Life Lessons From Warren Buffett
May 13, 2012 4 Comments
For Whom Wealth Matters
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March 6, 2011 4 Comments
This book is pretty small – just a little over 200 pages.And I love it.I am naturally a bargain hunter and love shopping in sales.I also love getting high quality goods at bargain-basement prices.So It’s small wonder that I am attracted to value investing.The danger of shopping in sales is that a person picks up things they don’t have any use for or items that are not a perfect fit just because they are cheap.Then there is a danger of buying poor quality stuff just because it seems to cost so little.The same applies to buying stocks cheap.Sometimes the whole market is beaten down and all stocks seem cheap, but if I buy stocks of companies I would not normally buy because of their poor returns to investors,just because they are cheap,I am left with the problem of selling them when the market and the stock recovers.This is a problem for me personally as I have a tendency to get married to my stocks.At other times a stock sells for low P/E multiples simply because there is something fundamentally wrong with the company. Stocking up on the shares and hoping for a turn-around is pretty foolish.But I am an optimistic type and I need to force myself to turn away from such situations.Over a period of time I have found ways to control my habits.When the markets are down,I first establish a budget and then try to make a list of likely stocks and arrange them in order of attractiveness depending on Buffett-style criteria and tell myself that I’m to invest over 80% of the budget on only the top 5 of my list.I find this stops me from stocking up on not so great businesses that I might find hard to sell later.Then I have accepted the fact that I am a speculator at heart.I no longer try to fight the urge but try to use the Dhandho Principles that come pretty naturally to me to gain out of my speculative tendencies.This is a book I recommend for all investors like me who like value investing but can’t overcome the urge to speculate.
Here is a round up chapter-wise of what is found in the book:-
Chapter 1
Pabrai starts the book by discussing the term “dhandho“which is a Gujarati word meaning “business”. Gujarat is a western coastal state in India that has served as a hotbed for trade with Asia and Africa. The Patels are a community of particularly entrepreunerial Gujaratis whose entrepreneurial ventures led to them forming a dominant part of the East African economy by the early 1970s. When Asians were thrown out of Uganda in 1972 on the basis of their race, a flurry of Patel immigrants landed in Canada, England and the United States. Read more of this post
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March 2, 2011 Leave a comment
The secret to doing well in stocks over the long term is to avoid making big mistakes rather than being spectacularly right a few times in one’s career.After all it just takes just one big enough mistake to wipe away all the gains of the previous years.The following checklist is to help avoid making major mistakes.
1. Avoid following the crowd.
Avoid the hottest stocks in the hottest sectors, which are invariably priced high.It’s far safer and more profitable to invest in stocks of companies that are either well-known but currently out of favour or not tracked at all by analysts often simply because they are too small to be of interest to institutional investors.
2. Look for consistently positive cash flow and beware of debt.
Share holders make money through dividends.The company first needs to throw off cash through its operations to be in a position to reward shareholders consistently.Debt reduces the surplus available for share holders.Excessive debt might kill a company in bad times.
3. Avoid serial acquirers and if necessary buy stocks of good companies after big acquisitions.
Making many small acquisitions or one big one are both fraught with peril, yet some managements insist on engaging in such behaviour regularly. They often fritter away the resources of their companies and shareholders in this way.If you must buy a company that has just made an acquisition buy after the deal , when the share price has dropped , not in the frenzy before the deal. Read more of this post
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