As
Warren Buffett was a student of Benjamin Graham, today we are all students of
Warren Buffett.
He
has become wealthy and famous from his investing. He is of great interest,
however, not because of these things but in spite of them. He is, first and
foremost, a teacher, a deep thinker who shares in his writings and speeches the
depth, breadth, clarity, and evolution of his ideas.
He has provided
generations of investors with a great gift. Many, including me, have had our
horizons expanded, our assumptions challenged, and our decision-making improved
through an understanding of the lessons of Warren Buffett:
1. Value investing works. Buy
bargains.
2. Quality matters, in businesses and in people.
Better quality businesses are more likely to grow and compound cash flow; low
quality businesses often erode and even superior managers, who are difficult to
identify, attract, and retain, may not be enough to save them. Always partner
with highly capable managers whose interests are aligned with yours.
3. There is no need to overly diversify. Invest like you
have a single, lifetime “punch card” with only 20 punches, so make each one
count. Look broadly for opportunity, which can be found globally and in
unexpected industries and structures.
4. Consistency and
patience are crucial. Most investors are their
own worst enemies. Endurance enables
compounding.
5. Risk is not the same as volatility; risk
results from overpaying or overestimating a company’s prospects. Prices
fluctuate more than value; price volatility can drive opportunity. Sacrifice
some upside as necessary to protect on the downside.
6. Unprecedented events occur with some
regularity, so be prepared.
7. You can make some investment mistakes and still
thrive.
8. Holding cash in the absence of opportunity makes
sense.
9. Favour substance over form. It doesn’t matter
if an investment is public or private, fractional or full ownership, or in debt,
preferred shares, or common equity.
10. Candour is essential. It’s important to
acknowledge mistakes, act decisively, and learn from them. Good writing clarifies your own thinking and
that of your fellow shareholders.
11. To the extent possible, find and retain like-minded
shareholders (and for investment managers, investors) to liberate
yourself from short-term performance pressures.
12. Do what you love, and you’ll never work a day in your
life.
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