Warren Buffett's Ground Rules | Jeremy Miller | Talks at Google
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- Опубликовано: 20 май 2024
- Jeremy Miller reflects on Mr. Buffett's partnership letters and his early investing style. He also discusses why he thinks that Mr. Buffett did the opposite of largely conventionally accepted 'rules' on investing.
About the book: Warren Buffett's Ground Rules Words of Wisdom from the Partnership Letters of the World's Greatest Investor is an "anti-Buffett" checklist for mediocracy in investment, derived from a study of the pre-Berkshire Partnership Letters. Author Jeremy Miller is an investment analyst.
Get the book here: goo.gl/4YpbBS
This speech should be a drinking game, every time he says right you take a shot of whiskey.
I'm not sure why the comments are so mean. I quite enjoyed this one. He answered everyone thoroughly and respectfully. Content was good, and there is only so much Buffett does to achieve his returns, so I'm not sure where people wanted him to elaborate
Generally worthwhile. listening to.
Thankyou for the talks. I have read the book it is amazing. Things are simple, we just have these urges to understand and do more. You pointed out the few things we should know and practice.
Good video. good lessons.
Very good video, I appreciate what he brought too the table in his talk
I also liked wat he brought from the table
@@ethank5681 q
@@ethank5681 ¹
right
Wow, please ignore the negative comments because the people making them have no idea what this talk was supposed to be or who Jeremy Miller is.
"Warren Buffett's Ground Rules" is a book that Jeremy wrote and it's based primarily on the Buffett Partnership Letters (prior to the Berkshire Hathaway years). I agree, Jeremy is not the best public speaker, but the content is what someone who knows that it's about the book should expect.
Also, read the book or listen to the audiobook, it's full of content you won't get from Berkshire meetings or Warren Buffett speeches and gives you a look at how Buffett got rich when he was just starting out with smaller sums of capital.
Right?
Excellent. And I don’t give compliments easily~ and know this topic very well.
During organic growth, look for both eps and roic growing at the dame time.
Maturity stage wheee ROIC is stable with little grow and >wacc, looking for eps growth.
Great talk.
Graham: " I know why you're doing it, but it's just harder". And Buffet did the hard thing in a seemingly easy way.
Well this just confirmed to me that it's better to hear from WB directly than listening to someone else talk about him
#NODAPL #NOTPP STAND WITH STANDING ROCK #FOLLOWTHEMONEY
The problem with this talk is that this person...who is obviously well meaning...is trying to convey the thoughts and style of a great teacher, speaker and hero to generations of investors and intellectuals.
highly undervalued video
Right? Right.
Spokesman for the wizard of Oz.
didn't try this video after reading negative comments. thanks for the alert y'all !
same, was going to give him a chance but not after reading the comments
he is no howard marks...
right...
Good but not like ted
I have to think that the people who don't like this guy are losers because he is making sense
Very good talk, right? Worth listening to, right? Good questions being asked and answered, right?
Seriously there are about 74826469396489 books about Buffett. Aside from offering nothing new, he couldn't even use an example from his own stock picking career. Before making a talk or writing a book, could he at least show his track record to back his credential ? Terrible talk.
you said there's 74trn books, but we only have about 7 bn people globally ..
just read bpl letter.
yeah stopped watching nothing new just ideas and quotes from others right ?
Er er er er er errrrr
dudes scrambling
Cocaine is a hellofa dog
1st
This guy doesn't even know the meaning of risk
Says the risk is what u don't know
Come on
How would you define it?
@@amirjon the potential for an actual outcome to differ from an expected outcome
Buffett went through so much shit with that mapping company he made "only" 50% return on that investment in 2,5 years. That is not so impressive. Good fund managers today (with AUMs smaller of 10 million) easily return 100% annually.
Ok so if I retire at the age of 60 (40 years from now) and followed your advice, I'll have $1.09 trillion from an investment of $1?
Good video. good lessons.