knowledge that she applied both professionally as an IRS auditor and personally as an investor. Her brother, who worked as a certified public accountant, may have also served as an informal source of financial education and mentorship during her formative years.[4]

Career

Internal Revenue Service

Anne Scheiber joined the Internal Revenue Service as an auditor and worked there for twenty-three years.[1] During her tenure, she reviewed the tax returns of individuals and businesses, gaining an intimate understanding of how wealthy Americans earned, invested, and preserved their money. This experience proved formative: by examining the financial activities of affluent taxpayers, Scheiber developed a keen awareness of which investment strategies generated reliable, long-term wealth and which were speculative or unsound.[6]

Despite her competence and dedication to her work, Scheiber never received a promotion during her entire career at the IRS.[5] Her salary never exceeded $3,150 per year during most of her career, reaching a maximum of approximately $4,000 annually by the time she retired.[1] She later attributed this stagnation to discrimination based on both her gender and her Jewish heritage, a claim that was consistent with the well-documented systemic biases present in many American government agencies during the mid-twentieth century.[1] The experience of being overlooked and undervalued left a lasting mark on Scheiber. She became deeply distrustful of institutions and developed an independent, self-reliant approach to financial planning that would define her retirement years.

Scheiber retired from the IRS in 1944 at the age of 51.[7] At the time of her retirement, she had accumulated approximately $5,000 in savings—a modest sum even by the standards of the 1940s.[6] She also had a small annual pension from her government service. With no spouse, no children, and no expectation of inheritance, Scheiber faced the prospect of funding what could potentially be a very long retirement on extremely limited resources.

Investment Career

Upon retiring in 1944, Scheiber committed herself to investing her $5,000 in savings in the stock market. This decision came at a time when the memory of the 1929 stock market crash and the Great Depression remained fresh in the American consciousness, and many ordinary citizens remained wary of equities.[6] Scheiber, however, had the advantage of having spent over two decades scrutinizing the financial records of wealthy taxpayers. She had observed firsthand that patient ownership of high-quality stocks—particularly those of well-established companies that paid regular dividends—was among the most reliable paths to wealth accumulation.[6]

Scheiber's investment approach was grounded in several core principles that she adhered to with extraordinary discipline over the next fifty-one years:

Buy and Hold Strategy: Scheiber was an unwavering buy-and-hold investor. Once she purchased shares in a company she believed to be fundamentally sound, she held them for years, often decades, regardless of short-term market fluctuations. She did not attempt to time the market and rarely, if ever, sold her holdings.[6] This approach allowed her investments to compound over extraordinarily long time horizons. By avoiding frequent trading, she also minimized transaction costs and the tax consequences of realizing capital gains—a consideration that, given her expertise as a former tax auditor, was likely deliberate and calculated.[5]

Dividend Reinvestment: A central pillar of Scheiber's strategy was the reinvestment of dividends. Rather than spending the dividend income her stocks generated, she consistently plowed it back into additional shares. Over time, this created a powerful compounding effect, as each reinvested dividend generated its own future dividends, which were in turn reinvested. This snowball effect, sustained over more than five decades, was arguably the single most important factor in transforming her initial $5,000 stake into a $22 million fortune.[7][6]

Focus on Quality Companies: Scheiber favored shares in large, well-established companies with strong brands, consistent earnings, and a history of paying and increasing dividends. Her portfolio reportedly included holdings in companies such as Schering-Plough, Coca-Cola, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and other major corporations.[5][7] She gravitated toward companies whose products she personally used or whose business models she understood, an approach that paralleled the investment philosophy later popularized by Warren Buffett's dictum to invest in what you know.[3]

Tax Efficiency: Scheiber's deep knowledge of the tax code, gained through her career at the IRS, informed her investment decisions. By holding stocks for the long term rather than trading frequently, she minimized her capital gains tax liability. The buy-and-hold approach meant that most of her gains remained unrealized—and therefore untaxed—for decades, allowing the full power of compounding to work unimpeded.[5] This tax-efficient strategy was a sophisticated element of her approach that many professional investors of her era did not employ as consistently.

Extreme Frugality: Scheiber lived in the same rent-controlled apartment in New York City for decades, spending as little as possible on personal expenses.[1] She did not own a car, did not travel, and reportedly wore the same clothes until they were threadbare. Her rent-controlled apartment ensured that her housing costs remained minimal even as New York City real estate prices soared around her. By keeping her living expenses to an absolute minimum, she was able to reinvest nearly all of her dividend income and pension into her portfolio.[4]

No Special Advantages: Commentators have repeatedly emphasized that Scheiber achieved her results without any of the advantages typically associated with wealthy investors. She had no special connections to Wall Street, no access to insider information, no significant inheritance, and no high salary. She did not use leverage, options, or any exotic financial instruments.[6][8] Her fortune was built entirely through the application of basic investing principles executed with exceptional patience and discipline.

Over the fifty-one years from 1944 to 1995, Scheiber's portfolio grew from $5,000 to approximately $22 million. This represented an annualized return that financial analysts have calculated to be in the range of 15 to 18 percent, a rate of return that compares favorably with many of the most celebrated professional investors of the twentieth century, including Warren Buffett.[3][9] The comparison to Buffett, while imperfect given differences in scale and methodology, has nonetheless become a recurring theme in popular financial journalism's treatment of Scheiber's story.[3]

Personal Life

Anne Scheiber lived an intensely private and reclusive life, particularly during her decades of retirement. She never married and had no children.[1] She resided in a rent-controlled apartment in New York City, where she remained for the duration of her retirement. The apartment, described in various accounts as modest and sparsely furnished, reflected her commitment to frugality above all else.[4]

Scheiber had few social connections and was not known to have close friends during her later years. She was reportedly suspicious of others and deeply private about her financial affairs. Her neighbors and the few people who interacted with her had no idea that the elderly woman living so modestly in their building was sitting on a fortune worth millions of dollars.[1] She did not discuss her investments with others, and the full extent of her wealth was not known publicly until after her death.

Her reclusiveness appears to have been shaped in part by the professional disappointments she experienced at the IRS, where she felt she had been unfairly denied advancement.[1] This sense of injustice, particularly the feeling that she had been discriminated against as a woman and as a Jewish person, stayed with her throughout her life and influenced her decision about how to distribute her wealth after death.

Despite her frugal lifestyle, Scheiber was an avid reader and maintained a sharp intellect well into her later years. She followed the stock market closely, reading financial publications and annual reports, and made her own investment decisions without the assistance of a financial advisor for most of her investing career.[5]

Anne Scheiber died on January 9, 1995, at the age of 101.[1]

Recognition

Bequest to Yeshiva University

The most dramatic revelation of Scheiber's life came after her death, when it was disclosed that she had bequeathed her entire estate—valued at approximately $22 million—to Yeshiva University.[1] The donation was specifically directed to fund scholarships for women at Stern College for Women and at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, both affiliated with Yeshiva University.[2] Scheiber's decision to leave her fortune to support the education of women was widely interpreted as a response to the gender-based discrimination she had experienced throughout her own career. By funding scholarships for women pursuing higher education and medical training, she sought to provide opportunities that she herself had been denied.[1]

The bequest was one of the largest individual gifts Yeshiva University had received at that time and had a transformative impact on the institution's scholarship programs. By 2007, the gift was already helping to fund full scholarships for Stern College graduates who had been accepted into the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, enabling young women to pursue medical degrees without the burden of significant educational debt.[2] Recipients of the Scheiber scholarships have included students from across the United States, and the fund has continued to support new generations of women in medicine and other fields.[10]

Media and Financial Commentary

Scheiber's story attracted significant media attention following the disclosure of her bequest. The New York Times published a detailed profile in December 1995, and People magazine ran a feature on her life under the headline "Angel in Disguise."[1][4] In the years since, her story has been cited in numerous books, articles, and financial education materials as a case study in the power of long-term compounding, dividend reinvestment, and disciplined investing.

Financial commentators have drawn comparisons between Scheiber's investment returns and those of Warren Buffett, with some noting that her annualized returns over five decades were comparable to or exceeded those of the famed Berkshire Hathaway chairman over similar periods.[3] While such comparisons involve significant methodological caveats—Buffett managed vastly larger sums and operated in a fundamentally different investment context—the comparison has served to underscore the remarkable nature of Scheiber's achievement as an individual, self-directed investor with no professional training in money management.[9]

Her story has been featured by major financial publications including The Motley Fool, Yahoo Finance, and The Globe and Mail, among others, often in the context of articles advocating for long-term, patient investment strategies accessible to ordinary investors.[6][8][5]

Legacy

Anne Scheiber's legacy operates on two distinct but interrelated levels: as a philanthropist who made a transformative gift to women's education, and as an exemplar of individual investment success achieved through patience, discipline, and the application of basic financial principles.

Her bequest to Yeshiva University has had a lasting and measurable impact. The scholarships funded by her estate have enabled dozens of women to pursue medical education and other advanced degrees without the financial barriers that might otherwise have prevented them from doing so.[2][10] In this respect, Scheiber's legacy directly addresses the inequities she experienced in her own professional life, creating opportunities for women in fields where they have historically been underrepresented.

As an investor, Scheiber has become one of the most frequently cited examples in popular financial literature of what can be achieved through compound interest and a buy-and-hold strategy. Her story is regularly invoked in discussions of dividend growth investing, tax-efficient portfolio management, and the importance of starting to invest early and maintaining a long time horizon.[6][7] The simplicity of her approach—buying shares in high-quality companies, reinvesting dividends, and avoiding unnecessary trading—has made her story particularly resonant with ordinary investors who may feel that wealth accumulation is beyond their reach.

Her story also serves as a commentary on the intersection of gender, institutional discrimination, and economic self-determination in twentieth-century America. Denied advancement in her government career, Scheiber found an alternative path to financial independence through the stock market—an arena where her gender and religion posed no formal barriers to participation. That she ultimately amassed a fortune many times greater than what she could have earned through a lifetime of salaried employment represents a form of vindication that she ensured would benefit others facing similar obstacles.[1]

The continued prominence of Scheiber's story in financial media decades after her death testifies to its enduring power as a narrative about individual agency, patience, and the democratizing potential of stock market investing.[9][3]

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 "About New York; A Quiet Auditor Leaves Yeshiva a Fortune".The New York Times.1995-12-02.https://web.archive.org/web/20231022200602/https://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/02/nyregion/about-new-york-a-quiet-auditor-leaves-yeshiva-a-fortune.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Anne Scheiber's Generous Gift Helps Educate a New Generation of Healers".Yeshiva University.2007-08-07.https://www.yu.edu/news/anne-scheibers-generous-gift-helps-educate-a-new-generation-of-healers.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 "The IRS Auditor Who Beat Warren Buffett At His Own Game".Yahoo Finance.2024-09-05.https://finance.yahoo.com/news/irs-auditor-beat-warren-buffett-110614004.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 "Angel in Disguise".People.https://people.com/archive/angel-in-disguise-vol-44-no-25/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 "'She ran rings around Warren Buffett': This IRS auditor secretly turned a $5K nest egg into a $22M fortune — here are the 3 simple strategies that made Anne Scheiber rich".Yahoo Finance.2023-12-19.https://finance.yahoo.com/news/she-ran-rings-around-warren-110000290.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 "A Tax Auditor's Secret to Building a $22 Million Fortune".The Motley Fool.2025-12-24.https://www.fool.com/investing/2025/12/24/the-tax-auditors-secret-to-building-a-22-million-f/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 "HOW ANNE SCHEIBER MADE $22 MILLION INVESTING IN DIVIDEND GROWTH STOCKS".Vocal Media.2020-08-29.https://vocal.media/trader/how-anne-scheiber-made-22-million-investing-in-dividend-growth-stocks.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "A Tax Auditor's Secret to Building a $22 Million Fortune".The Globe and Mail.2025-12-24.https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/markets/markets-news/Motley%20Fool/36781943/a-tax-auditor-s-secret-to-building-a-22-million-fortune/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 "The Story of the Greatest Mom and Pop Investor Ever".Yahoo Finance.2022-08-17.https://finance.yahoo.com/news/story-greatest-mom-pop-investor-191107126.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Los Angeles Yeshiva University Graduate Receives Pioneering Medical School Scholarship".Yeshiva University.2024-02-24.https://www.yu.edu/news/los-angeles-yeshiva-university-graduate-receives-pioneering-medical-school-scholarship.Retrieved 2026-02-24.