Investing can be simply defined as using money to make more money. How does one go about doing that? That’s where things can get overly complicated but the answer is simpler than you might think.
One person who distilled it wonderfully was Bill Miller. He offered a simple three-part answer:
When I first got into the business, I met Bill Ruane, Warren Buffett’s friend who ran Ruane Cunniff. Somebody asked him, “If you could give some advice about investing, what would it be?” And as Ruane related this story to me, he said, “I told the guy that if he reads Security Analysis and The Intelligent Investor and then reads all of Warren Buffett’s annual reports, and if he really understands what they were saying, he will know everything there is to know about investing.”
I thought about that advice for a number of years and agree with it, and then I heard this comment from two-time World Series of Poker champion Puggy Pearson: “Ain’t but three things to gambling. Number one: knowing the 60/40 end of a proposition. Number two: money management. And number three: knowing yourself.” This advice is succinct and encompasses all you really need to know about how to approach investing.
Here’s why: Knowing the 60/40 end of a proposition means knowing when you invest that the odds are in your favor. However you compute the odds, the odds have to be in your favor.
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