Sentences with word «superinvestor»

If it wasn't for Buffett praising him in Superinvestors and in a few of his Berkshire letters and other places, we probably wouldn't know nearly as much about him.
I strayed outside my competency here but thought the company of superinvestors like Klarman and Icahn had me covered.
If you've registered for a ValueConferences event, watch our hour - long exclusive conversation with value superinvestor Howard Marks.
Today, I'm going to look at one high - conviction dividend stocks each from five well - known superinvestors.
Some of the original Superinvestors still work as portfolio managers today.
Benjamin Graham was the original value investing superinvestor.
That, and other similar advice I got from superinvestors like Buffett and Munger helped as well my own experience of observing the horrible averaged out outcome for stockholders of highly - leveraged companies, made me realize just how little margin of safety exists in such businesses.
Walter Schloss, one of Warren Buffett's Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville, has died at 95.
In 1984, he read «The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville,» a screed written by Warren Buffett that laid out the case for value investing, and his career course was set.
The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville is a well - known article (see the original Hermes article here.pdf) by Warren Buffett defending value investing against the efficient market hypothesis.
Even if they were bad, the business was good, and the superinvestor's minding the store would keep things on track.
Whilst attributing many articles, the most notable The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville, Buffet also can command a crowd as a public speaker with his easy, down to earth and very humorous personality, especially at the annual Berkshire Hathaway shareholders meeting where he draws in crowds of up to 20,000 including many foreigners willing to travel to hear him.
On the 50th anniversary of Security Analysis, Buffett wrote an article in the Columbia Business School Magazine called The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville.
I would be remiss if I didn't mention that since 1985, these superinvestors have done far better than the Fama French Value Index.
With the wind at their backs, the Superinvestors that Buffett highlighted in the article - Walter Schloss, Tweedy, Browne, and Sequoia - to name a few, enjoyed a spectacular run of outperformance.
Prior to the publication of Superinvestors, the Fama French Value index had outperformed the S&P 500 in 89 % of all rolling twenty year periods, and since then, that number has fallen to 62 %.
Are you aware of any superinvestors with recent & consistent standout performance say over 10/15 years?
Buffett himself wrote an article called, «The Superinvestors of Graham and Doddsville [PDF],» which was published in Hermes [Columbia Business School], and republished as a forward to later versions of «The Intelligent Investor.»
Most of the «Superinvestors» ran concentrated portfolios by today's standards.
Warren Buffett highlighted Schloss» investing style in an article called «The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville.»
1984 Buffett, Warren E. «The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville.»
If you are interested in reading other Security Analysis success story, check out the essay «The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville», which details various value investors and how they have managed to crush the market over time.
The title of the speech was «The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville.»
«The Superinvestors» is a name given by Warren Buffett to Benjamin Graham and his protégés.
This blog will aggregate as much information as possible about the Superinvestors and their firms under the tag «Superinvestors.»
Have you read Warren Buffett's article «The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville»?
Back in 1984, Warren Buffett wrote an article entitled «The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville» (referring to the book Security Analysis co-authored by Benjamin Graham and David Dodd) in which he argues that passively managed funds can generate alpha for investors (beat the market) more so than actively managed funds.
Everyone has read about «THE SUPERINVESTORS OF GRAHAM - AND - DODDSVILLE», but have you read» Superinvestors of Philip Fisher».
Whether in his debate against Michael Jensen in 1984, which helped to produce the article, «The Superinvestors of Graham and Doddsville [PDF, 13 pages],» or in his annual shareholder letters, that risk is not volatility — risk is the permanent impairment of capital.
In case you have missed it, Walter Schloss was one of the «superinvestors» in a 1984 speech of Warren Buffett.
But what I will argue regarding trend following is that there is some measure of momentum that explains over 70 % of the results of a wide number of trend followers, much as Buffett could point to the «Superinvestors» and claim that they were all one tribe, though the details differed considerably, much as Covel has done with trend following.
I would be remiss if I didn't mention that since 1985, these superinvestors have done far better than the Fama French Value Index.
Prior to the publication of Superinvestors, the Fama French Value index had outperformed the S&P 500 in 89 % of all rolling twenty year periods, and since then, that number has fallen to 62 %.
With the wind at their backs, the Superinvestors that Buffett highlighted in the article - Walter Schloss, Tweedy, Browne, and Sequoia - to name a few, enjoyed a spectacular run of outperformance.
On the 50th anniversary of Security Analysis, Buffett wrote an article in the Columbia Business School Magazine called The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville.
Supplement this video with a reading of Buffett's classic article, The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville.
Walter Schloss might be one of Benjamin Graham's lesser - known disciples, but to Warren Buffett, perhaps Graham's most famous disciple, Schloss is a «superinvestor
Buffett, another Graham disciple, called Schloss a «superinvestor» in a 1984 speech at Columbia Business School.
John also suggests following great managers, and using the portfolios of «superinvestors» as a source of ideas.
In The Superinvestors of Graham - and - Doddsville, an article based on a speech Buffett gave at Columbia Business School on May 17, 1984 and appearing in Hermes, the Columbia Business School magazine, Buffett said of Schloss:
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