Walter Schloss started as a runner on Wall Street in 1934. By 1940, he had taken a couple of courses taught by Ben Graham. Which led to him working under the master at Graham-Newman. Then Schloss started his own partnership in 1956 after Graham-Newman shut down.
Warren Buffett described Walter’s investing style this way:
Walter has diversified enormously, owning well over 100 stocks currently. He knows how to identify securities that sell at considerably less than their value to a private owner. And that’s all he does. He doesn’t worry about whether it’s January, he doesn’t worry about whether it’s Monday, he doesn’t worry about whether it’s an election year. He simply says, if a business is worth a dollar and I can buy it for 40 cents, something good may happen to me. And he does it over and over and over again. He owns many more stocks than I do — and is far less interested in the underlying nature of the business; I don’t seem to have very much influence on Walter. That’s one of his strengths; no one has much influence on him.
Schloss’s genius was that he knew himself well to build a strategy that fit himself perfectly. He knew what he understood (avoided what he didn’t understand), his risk tolerance, and his personality. And he kept it simple.
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