With the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting right around the corner, I thought I’d dig through the site to unearth a few nuggets of Buffett wisdom that I’ve collected over the years. Continue Reading…
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With the Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting right around the corner, I thought I’d dig through the site to unearth a few nuggets of Buffett wisdom that I’ve collected over the years. Continue Reading…
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Volatility gets way to much attention. It’s almost as if investors are codependent on the short-term twitches in the market. They need it, just know the market is working for them. And good ole Mr. Market loves the attention.
Jason Zweig summed this up nicely in a short article: Volatility: In the Eye of the Beholder. In it, he included this image showing volatility over three different periods. Continue Reading…
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I sat down with Brian Bain, on the Investor in the Family podcast, to discuss investing and my early life in the finance industry. Brian’s had a bunch of great guests in the past. You can find the episode on iTunes or at Investor in the Family.
It was a fun experience, though I have a newfound respect for the recorded medium. Writing – with the ability to edit – is a lot less nerve-racking than a live interview. So, if I sound like a rambling fool, I’m blaming first-time jitters.
Anyways, I thought I’d expand a bit on my past experience in the industry since I rarely cover it here. Continue Reading…
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Morgan Housel wrote a great piece on why it’s so hard to predict outcomes. Really, it’s about feelings.
How investors feel about stocks five years from now will have a big impact on performance between now and then. If you could semi-accurately predict broader shifts in market mood, you’d do fairly well for yourself. Except, predicting how people will feel in the future is just as hard as predicting everything else about the future. Continue Reading…
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The Little Book that Beats the Market is Joel Greenblatt’s attempt to explain investing to his kids. In that, he succeeds. But it also offers some insights into his simple investing strategy.
If you’ve read any value investing books before, the first half this Little Book will be familiar. Greenblatt understands that investing is not easy. It takes discipline, work, and patience – areas where investors fail – to put up with manic Mr. Market. Greenblatt offers up his Magic Formula to help the cause.
Greenblatt based the concept of his formula off of another investing strategy by Ben Graham. Graham came up with a simple strategy that bought a basket of 20-30 stocks that were cheap enough to meet Graham’s specific requirements, and without doing additional work, the “results would be quite satisfactory”. Continue Reading…
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Amazon released its annual letter to shareholders and Jeff Bezos touched on several reasons for the companies success.
A customer first mentality was one piece of it. Long term focus was another. As was luck. Lastly, there was a willingness to fail more than its competition. Bezos explains: