#1 – Few people make financial decisions purely based on spreadsheets. They make them at the dinner table or in a company meeting. Your personal history, your view of the world, ego, pride, marketing and odd incentives influence your decision. Manage your money in such a way that helps you sleep at night.
#2 – Excerpt from a letter from the author to his son, ” Some people are born into families that encourage education, others are against it. Some are born into flourishing economies encouraging of entrepreneurship, others are born into war and destitution. I want you to be successful and I want you to earn it. But realise that not all success is due to hard-work and not all poverty is due to laziness. Keep this in mind while judging people, including yourself”.
#3 – When dealing with a financial failure, arrange your financial life in such a way that a bad investment here or a missed financial goal there won’t wipe you out and you can keep playing long enough for the odds to fall in your favor.
#4 – Good investing isn’t necessarily about earning the highest returns. Highest returns tend to be one off hits and can’t be repeated. It’s about earning pretty good returns that you can stick with for the longest period of time. If you want to do better as an investor, the single most important thing to do is to increase your time horizon.
#5 – Room for error or Margin of Safety is the most underappreciated force in finance.
#6 – An investing genius is the one who can do the average thing when all those around him/her are going crazy.
#7 – Warren Buffet @ Berkshire Hathway shareholder meeting – “I’ve owned 400-500 stocks in my life and made most money on 10 of them”. Charlie Munger – “If you remove just a few of Berkshire’s top investments, its long term track record is pretty average”
#8 – The ability to do what you want, when you want, with who you want, for as long as you want is priceless. It’s the highest dividend money pays. More than your salary, more than the size of your house, more than the prestige of your job, control over doing what you want, when you want to, with the people you want to is the broadest lifestyle variable that makes people happy
#9 – Independence, at any income level, is driven by your savings rate. Beyond a certain level of income, your savings rate is determined by your lifestyle expenses not escalating.
Awesome. Thanks for hosting the post here Nishant.
Very well summarized and explained! Must give a read.
Thank you for these useful insights!
Very well written review….!!!