Richer, Wiser, Happier

Richer, Wiser, Happier 
William Green

Summary

Timeless investing lessons from some of the greatest investors in the world

Rating: 5/5

Notes

The crowd is always wrong

Watch out for momentum

Never borrow money to buy stocks

Pick your 10 best ideas, study them like crazy

Hope is not a method - know exactly what you’re buying

Know where your edge is (healthcare)

As long as you have faith in you, nothing will abstract you

Just copy the best ideas other people have figured out

Know the rules of the game

  • You’re buying a business
  • The market is a voting machine with prices that don’t make sense
  • Only buy a stock when it’s less than your conservative estimate

Only buy stocks when values are so low relative to what you think

Fish where the fish are. Go to where there’s value, everything else is noise

Be patient and let the bargains come to you

Keep a solo investment advisor - you. As soon as people come onboard, you’re going to change how you act

Say no to almost everything

If something is not an obvious double in a short period of time, leave it

Avoid anything w/ financial statements that are too difficult

Simplicity rules

Be patient and selective

Make bets w/ minimal downside and significant upside

Never deal w/ leverage and impatience. Compound over long periods of time

Don’t meet w/ CEOs you’re investing in, understand the numbers

Take a simple idea and take it seriously

You have to have a willingness to be lonely and take positions other people don’t like

When you stick your neck out, you have to be self-confident enough to do it

Don’t listen to experts and trust their opinions

In the darkest of times, never forget the sun always rises

Templeton’s 6 investing principles:

  • Beware of emotion is investing
  • Because of your own ignorance - research as much as you can
  • Diversify to protect against your own ego
  • Successful investing requires patience
  • Study assets over the last 5 years to find bargains
  • Do not chase fads - focus on value

Choose where to place your focus because what we focus on expands

Change is inevitable, the only constant is impermanence 

Being intelligent is nothing but luck

Always buy cheap and never overpay

Don’t invest in dreams, invest in what’s tangible today

The cycle of the market is always predictable

The environment is what is it - act accordingly

‘Skepticism calls for pessimism when optimism is excessive. But it calls for optimism when pessimism is accepted.’

Cycles always reverse and reckless excess will be punished

Humility, skepticism and prudence are key to long term financial success

Because the future is uncertain, always minimize risk

Many shall be restored that now are fallen and many shall fall that are now in humour

Do not cave to external pressures

Create a closed end vehicle so you can’t have redemptions

Always keep enough cash on hand so you can never go bust

Secret to investing is ‘safety’. Always think how much you could lose

Build a portfolio that can withstand various states of the world

Don’t add fragility to your portfolio (bad balance sheets, too much leverage, too much debt, bad mgmt teams)

Beauty lies in the mundane businesses, not the glamour

Invest when the company is 30% less than intrinsic value

Rules of resilience:

  • Respect uncertainty
  • Eliminate debt, avoid leverage and don’t spend excessively
  • Become shock resistant, avoid ruin and stay in the game
  • Beware of overconfidence and complacency
  • Beware of exposure to risk and require a margin of safety

Figure out what something is worth and pay a lot less

STOCKS FOLLOW EARNINGS

The way you’re going to find bargains is search for places others don’t want

Buy good businesses at bargain prices

Scale economies shared can turn into great business (amazon, costco, etc.)

Resist the external and internal forces that make you act impulsively

Make your mistakes non-fatal

Live on less than you make. Invest the difference

To attain knowledge, add things. To attain wisdom, subtract things

Figure out what not to do first

Know what you own

Think about your own limitations

Find disconfirming evidence against your ideas

Start with ‘why am I wrong?’

Everyone messes up or gets unlucky, it’s part of the game

***

Buy the book here

Free E-book download here


How the World Works  
Noam Chomsky         

Summary

A combination of books Chomsky wrote in the 80s and 90s about America and it's role in the world. Fascinating read and insight into one of the great thinkers of the 21st century

Rating: 5/5

Notes

The US invaded Greece in 1947 and supported a horrendous war which led to 160k Greek deaths. This was the model for Vietnam and allowed American business to gain and thrive

US policies in the 3rd world consistently opposed democracies if they couldn’t be controlled as real democracies believe government should respond to the needs of their own population rather than those of US investors

US-run contra forces in the 3rd world isn’t ordering killing - it’s brutal sadistic torture (Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala)

From the Bolshevik revolution in 1917 till the collapse of the communist governments in eastern europe in the 80s, it was possible to justify every US attack as defense against the Soviets

If you want a global system that’s subordinated to the needs of US investors, you can’t let pieces of it wander off. It’s clearly stated in the documents of record

The US wants ‘stability’ meaning security for the upper classes and large foreign businesses

Solid case for impeaching every American president since World War 2 either outright as war criminals or involved in serious war crimes

El Salvador and Nicaragua were not covered by the US media in the 70s when US-supported brutal torture and murder were taking place

In the early 80s, America’s friends slaughtered 10s of thousands of Guatemalans with countless others tortured and raped

After Vietnam, the major US policy goal has been to maximize repression and suffering of countries demonstrated by their violence - blocked other countries from seeking aid

The US regularly carries out or supports aggression

For most of the 20th century, the US was the dominant economic power and used economic warfare as a weapon ranging from illegal embargoes to enforcement of weak IMF rules with their military becoming pre-eminent

The US tries to avoid negotiations with countries as the US fears it will lose and other countries will be better off

When a state has huge debts, it must divert the population from what’s happening and they do this by inspiring fear of our enemies (Russia in Europe)

The real enemy of the US has always been ‘the poor who seek to plunder the rich’. In America, it’s the opposite and has been for generations

‘The war on drugs’ was a manufactured media blitz by the US leadership to distract the population, increase repression in inner cities and build support for attack on civil liberties

The US government blocks international effort to seek peace (Russia and Ukraine)

Major media are large companies owned and interlinked with even larger conglomerates. The market is the advertisers and the product is audiences

The power in the US lies in the hands of people who determine investment decisions as they determine production, distribution and staff the government. They want a passive, quiescent population

The struggle of freedom is never over and requires active and sustained efforts

One important consequence of globalization is it extends the third world model to industrial nations where the average person has their jobs shipped away while the rich and elite continue to amass massive amounts of wealth

We’ve moved to an international state with the IMF, World Bank, G7 & EU, WEF where the general population doesn’t know what’s happening and it doesn’t know it doesn’t know

If the borrowing the US has done was used for constructive purposes like investment or infrastructure, the US would be better off, but it was used to enrich the rich - for consumption, financial manipulation and speculation which are all harmful

The class warfare of the last few decades has successfully weakened popular organizations leaving people to feel isolated

The US is so deeply in debt to the international financial community because of debt that they have a lock on US policy

Many of the large number of security council resolutions vetoed by the US have to do with Israeli aggression or atrocities

Invaders typically use local collaborators to run things for them by playing upon existing rivalries to get onne group to work for them against another

European wars were wars of extermination. If we were to be honest about history, we would simply describe it as barbarian invasion

There has always been racism but it developed as a leading principle of thought in the context of colonialism. 

A standard technique of belief formation goes along with oppression

In the US, you’re not allowed to talk about the class differences, which is the real issue

When the US establishment talks about jobs, it means profits for its corporations

The elite are masters and they follow what Adam Smith said about ‘the vile maxim’ - all for ourselves and nothing for anyone else

People who aren’t owners and investors have nothing much to say in the US

Jefferson warned against banking institutions and corporations and said if they grow, aristocrats would’ve won and the revolution would’ve been lost

The ‘Free market’ is for the poor. We have a dual system - protection for the rich and market discipline for everyone else

There’s been a considerable increase in inequality and has the American society moving towards a third world model, thereby seeing increased crime and signs of social disintegration

A huge area of the media is dedicated to diverting people and making them more stupid and passive

There’s nothing individualistic about corporations who are totalitarian in nature

Free trade agreements result in reduced wages for local employees while predominantly benefiting the rich consumer while also destroying unions

Operation Paper Clip imported large number of known Nazi criminals

The American army’s counter-insurgency literature begins with an analysis of the German experience in Europe written with the co-operation of Naxi officials (instruments of statecraft - book)

US involvement in Chile with the coup in 1973 to reduce social democracy

The threat of a good empire is what the US worried about with reforms on uncontrolled capitalism

The US killed a few million people and destoryed 3 countries during the Vietnam war

A huge amount of business propaganda is to create wants

The answers to solve all these issues is to organize. Being alone you can’t do anything but if you join with other people, you can make changes

Under capitalism, investment is supposed to be as risk free as possible. No competition wants free markets - what they want is power

The government subsidizes corporations’ costs, protects them from market risks and lets them keep the profits

There’s never been much difference between the 2 business parties and the differences are disappearing

The CIA has been involved in drug running for generations (the politics of heroin book)

You need something to frighten people with, to prevent them from paying attention to what’s really happening to them. You have to engender fear and hatred

The first world lives in a highly indoctrinated society

Neoliberalism is nothing more than the imperial formula: free markets for you and plenty of protection for me. The rich would never accept it but they’re happy to impose it on the poor

The UN does mostly what US business wants

‘Politics is the shadow cast on society by big business’ - John Devery

If people dedicate themselves to organizing and activism, we’ll gain access to broader audiences

If you extrapolate to the future, it’s very ugly but the point is it’s not inevitable. It can be changed but we can’t change things till we understand them.

***

Buy the book here

Free E-book download here

Richer, Wiser, Happier

Notes and Quotes
Copy Share Link

Richer, Wiser, Happier 
William Green

Summary

Timeless investing lessons from some of the greatest investors in the world

Rating: 5/5

Notes

The crowd is always wrong

Watch out for momentum

Never borrow money to buy stocks

Pick your 10 best ideas, study them like crazy

Hope is not a method - know exactly what you’re buying

Know where your edge is (healthcare)

As long as you have faith in you, nothing will abstract you

Just copy the best ideas other people have figured out

Know the rules of the game

  • You’re buying a business
  • The market is a voting machine with prices that don’t make sense
  • Only buy a stock when it’s less than your conservative estimate

Only buy stocks when values are so low relative to what you think

Fish where the fish are. Go to where there’s value, everything else is noise

Be patient and let the bargains come to you

Keep a solo investment advisor - you. As soon as people come onboard, you’re going to change how you act

Say no to almost everything

If something is not an obvious double in a short period of time, leave it

Avoid anything w/ financial statements that are too difficult

Simplicity rules

Be patient and selective

Make bets w/ minimal downside and significant upside

Never deal w/ leverage and impatience. Compound over long periods of time

Don’t meet w/ CEOs you’re investing in, understand the numbers

Take a simple idea and take it seriously

You have to have a willingness to be lonely and take positions other people don’t like

When you stick your neck out, you have to be self-confident enough to do it

Don’t listen to experts and trust their opinions

In the darkest of times, never forget the sun always rises

Templeton’s 6 investing principles:

  • Beware of emotion is investing
  • Because of your own ignorance - research as much as you can
  • Diversify to protect against your own ego
  • Successful investing requires patience
  • Study assets over the last 5 years to find bargains
  • Do not chase fads - focus on value

Choose where to place your focus because what we focus on expands

Change is inevitable, the only constant is impermanence 

Being intelligent is nothing but luck

Always buy cheap and never overpay

Don’t invest in dreams, invest in what’s tangible today

The cycle of the market is always predictable

The environment is what is it - act accordingly

‘Skepticism calls for pessimism when optimism is excessive. But it calls for optimism when pessimism is accepted.’

Cycles always reverse and reckless excess will be punished

Humility, skepticism and prudence are key to long term financial success

Because the future is uncertain, always minimize risk

Many shall be restored that now are fallen and many shall fall that are now in humour

Do not cave to external pressures

Create a closed end vehicle so you can’t have redemptions

Always keep enough cash on hand so you can never go bust

Secret to investing is ‘safety’. Always think how much you could lose

Build a portfolio that can withstand various states of the world

Don’t add fragility to your portfolio (bad balance sheets, too much leverage, too much debt, bad mgmt teams)

Beauty lies in the mundane businesses, not the glamour

Invest when the company is 30% less than intrinsic value

Rules of resilience:

  • Respect uncertainty
  • Eliminate debt, avoid leverage and don’t spend excessively
  • Become shock resistant, avoid ruin and stay in the game
  • Beware of overconfidence and complacency
  • Beware of exposure to risk and require a margin of safety

Figure out what something is worth and pay a lot less

STOCKS FOLLOW EARNINGS

The way you’re going to find bargains is search for places others don’t want

Buy good businesses at bargain prices

Scale economies shared can turn into great business (amazon, costco, etc.)

Resist the external and internal forces that make you act impulsively

Make your mistakes non-fatal

Live on less than you make. Invest the difference

To attain knowledge, add things. To attain wisdom, subtract things

Figure out what not to do first

Know what you own

Think about your own limitations

Find disconfirming evidence against your ideas

Start with ‘why am I wrong?’

Everyone messes up or gets unlucky, it’s part of the game

***

Buy the book here

Free E-book download here