Wells Fargo, a major holding once praised by Buffett and Munger

Wells Fargo, a major holding once praised by Buffett and Munger, Company profile, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A and BRK.B) started buying Wells Fargo stock in 1990, a story worth mentioning.

Outliers – great finding on 10000 hours

Outliers 10000 hours, statistics can be deceiving, I quote Graham in my book of “The Rules of Super Growth Stocks Investing”, he said: “The combination of precise formulas with highly imprecise assumptions can be used to establish, or rather to justify, practically any value one wishes.”

ROE, the most important management indicator

The Return On Equity (ROE) algorithm is “net profit after tax/shareholder equity × 100%”, which is one of the few financial figures that can be used to measure the operational performance of a company’s leadership team. It represents the efficiency of the company’s profit for shareholders, and it can also be said to measure the company’s overall capital utilization efficiency. Therefore, the higher the value, the better.

The commonalities of Buffett portfolio – cheap, fixed income, repurchase

I recently took a general look at Buffett portfolio , and I made some big discoveries. Buffett basically only invests in companies with fixed cash flow income. He likes companies that actively implement stock repurchases. Almost every shareholding has dividends. He likes cheap companies.

The main investment principles of successful investors are similar

The main investment principles of successful investors are similar. Buffett once lamented that “There seems to be some perverse human characteristic that likes to make easy things difficult.” I personally think that this is also the biggest investment defect committed by most investors (especially younger investors). I wrote at the beginning of 1-1 in my book

I would rather be vaguely right than precisely wrong

I would rather be vaguely right than precisely wrong. Warren Buffett saying quoted in The Warren Buffett Way by Robert G. Hagstrom, Wiley, November 4, 1994. Buffett admits, for the simple reason that calculating future capital expenditures often requires rough estimates “I would rather be vaguely right than precisely wrong.”

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