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The kindness trade: The one edge that never gets priced out

Every November, the world pauses for La Settimana della Gentilezza, the World Kindness Week. And while the financial markets rarely pause for sentiment, the humans who move those markets are, always, people. People who respond to tone, to trust, to the quality of the relationships they build across trading floors, Bloomberg terminals, and boardroom tables.

This week, while we start the month of April and prepare to celebrate Easter, I want to talk about kindness as a professional edge.

Not kindness as weakness. Not kindness as naivety. But kindness as a discipline, a habit, and intentional way of showing up that changes everything, builds loyalty, and creates the kind of reputation that no marketing budget can replicate.

It starts with language.

Most of us move through professional life on autopilot. "Thanks." "Noted." "Will do”, thanks for aking”. These phrases are efficient. They are also invisible. They leave no trace. They build nothing,, absolutely nothing.

Now consider the alternative. When a colleague goes out of their way to send you data you didn't ask for, when an analyst prepares a briefing on a weekend, when a client refers you to someone new, what if instead of the reflexive "thanks" you said: "It's very kind of you." Or, even more simply: "...how very kind."

In Italian, a culture that has long understood the economics of warmth, and kindness this becomes: È molto gentile da parte tua. ...molto gentile.

Notice the difference. Not just in how it sounds. In what it does.

It slows the interaction down. It makes the other person feel appreciated and understood. It signals that you are present, not processing. And in a world where attention is the scarcest currency ever, giving someone your genuine attention is perhaps the most valuable thing you can offer.

The market runs on relationships. On the willingness of counterparties to pick up the phone, to share a view, to flag a risk before it becomes a loss. Those relationships are not built on execution speed alone. They are built on the accumulated weight of how you made people feel over months and years of interaction.

Research in behavioural economics consistently shows that people do not make purely rational decisions, they make decisions shaped by how they feel about the person on the other side of the trade, the conversation, the deal. Kindness is not soft strategy. It is smart strategy.

So this Kindness Week, here is the challenge: be the kindest person in the room. In every room. The morning call. The client lunch. The internal debrief. The quick Slack message that could go either way.

Choose the phrase that means something. Choose the moment to make someone feel that what they did mattered to you. Choose, in the language you use every day, to be a little more human than the situation requires.

È molto gentile da parte tua.

It's very kind of you.

Say it. Mean it. Watch what it builds. Even if it comes at the cost of time.

In markets and in life, the compounding effect of small, consistent acts of genuine kindness is one of the most underpriced assets available to any professional like you. It costs nothing. It appreciates over time. And unlike most positions you will ever cover, it is almost impossible to lose.

Be the kindest person in the room. Not because it is easy. Because it is the one edge that never gets priced away.

 

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