An understanding of the investing lessons of Warren Buffett.
1. Value investing works. Buy bargains which involve buying assets at a price below the asset’s intrinsic value. Value investing takes time, focus, discipline and patient, and is a hard process to implement and follow. It requires a lot of work to determine the fair value of a particular business. If investors could predict the future directions of the stock market, they would certainly not choose to be value investors. But no one can accurately forecast future prices. Value investing is a safe and successful strategy in all investing environments. The biggest obstacle for a value investor is to remain disciplined and patient in every circumstance the market and life might throw at him. Most people quit value investing and long- term investing for this exact reason: because they lack the discipline and cannot sit through periods of poor performance.
2. Quality matters, in businesses and in people. Better quality businesses are more likely to grow and compound cash flow; low quality businesses often erode and even superior managers, who are difficult to identify, attract, and retain, may not be enough to save them. Always partner with highly capable managers whose interests are aligned with yours.
3. There is no need to overly diversify. Invest like you have a single, lifetime “punch card” with only 20 punches, so make each one count. Look broadly for opportunity, which can be found globally and in unexpected industries and structures.
4. Consistency, discipline and patience are crucial. Most investors are their own worst enemies. Endurance and long-term perspective enables compounding.
5. Risk is not the same as volatility; risk results from overpaying or overestimating a company’s prospects. Prices fluctuate more than value; price volatility can drive opportunity. Sacrifice some upside as necessary to protect on the downside.
6. Unprecedented events (or Black Swan events) occur with some regularity, so be prepared.
7. You can make some investment mistakes and still thrive.
8. Holding cash in the absence of opportunity makes sense.
9. Favor substance over form. It doesn’t matter if an investment is public or private, fractional or full ownership, or in debt, preferred shares, or common equity.
10. Candor is essential. It’s important to acknowledge mistakes, act decisively, and learn from them. Good writing clarifies your own thinking and that of your fellow shareholders.
11. To the extent possible, find and retain like-minded shareholders (and for investment managers, investors) to liberate yourself from short-term performance pressures.
12. Do what you love, and you’ll never work a day in your life.
13. “The first rule of investing is to not lose money, the second rule is to never forget the first one,” states Warren Buffett. Loss avoidance must be the cornerstone of your investment philosophy. Investors should not stick to bonds or avoid risks at all, but rather that “an investment portfolio should not be exposed to losses of principal capital over five to ten years”, according to Klarman. This, concentrating on avoiding big losses is the safest way to ensure a profitable investing outcome.
14. Ignore Market Price Fluctuations which are completely unrelated to the value of the investment or asset. When the stock’s market price goes down, the investment may be seen as riskier regardless of its fundamentals. But that’s not risk. Investors should expect prices to fluctuate and should not invest in securities if they cannot tolerate market volatility.
15. Avoid Leverage At All Costs.
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