Monday 29 June 2015

Collection of evergreen Quotes of eminent people



1. ‘There is nothing new on Wall Street or in stock speculation. What has happened in the past will happen again and again and again. This is because human nature does not change, and it is human emotion that always gets in the way of human intelligence.’ – Jesse Livermore

2.‘The reason that capital markets are, have always been, and will always be inefficient is not because of a shortage of timely information, the lack of analytical tools, or inadequate capital. The Internet will not make the market efficient, even though it makes far more information available, faster than ever before, right at everyone’s fingertips. Markets are inefficient because of human nature – innate, deep-rooted, permanent. People don’t consciously choose to invest with emotion – they simply can’t help it.’ – Seth Klarman

3.’What a company’s stock sells for today,tomorrow, next week, or next year doesn’t matter. What counts is how the company does over a five – or ten-year period.’ – Warren Buffett


4.’Although markets are generally good at estimating the magnitude of a contingent liability, they are often poor at evaluating outcomes probabilistically.’ – Jamie Mai


5.’Stocks heavily owned and constantly monitored by institutions have often been amongst the most inappropriately valued.’ – Warren Buffett
  

6.’If you read a financial disclosure three times and cannot understand it, it is intentional.’ – Jim Chanos


7.’If the future could be told from a balance sheet, then mathematicians and accountants would be the richest people in the world by now.’ – Peter Lynch

8.’Reward excellent failures. Punish mediocre success.’ – Tom Peters

9.’Integrity is just a ticket to the game. If you don’t have it in your bones, you shouldn’t be allowed on the field.’ – Jack Welch


10.’There should be present the greatest number of people with the ingenuity and determination not to leave things just at their present, possibly quite satisfactory, state but to build significant further improvements upon them. Management must recognize and be attuned to the fact that the world in which they are operating is changing at an ever increasing rate.’ – Philip Fisher


11.’When given a choice of working hard to fix a base business or, instead, completing a glamorous acquisition and crowing about its promise on the financial TV stations, too many executives opt for the latter. A good portion of IBM’s success was due to all of the deals it didn’t do.’ – Lou Gerstner


12.’There are no predictable industries in which you can count on analysts’ forecasts. Relying on these estimates will lead to trouble.’ – David Dreman


13.’Vanity plays a great part in the willingness with which traders fall victim to supposed ‘straight tips’. If, however, he will have the humility to believe that he may be the thousandth rather than the first or second to hear the bullish story, this lack of self-pride will probably be well rewarded. No one ever attained a fortune by seeking the advice of others.’ – David Carret


14.’Most bad companies stay bad, and most cheap stocks get cheaper. Once you realize that, then you’re ready for investing in turnarounds situations.’ – Charles Kirk, The Kirk Report


15.’Buying a cyclical after several years of record earnings and when the P/E ratio has hit a low point is a proven method for losing half your money in a short period of time.’ – Peter Lynch


16.’If you limit your investments to those situations where you are knowledgable and confident, and only those situations, your success rate will be very high.’ – Joel Greenblatt


17.’It is the emotional nonprofessional investor who sends the price of a stock up or down in sharp, sporadic and more or less short-lived spurts. The professional investor has no choice but to sit by quietly while the mob has its day, until the enthusiasm or the panic of the speculators and nonprofessionals have been spent.’ – J. Paul Getty


18.’When I see hysteria, I usually like to take a look to see if I shouldn’t be going the other way. Just about every time you go against panic, you will be right if you can stick it out.’ – Jim Rogers


19.’Only 1 in 100 survived the 1929-32 debacle if one was not bearish in 1925.’ – Benjamin Graham


20.’It is obvious that the inner glow that results from having held a winner last year is of no importance in making a decision as to whether it belongs in an optimum portfolio this year.’ – Warren Buffett


21.’While one can know all there is to know about a few issues, one cannot possibly know all one needs to know about a great many issues.’ – Bernard Baruch


22.‘Never invest all of your funds. By maintaining a large cash reserve, I have been in a position to take advantage of unforeseen opportunities as they developed.’ – Bernard Baruch


23.’There is a persistent overall tendency for equity to flow from the many to the few. In the long run, the majority loses. The implication for the trader is that to win you have to act like the minority. If you bring normal human habits and tendencies to trading, you’ll gravitate toward the majority and inevitably lose.’ – William Eckhardt


24.’The unpredictability of Mr. Market’s moods and the pressure of competing with other money managers can make it really hard to stick with a strategy that hasn’t worked for years.’ – Joel Greenblatt


25.’In no field is the old maxim more valid – that a little knowledge is a dangerous thing – than in investing.’ – Bernard Baruch

26.’A skilled operator in any field acquires an almost instinctive ‘feel’ which enables him to sense many things even without being able to explain them.’ – Bernard Baruch


27.’My sense of insecurity keeps me alert, always ready to correct my errors. To others, being wrong is a sense of shame; to me, recognising my mistakes is a source of pride.’ – George Soros

28.’Curiosity is the engine of civilisation. If I were to elaborate it would be to say read, read, read, and don’t forget to talk to people, really talk, listening with attention and having conversations, on whatever topic, that are an exchange of thoughts.’ – Peter Cundill


29.’One of the best rules anybody can learn about investing is to do nothing, absolutely nothing, unless there is something to do.’ – Jim Rogers


30. ‘The most important attribute for success in value investing is patience, patience, and more patience. The majority of investors do not possess this characteristic.’ – Peter Cundill



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