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@CAronitpereira I’m sure I could ask an LLM for a good summary, but it would be great to have a good piece of writing or a resource to explain to foreigners why the Indian government limits foreign investment (as I understand) and when and how that might change.
James Montier's ten tenets of investing from his book Value Investing: 1. Value, Value, Value — Price determines return; no asset is too good to be overvalued, and few are too bad to be undervalued. Always buy with a margin of safety. 2. Be Contrarian — Following the crowd means paying consensus prices. Superior returns require doing something the majority isn't doing. 3. Be Patient — Undervaluation can persist for an inconveniently long time. Cheap stocks can get cheaper, and the value investor's curse is being too early. 4. Be Unconstrained — Forcing a manager into a style box prevents them from exploiting the full opportunity set. Go where the value is, including cash or short positions if that's where the edge lies. 5. Don't Forecast — Even if you're right 70% of the time on four sequential forecasts, you're right overall only 24% of the time. The evidence on the folly of forecasting is overwhelming. 6. Cycles Matter — We can't predict, but we can prepare. Economic, credit, and sentiment cycles all shape asset values, and ignoring them is its own form of risk. 7. History Matters — "This time is different" are the four most dangerous words in investing. Financial memory is short and disasters keep repeating for exactly that reason. 8. Be Sceptical — The best investors' default is non-ownership; they need to be convinced of the merits. Most managers ask "why shouldn't I own this?" and skip the hard questions. 9. Be Top-Down and Bottom-Up — Macro and micro are inseparable. Value investors who ignore macroeconomic context are actually closer to Graham and Dodd than they might think. 10. Treat Your Clients Like You Would Yourself — Ask "would I do this with my own money?" Maximizing assets under management and maximizing returns for clients are often in direct conflict.
Leon Cooperman on the role of company management in an investment: "It’s a factor. Ben Graham in The Intelligent Investor said that you evaluate management teams twice, once through the numbers and once face-to-face. By the numbers, I mean looking at returns on capital, growth rate, market position, gross margins, and so on. When measuring the quality of management face-to-face, you make your own judgment on how they respond to questions and what their integrity is like." On getting rich: “You want to get rich quietly. I don’t go on CNBC trying to talk a stock up.” Source: Graham & Doddsville newsletter, Winter 2018
@CAronitpereira Funny how you almost never hear that opinion, “I’m rich already. Why would I want to bother getting down in the mud?”
@blondesnmoney * JENSEN HUANG FURTHER ADDS CLUSEAU INVESTMENTS THE NEXT 1MN FOLLOWER TWITTER ACCOUNT
From @benthompson’s latest, on why Google may be issuing equity and not debt. Self-recommending, as always... “…Google [may be] uncertain about the return on investment of all that capex, and would prefer to share the risk (along with the upside). If there isn’t a substantial debt issuance down the road then this might be the right answer.” That is my working hypothesis at the moment for why Google issued equity and not debt. Google is in the strongest position of all for the coming AI wave. The starkest risk to them, however, is that some development occurs to call their huge capex into question (e.g., improvements in LLM's finally cease or perhaps a recession causes investor attitudes to change). In that case, big tech will suffer a downturn, and issuing equity will have been a relative win because they will have less debt burden to work through during recovery. On the other hand, if the capex and AI improvements deliver untold abundance, while issuing equity will probably have technically been the wrong move, the company could be so valuable that investors will excuse management for having done so.
The Google Capital Company Google has issued equity to Berkshire Hathaway in a deal that signals far more demand and a future where capital is the ultimate commodity. stratechery.com/2026/the-googl…
Part 2 of the story of Charlie Munger's investment in Tenneco Automotive is live at The Owner's Memo. Last week, I set up Tenneco Automotive's situation in 2001: a company that looked headed for bankruptcy with its stock trading near $1 and its junk bonds at 35 cents. Part 2 reveals the harder question. What did Munger see that the market didn't? Some of it is typical: two of the most recognized brands in the industry, a profitable underlying business, and a cost-cutting program that was already underway. But the most interesting part of Munger's investment is the bankruptcy calculus itself, thinking through the situation from the lenders' point of view and asking what they would rationally do. Read today's piece for the full analysis, including the investment and eventual outcome for Charlie Munger.
Li Lu on first starting out: "In January 1998, I started my own company. I had very few supporters, but was able to pool together a small sum of money with the help of a few close friends. I wore many hats, acting as the chairman, fund manager, secretary, and analyst, and used only a cell phone and a laptop. The timing coincided with the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the price of oil dropping below $10 per barrel. I started buying the stocks of many excellent Asian companies as well as the stocks of oil companies in the U.S. and Canada, but the volatility of the stock market that followed created a 19% paper loss that year. This caused some investors to become concerned about future operating conditions and they dared not invest more. One of my largest investors decided to withdraw his investments the following year. Coupled with the high operating costs of the previous period, my company was struggling to survive." Source: Foreword to the Chinese Edition of Poor Charlie’s Almanack
Seth Klarman on where to find opportunities: We look for value everywhere and anywhere," he said. Klarman said he looks for "market-insensitive opportunities". By that he means securities whose prices depend less on the vagaries of the financial markets and more on specific corporate events unique to them, such as emerging from bankruptcy, liquidating the business or solving a major business problem Last year, for example, he saw value in Technology Solutions Co., a fast-growing computer systems company that ran into a spot of trouble when a large customer reneged on a contract with the company. That bad news caused the stock price to fall to $8 a share from $30. Klarman leaped in and bought 6 percent of the company's outstanding shares. "The company had a hiccup, but it was still earning 70 cents a share and had $2.50 {a share} of cash on the balance sheet with no debt," Klarman said. "Basically, we bought a high-growth company cheaply." The stock traded recently at $14 a share, a bit too pricey for Klarman. Source: The Washington Post, "Money Managers: New Faces, Old Methods", 1993.
“So my discovery in investing, and advice to younger ones who would endeavor to is to study markets and invest in long term enterprises which have the potential to vastly outpace other companies and industries and stick with them as long as the theme is intact. Forget about the trading and use the time you would have spent monitoring the trade with your family. It seems so simple, but few actually ever achieve it. Here is a prime example of what I am talking about: Back in January 1992 I read the Barron’s Roundtable and Felix Zulauf recommended Potash of Saskatchewan (POT) as a unique way to play the China growth story. . . . It all made sense to me so I took a modest position. The stock did quite well, I recall I bought it for $2/share. I held onto it for 3 years and got a 4–5 bagger out of it. I was pretty impressed with myself at my acute market acumen. It stalled out eventually and I sold it around 1996 as I got tired of it treading water. Now mind you the original premise never changed, it was always intact, yet I craved new action. If I had held on until the blow off in 2007 I would have had my 100-bagger.” Source: email received by Chris Mayer for the book 100 Baggers
@sidecarcap 🙏 That is really nice to hear, Sidecar. Thanks.
@modestproposal1 I thought you were talking about golf until the word “goalie”.
“One of the great tricks in investment is learning to be happy doing nothing.” - Luke, an investor from the book Free Capital by @guy_thomas
“Young people with stable incomes can typically take more risk because their income is equivalent to a very large and safe fixed income allocation.” 💯 Cullen’s point works just as well with retirees who have a stable pension, and it can be difficult to understand if you’re not financially-minded. Imagine you’re a 75-year-old retiree collecting $50,000 per year from your state government pension and you also have $250,000 of investable assets. It might not irresponsible to have *all* of that $250k invested in equities. Why? Because you can imagine your $50k pension income as being a coupon payment from a municipal bond. If municipal bonds in your state pay a 5% coupon, for example, you can think of yourself as effectively owning a $1,000,000 municipal bond (paying you $50k in interest per year). This way, instead of imagining you have a 100% equity allocation and too much risk, your truer effective portfolio looks much more appropriate: - $1,000,000 in municipal bonds (80%) - $250,000 in equities (20%)
This is something I've completely changed my mind about in recent years. I now think the idea of a subjective "risk tolerance" is a terrible concept. Everyone gets scared during a bear market. And everyone thinks they won't get scared during a bear market. You will. And it's
Source: Li Lu’s April 2010 lecture at Columbia University brianlangis.wordpress.com/wp-content/upl…
Warren Buffett gave a lecture at Columbia in the early 1990s. Li Lu was in the audience at the time, young and worried about his student loan debt. Buffett said three things, as Li recounts: (1) A stock is a piece of ownership in a company, not a piece of paper. (2) You need a margin of safety so that if you're wrong, you don't lose much. (3) Most people in the market are in it for the short term, which gives you a framework for dealing with the day-to-day volatility. "What I heard that night changed my life," Li Lu said.
Olive Garden Capital @olivegardencap
36 Followers 892 Following when you're here, you're family. this is a burner, bruh, not investment advice.
Vijay Wiltshire @vijaywiltshire
407 Followers 2K Following
peter.silberstein@aja... @financex1988
150 Followers 3K Following
Tracking Errors @TrackingErrors
97 Followers 102 Following Motivated Cellar, Inaction Jackson, Talking Book
MadeUp @stuff256702
25 Followers 554 Following
John Wang @johnwang0615
122 Followers 3K Following Intelligence is deterministic and causal, not probabilistic and correlational.
Paco @PaquitoPF
1K Followers 7K Following
Impe @Impe11
20 Followers 102 Following
Jason Wong @JasonWo72274228
8 Followers 92 Following
Isoplex @Isoplex_Ind
1 Followers 106 Following
eryk @iameryk
0 Followers 372 Following
Bob zhou @bbyzyy1998
89 Followers 4K Following
Alex Cole @alexcole202
79 Followers 653 Following Individual investor. Ideas freely given (27% CAGR since inception). Proffer buy signals for long term investors, not traders. Opinion, not advice.
Jon Cukierwar @JonCukierwar
16K Followers 467 Following Founder of Sohra Peak Capital Partners Disclaimer applies to all posts: https://t.co/C1dK5tA83R
RicardoMoltres @RMoltres
0 Followers 11 Following
Hunter Harris @hunter_harris
52 Followers 400 Following
Unusual Value @unusualvalue
1K Followers 819 Following Founder and Portfolio Manager. Seeking a frictionless mind and a seeing eye. Finding value in duration. Long term, concentrated, global, fundamental.
Ferg @trader_ferg
33K Followers 610 Following Full-time trader for 9 years now. Have a habit of hanging out in hated corners of the market that are "uninvestable"
syncopationstudios @ljang92
4 Followers 214 Following
Austin Ross @_Austin_Ross
8 Followers 974 Following
Carvel @Carvel98
1K Followers 2K Following value investing in a hammock, meditation, DOING nothing, art, science
bm @pspsps146
41 Followers 1K Following
Brett Snyders @SnydersBrett
0 Followers 95 Following
GoldCountryCap @goldcountrycap
65 Followers 2K Following
Cas @Cas94179693
3 Followers 118 Following
Ash Thaker @ashthaker1
490 Followers 3K Following Husband/Dad/Gooner in the corner of a foreign field. I know little but am always curious. History rhymes. “If you can think—and not make thoughts your aim...”
Wigger_Capital_PLC @NormMacdonald21
59 Followers 559 Following Likes: wide moats, monopolies, hard assets, energy, undervalued.
Dhronas Apple @DhronasApple
816 Followers 370 Following Value investor Don’t follow if bad words🤬offend you more than evil actions☠️ Retweets are NOT endorsements🚫
alexandre weinberg @alexweinber
61 Followers 1K Following
Compounding EBITDA @LongTermHoldCo
8 Followers 168 Following
T Rowan @Trow88
103 Followers 1K Following
Matthew Rapoport @mrapopor
286 Followers 819 Following I chase a golf ball around a field, collect leather-bound books, and geek out on Warren Buffett.
K's & N's Papa @ssaxim
2K Followers 6K Following Product Development, Fund Management - now & before before; IFA - before; Trainee actuary - before before before; 'dent - before before before before.
Tim McDonald 🇺🇸... @trmcdonald
3K Followers 2K Following Comments on markets, economics, politics & technology. Father x 5. Christian. Seeker of the Truth. Comments reflect personal views.
Fruitful Fig @FruitfulFig2024
13 Followers 295 Following
Divergent Capital @Divergent7651
5K Followers 3K Following Private investor. Opinions expressed here are not recommendations or advice. Do your own research.
Jerome @RagweedCapital
529 Followers 233 Following BS Mechanical & Aeronautical Engineer turned full-time investor. Micro cap deep value is my game. DMs open to verified users. Let's revive #FinTwit.
Stratechery @stratechery
641K Followers 3 Following Articles and Updates from https://t.co/A7bGqyJ7db. For the author, follow @benthompson.
Rose Celine Investmen... @realroseceline
22K Followers 5K Following Equity investor sharing wisdom. I am not your advisor.🌹
Dr Microcap @MicrocapDr
300 Followers 48 Following Ph.D. Economist & Global Macro veteran (20+ yrs). Applying institutional rigor to the under-analyzed microcap space. Focused on Energy, Mining & Infrastructure.
T Shirt n Jeans @TShirtnJeans2
2K Followers 1K Following
Carvel @Carvel98
1K Followers 2K Following value investing in a hammock, meditation, DOING nothing, art, science
Jim O'Shaughnessy @jposhaughnessy
191K Followers 5K Following https://t.co/HGYG4UoYts 🎙 https://t.co/EgEFb3o46Q
Daniel S. Loeb @DanielSLoeb1
175K Followers 2K Following Investor in public and private equity and credit securities. Sometime purveyor of dad humor.
Tokyo Deep Value @TokyoDeepValue
34K Followers 9 Following Japanese stocks are the last great deep value trade on earth. Rock solid balance sheets. Monster cash flows. Dirt cheap prices. I find them and buy them
Compound248 💰 @compound248
66K Followers 826 Following "That thing that rich people do where they turn money into more money. Can you teach me how to do that, Jack?” - Tina Fey, 30 Rock Jack, “With my eyes closed.”
Rohan @rohantweeter
524 Followers 4K Following
Roger Lowenstein @RogerLowenstein
4K Followers 129 Following Author of the new "Ways and Means" (Now in Paperback) and of Buffett, When Genius Failed, America's Bank. Newsletter @ https://t.co/ujgb001E1j.
Cognition @cognition
160K Followers 4 Following Makers of Devin, the first AI software engineer. We are an applied AI lab building end-to-end software agents. Join us: https://t.co/JZDd4VhMfh
LegalFinancialGuy @LegalFinGuy
148 Followers 713 Following Founder & portfolio manager at KSK Capital and tax law professor @nyulaw | ex-@sullcrom, @kirkland_ellis | Views my own. Not tax, legal, or investment advice.
Giuliano @Giuliano_Mana
26K Followers 259 Following I read different things and share the interesting ones | DMs open.
Dr. Jack Skeen @JackSkeen
969 Followers 630 Following Executive coach for CEOs, founders, & investors who’ve achieved success, but not fulfillment. I help them see what their success has been hiding.
SemiAnalysis @SemiAnalysis_
95K Followers 27 Following
Colossus @colossusmag
45K Followers 136 Following Subscribe: https://t.co/Zu7Sv2Efxd. Listen: @InvestLikeBest, @FoundersPodcast, @BizBreakdowns, @joyscompounding.
Acquired Podcast @AcquiredFM
83K Followers 138 Following Every company has a story. Acquired tells the definitive history and strategy of the world's greatest companies. Hosted by @gilbert and @djrosent.
Ben Thompson @benthompson
271K Followers 2K Following Author/Founder of @stratechery. Host of @ditheringfm @sharptechpod. @notechben for sports. @monkbent on other networks. Home on the Internet.
Invest Like the Best @InvestLikeBest
35K Followers 130 Following Conversations with the world's best investors, founders & domain experts / hosted by @patrick_oshag / part of @colossusmag
Dwarkesh Patel @dwarkesh_sp
236K Followers 1K Following Host of @dwarkeshpodcast https://t.co/3SXlu7fy6N https://t.co/4DPAxODFYi https://t.co/hQfIWdM1Un
3:10 Value @310Value
11K Followers 5K Following Independent Thought, Creative Insights, Relentless Discovery. Not investment advice. [email protected] https://t.co/BmHjJLItKG
John Mihaljevic @mihaljevic
14K Followers 3K Following Private investor. Author, The Manual of Ideas. Co-Host @twiii_podcast. Host of Latticework, Ideaweek St. Moritz, The Zurich Project. Chairman @manualofideas.
Nat Stewart @natstewart5
17K Followers 1K Following I write a concise small/micro cap focused newsletter for (mostly) professional investors. Deep value, GARP, special situations. Join my list below:
Kevin Martelli @KevMartelli
595 Followers 901 Following At the moment of commitment, the entire world conspires to assist you - Johann Goethe
Ohio Capital Ideas @ohcapideas
8K Followers 2K Following Independent investor. Not investment advice. Sometimes sports and other stuff. “A wealth of information creates a poverty of attention.” — Herbert A. Simon
Jonah Lupton @JonahLupton
552K Followers 3K Following CEO/CIO at @LuptonCapital and @FirstWaveFund (long/short hedge fund, long-biased, focused on high-growth, disruptive companies) — https://t.co/SQEowKnIF9
Stockcoach @StockcoachPB
11K Followers 37 Following After 19 years, Stockcoach is back. This is my personal trading log. Not a solicitation to buy or sell. Main account: @PeterBerezinBCA
Bill @wabuffo
36K Followers 2K Following 1) If you have no edge, correct position size is 'don't buy”. 2) Position sizing is determined by downside. 3) All great investing records employed leverage.
Maxfield on Banks @MaxfieldOnBanks
23K Followers 243 Following a chronicle of american banking, by john j. maxfield
Rihard Jarc @RihardJarc
77K Followers 3K Following Researching and investing in tech (AI, cloud, semiconductors, platforms). DMs open. Tweets are only opinions.
Sheel Mohnot @pitdesi
198K Followers 4K Following I write my own tweets. politically centrist, abundance minded. Work: @btv_vc, leading pre/seed rounds in fintech & vertical AI
Claude @claudeai
1.4M Followers 2 Following Claude is an AI assistant built by @anthropicai to be safe, accurate, and secure. Talk to Claude on https://t.co/ZhTwG8d1e5 or download the app.
Sidecar Investor @sidecarcap
27K Followers 804 Following Private Investor | World-Class Operators | DMs Open
Saneel @sanlsrni
7K Followers 997 Following schrodinger’s flaneur (EIR) @accomplices fmr: building, investing, @ucberkeley
Manu Invests @ManuInvests
6K Followers 567 Following Mark Mulhern - Manu Invests - Fundamentally Sound Substack. Quality investment insights. Breaking down financial statements & simplifying complex concepts.
Chris Camillo @ChrisCamillo
288K Followers 502 Following Being smart matters less than being smart differently. $20k to $80M by getting ahead of undiscovered niches.























