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  • Notes from the 2019 Berkshire Meeting

    May 8, 2019

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    Jon

    The Berkshire meeting was last weekend and I thought I’d share a few highlights. But before I begin, this years meeting was a little dry on content.

    There’s always some repetition across past meetings but this year, similar questions were asked several times. I counted three questions about buybacks and, at least, two about circle of competence. And there more Berkshire specific questions than usual (a good thing for shareholders).

    If you missed the meeting, CNBC has video and transcripts of it in its entirety (links below). Continue Reading…


  • Reminiscences on Human Nature

    May 3, 2019

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    Jon

    Edwin Lefevre tells an entertaining story of a fictionalized account of Jesse Livermore in Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. The draw of Livermore is an interesting one because he failed to learn the biggest lesson, summed up by Levefre:

    In addition to trying to determine how to make money one must also try to keep from losing. It is almost as important to know what not to do as to know what should be done.

    Even after he made and lost multiple fortunes in his life, Livermore never figured it out. In the end, he died broke. But this is less about Livermore and more about highlights from the book.

    Despite the book being fiction, it offers some great lessons on history, human nature, and what not to do: Continue Reading…


  • Investing Lessons from the Banana Business

    May 1, 2019

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    Jon

    The first real banana business began in the 1860s. It was literally a race against time. Profits were dependent on getting from port to port as quickly as possible, so as to avoid spoilage. Sail too long and they’d lose everything.

    But once that first company sprung up, other’s soon followed. By the late 1890s, the market for bananas was booming.

    Then just before the turn of the century, it stopped.

    Like most booms, it could not last. Not because there was anything wrong with the product: the banana is perfect. Not because there was any scarcity in demand: people loved bananas from the start — the average American now consumes seventy a year. But because supply was uncertain… Most firms got their fruit from a single farm or valley, greatly increasing this vulnerability. The entire supply of many early traders could be wiped out by one bad storm.

    This became painfully clear in 1899, the Year Without Bananas. There had been a heat wave, a flood, a drought, a hurricane. The market sheds were shuttered, the pushcarts stood empty. Dozens of firms went under. It was like the natural disaster that wipes out all but a few impossible-to-kill species.

    The lessons from 1899 became obvious to the few surviving businesses. Since investing is very business-like, those same lessons transfer over. Continue Reading…


  • The Fish That Ate the Whale by Rich Cohen

    May 1, 2019

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    The Fish that Ate the WhaleBuy the Book: Print | eBook

    Rich Cohen tells the story of a Russian immigrant, Sam Zemurray, who saw an opportunity in the banana business and seized it. Along the way, he out-hustled and out-innovated the giant of the industry, United Fruit.

    The Notes

    Continue Reading…


  • 7 Moats of Great Investors

    April 26, 2019

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    Jon

    A moat is a competitive advantage one company has over the competition. It can’t be easily copied either. Otherwise, it wouldn’t be a moat, it’d be a temporary edge.

    The moat comes in several forms — economies of scale, network effects, intellectual property, switching costs, and cost advantage — that produce phenomenal performance over extended periods. Buffett’s focus on moats created a craze around finding these “wonderful companies.”

    But before you run off to do the same, consider this. Buffett is unique in that he has his own moat. All great investors do. They have a competitive advantage over everyone else that produces phenomenal performance over extended periods. Without their moat, they’d be like everyone else.

    You might think their moat is IQ, the right college degree, or experience. It’s not. Those things are important because they keep you in the game but all those things can be copied to some degree. It’s a temporary edge until a similarly smart, experienced person comes along. Besides, up to a certain point, an extra IQ point or one more experience brings less to the table. Continue Reading…


  • Joel Greenblatt on the Opportunity in Misbehavior

    April 24, 2019

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    Jon

    Joel Greenblatt is one of the rare few who can claim 40% returns over two decades. He also has a knack for explaining things simply.

    He did that in his first book, You Can Be a Stock Market Genius, which explained how he earned some of that 40% return. And it showed again in his second book, The Little Book that Beats the Market.

    And he did it again in his third book, The Big Secret for the Small Investor, though it’s a little different than the first two. It’s written for people new to the game, but there’s something in it for everyone.

    His message is simple: the small investor has built-in advantages over the pros and there is more than one right way to invest. You can try to value stocks, evaluate fund managers, or settle for index funds. And if the typical index fund is too average for you, maybe spice things up with equal- or value-weighted funds instead. Continue Reading…


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