Learn some more investment tips from the investment guru Warren Buffet and invest like Warren Buffet.
- Beware of companies displaying weak accounting.
- Unintelligible footnotes usually indicate untrustworthy management.
- Be suspicious of companies that trumpet earnings projections and growth expectations.
- Suspect those CEOs who regularly claim they do know the future –and we become downright incredulous if they consistently reach their declared targets.
- Managers that always promise to “make the numbers” will at some point be tempted to make up the numbers.
- Derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction.
- A director whose moderate income is heavily dependent on directors’ fees is highly unlikely to offend a CEO or fellow directors, who in a major way will determine his reputation in corporate circles.
- If regulators believe that “significant” money taints independence (and it certainly can), they have overlooked a massive class of possible offenders. (referring to outside directors)
Those attributes are two legs of our “entrance” strategy, the third being a sensible purchase price. We have no exit to strategy – we buy to keep.
That is one reason why Berkshire is usually the first- and sometimes the only – choice for sellers and their managers.
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