Showing posts with label videos on investing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label videos on investing. Show all posts

Monday, 15 December 2025

Li Lu's Value Investing Strategies Explained

Based on the lecture transcript, Li Lu presents a disciplined and high-conviction approach to value investing. The core of his strategy is a fundamental mindset shift: viewing stock ownership as buying into a real business, not just trading a piece of paper.

Below is a summary of the main points from his 2006 lecture, followed by a discussion and analysis of his key principles.

📝 Summary of Li Lu's 2006 Lecture at Columbia Business School

The central theme of Li Lu's lecture is the psychology and practice of being a true value investor. He frames this as belonging to a rare "genetically mutated" 5% minority of market participants, defined by a distinct mindset rather than just a strategy





















💡 Discussion and Commentary on Key Ideas

Li Lu's framework is more than a checklist; it's a philosophy for navigating financial markets.

  • The "Two Markets" Theory: Li Lu posits there are effectively two markets. The first is designed for the 95%—traders and speculators motivated by gambling instincts and short-term price movements. The second is for the 5%—long-term owners who use the first market's emotional volatility to acquire ownership stakes in businesses. This explains why, despite its proven long-term success, value investing remains a minority discipline.

  • From Analyst to Owner: His emphasis on "encyclopedic knowledge" and acting as an investigative journalist (as seen in the Timberland case study, where he researched lawsuits and met management) bridges the gap between theory and practice. His checklist ends with the crucial question, "What did I miss?" underscoring a focus on avoiding errors and psychological pitfalls.

  • Concentration vs. Diversification: His strategy leans heavily toward the Buffett/Munger school of making large, concentrated bets on high-conviction ideas, as opposed to the Graham/Tweedy Brown approach of holding many statistically cheap stocks. Modern portfolio data shows he practices this: his top five holdings consistently make up over 85-90% of his portfolio.

  • Evolution of a Value Investor: The lecture hints at the investor's journey. Beginners might find "cigar-butt" opportunities like Timberland (which rose ~700% in two years). The ultimate goal, however, is to find exceptional "compounder" businesses where the math of high returns on capital creates immense wealth over decades, making selling a tax-inefficient mistake. His early and massive investment in BYD, which grew exponentially for Berkshire Hathaway and his own funds, is a real-world example of this principle in action.

🔍 Connection to Broader Themes & Current Practice

Li Lu's teachings are part of a continuous intellectual tradition and are reflected in his current investment decisions.

  • Intellectual Heritage: His philosophy is deeply interwoven with the teachings of Benjamin Graham (Mr. Market, margin of safety) and, more significantly, Charlie Munger (circle of competence, worldly wisdom, mental models). Munger is his direct mentor and partner, and Li Lu credits him for evolving his thinking beyond pure quantitative bargains.

  • Modern Application: While the lecture is from 2006, his principles remain consistent. In a 2019 speech, he distilled value investing into four core concepts: stock as ownership, margin of safety, Mr. Market, and circle of competence. He also advises investors to "take the macro as it is" and focus on the micro-analysis of businesses they can understand.

  • Portfolio as a Reflection: His current portfolio is a testament to his philosophy. It is hyper-concentrated, with a recent top-five holding percentage of 94.08%. Major holdings include Alphabet (a modern "compounder"), Berkshire Hathaway (alignment with mentors), and Bank of America (a traditional value play), demonstrating application across different business types.

In conclusion, Li Lu's strategies offer a powerful, psychology-centric framework for value investing. Its difficulty lies not in complexity, but in the discipline and temperament required to execute it consistently against the crowd.



Read more:

Li Lu sharing his Value Investing Strategies

https://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2010/06/li-lu-sharing-his-value-investing.html

Friday, 11 October 2013

Making Money the Warren Buffett Way (Educational Videos)


https://www.udemy.com/value-investing-code/



by MILLIONAIRE INVESTOR
Always wanted to learn how to invest like the world's greatest investor - Warren Buffett?

Then let this simple investment course teach you the fundamentals of Value Investing - the investing philosophy that has made Warren Buffet the richest investor in the world. In this stock market for beginners course, you'll learn how the stock market works, the basics of personal financial management, the concept of value investing, and how to analyze and pick the best companies to invest in.

For the aspiring or beginner investor, this 30-video investment course is right up your alley in helping you achieve financial freedom and passive income through the power of value investing!

*Please note that we are not affiliated with Warren Buffett or Berkshire Hathaway in any way. We just think Warren Buffett is one really cool dude who just happens to be the greatest investor of all time.

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Warren Buffett - How to Be a Success



For the latest Warren Buffett, go to http://WarrenBuffettNews.com -

There will be a short speech in this MBA talk, and then there will be a question and answer session. It is important to think about your future. Everyone graduating has the ability to make a lot of money and to succeed. However in order to succeed, more is needed than intellect and energy. You also need integrity. Without integrity, intellect and energy doesn't matter too much.

Think for a moment that you had the right to buy 10% of one of your classmates for the rest of their lifetime. Are you going to give them an IQ test or pick the one with the best grades? Probably not. If you thought about this for an hour, you would probably invest in the person who has the type of leadership qualities, the type of person who has the ability to get other people to do what they want. By the same token, if you had to go short on one of your classmates, then you would also look for qualities like dishonesty and cutting corners.

As you reflect on those qualities, you will notice that they are all qualities that are achievable. They are not forbidden to other people. There aren't any negative qualities that you have to have. They are all simply habitual. Habits are too light to be felt until they are too heavy to cast off. When you are young, you can choose to have any habits that you want. Look around at the people that you admire and try to develop patterns of behavior like them. Benjamin Franklin did this and Benjamin Graham did it as well.

Warren Buffett is not a macro guy. But you can borrow money in Japan at 1%. You would think that you could make money if you can borrow money at 1%. However, he is having trouble finding anything. It is hard to make a lot as an investor if the business you are interested in doesn't make a large return on equity. However, you could take the cigar butt approach to investing. If you are looking for a free puff, then you can purchase a lousy business at a discount. Time is the friend of the wonderful business and the enemy of the lousy business. Japan had an incredible market without a lot of incredible businesses.

Warren Buffett - Coke vs McDonald's



For the latest Warren Buffett, go to http://WarrenBuffettNews.com -

There are a lot of things you can learn if you are around securities over the course of your career, and you will find a lot of arbitrage opportunities. However, that probably won't be the primary driver of your investment returns.

If you are not a professional investor, then you should be extremely diversified and you should do very little trading. However, if you want to bring an intensity to the game, and you are going to value businesses, then diversification is a terrible mistake. If you really know business, then you shouldn't own more than 6 businesses. Very few people have gotten rich on their 7th best idea. You'd be much better off putting more money into your best idea.

Proctor and Gamble is a good business. But if you are going to go away for 20 years, would you rather own Coca-Cola or Proctor and Gamble? Proctor and Gamble wouldn't be bad, but Coca-Cola has much better pricing power. They sell 1 billion units per day. If they charge a penny more, they will make another $10 million per day.

McDonald's has a lot of things going for it. But it is a tougher business. People do not want to eat at McDonald's every day. If someone drinks 5 Cokes today, they will probably buy 5 more tomorrow. The fast food business is tough, and they don't win taste tests. They are also competing on price more than they used to, and they give away toys in order to sell more product. It is better to own a business with a product that can stand alone absent promotions and price appeals. But it is a very good business. Not as good as Coca-Cola, but then again very few businesses are.

The utility industry is tough to understand because there are so many regulations. Obviously the guy who produces energy more cheaply has an advantage, but it is hard to predict how much of the profits he will be allowed to keep and whether he can sell his energy outside of his geographic area. A lot of money will be made in utilities, but it is hard to be able to tell who is going to make it.

Thursday, 6 October 2011

Video Investing Tutorials



Video Investing Tutorials


Lesson 1: Stock MarketLesson 2: Online Stock Investing
Lesson 3: Brokerage AccountsLesson 4: Buying Your First Stock
Lesson 5: Market vs. Limit OrdersLesson 6: Buy-and-Hold Strategy
Lesson 7: Day-TradingLesson 8: Swing Trading
Lesson 9: Contrarian InvestorsLesson 10: Momentum Investors
Lesson 11: Technical AnalysisLesson 12: Fundamental Analysis
Lesson 13: Income,Value,GrowthLesson 14: Stock Returns
Lesson 15: Stock DividendsLesson 16: P/E Ratios
Lesson 17: Interest Rates StocksLesson 18: Inflation Stock Market
Lesson 19: Dollar-Cost AveragingLesson 20: Stock Prices
Lesson 21: Moving AveragesLesson 22: Bull,Bear,Sideways
Lesson 23: Standard and Poors 500Lesson 24: Dow
Lesson 25: NYSE,NASDAQ,AMEXLesson 26: Risk Trading Stocks
Lesson 27: Refusing to Sell StocksLesson 28: Greed and Stocks
Lesson 29: Income StatementsLesson 30: Earnings Per Share
Lesson 31: Price-to-Sales RatioLesson 32: Stock Analysts
Lesson 33: Problems FundamentalsLesson 34: Volume Indicator
Lesson 35: On-Balance VolumeLesson 36: Relative Strength
Lesson 37: Stochastic OscillatorLesson 38: Williams %R
Lesson 39: Line ChartsLesson 40: Bar Charts
Lesson 41: Candlestick ChartsLesson 42: Problems Technicals
Lesson 43: Emotional Stock PicksLesson 44: Investing Discipline
Lesson 45: Investing MistakesLesson 46: Stock Market Crash
Lesson 47: Investing FearsLesson 48: Gambling or Investing
Lesson 49: Cyclical StocksLesson 50: Investing in REITs
Lesson 51: Investing in IPOsLesson 52: Insider Trading
Lesson 53: Market CapitalizationLesson 54: Outstanding Shares
Lesson 55: Stock SectorsLesson 56: Revenge Trading
Lesson 57: Stop-Loss OrdersLesson 58: Trailing Stops
Lesson 59: Pump-and-Dump ScamsLesson 60: Stock Splits
Lesson 61: Reverse Stock SplitsLesson 62: Shares of Stock
Lesson 63: Trading on NewsLesson 64: Dangers of Stock Tips
Lesson 65: Trading the QQQQsLesson 66: Non-Diversified
Lesson 67: Penny StocksLesson 68: Commodities
Lesson 69: Mutual FundsLesson 70: Index Funds
Lesson 71: ETFsLesson 72: Diversification
Lesson 73: Load vs. No LoadLesson 74: Cash vs. Margin

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Saturday, 14 August 2010

MBA - Managerial Economics

MBA - Managerial Economics 01
54:37 - 1 year ago
MBA Course in Managerial Economics at Prince Sultan University. Lecture 1 covers introductory overview to economics - choice, economic decisions, scarcity, trade-offs, opprtunity cost, marginal analysis, efficiency, resources, utility, modeling.http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3236390700554076825#docid=-408690692811744650



MBA - Managerial Economics 02
30:40 - 1 year ago
Lecture 2 of MBA course in Managerial Economics at Prince Sultan University. Discusses some fallacies and myths on global issues related to the U.S dollar, US economy, gold, oil, and other important and current global economic issueshttp://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3712587726439038583#



MBA - Managerial Economics 03
02:31 - 1 year ago




MBA - Managerial Economics 04
33:06 - 1 year ago
Covers the first half of the first chapter of the textbook "Managerial Economics" by Maurice & Thomas.http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3712587726439038583#docid=8361401330998686750














MBA - Managerial Economics 22
1:11:56 - 1 year ago
Long run cost and production. Isoquant curves. Marginal rate of technical substitution. Isocost curves. Optimal combination of inputs. Cost optimization. Expansion path. Returns to scale; economies of scale; economies of scope.http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3712587726439038583#docid=6029229602533143315

Thursday, 12 August 2010

Investment In Gold Seminar by Krassimir Petrov

Krassimir Petrov - Investment Analysis (part 1)
29:14 - 2 years ago




Krassimir Petrov - Investment Analysis (part 2)
28:52 - 2 years ago
Tavex Investment Gold Seminar in Stockholm April 9, 2008http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3227070987190450403#



Krassimir Petrov - Investment Analysis (part 3)
32:33 - 2 years ago
Tavex Investment Gold Seminar in Stockholm April 9, 2008http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=976700141486118374#



Krassimir Petrov - Investment Analysis (part 4)
13:30 - 2 years ago
Tavex Investment Gold Seminar in Stockholm April 9, 2008http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1383332369012611726#

21 Evils of Inflation (Video)

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6484061137769305763&hl=en&emb=1#

21 Evils of Inflation - Prof. Krassimir Petrov
59:42 - 3 years ago
A 60 minute lecture by Prof. Krassimir Petrov at the American University in Bulgaria explaining 21 negative effects from inflation.

Tuesday, 10 August 2010

Introductory Lectures to Business Cycles

Business Cycles, Part 0 of 4- Interest and Capital,
Prof. Krassimir Petrov
1:02:36 - 3 years ago
The theory of Interest, Production, and Capital is the foundation for understanding Economic Growth and Business Cycles.http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6484061137769305763&hl=en&emb=1#docid=-5669706349089810530



Business Cycles, Part 1 of 4 - Introduction, 
Prof. Krassimir Petrov
1:06:14 - 3 years ago
An introductory 65 min lecture describing the nature of business cycles. Explains business fluctuations, phases, periodicity, comovement, persistence, amplitude, cyclicality, and introduces major business cycle theories.



http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8415267688491832655#
Business Cycles, Part 2 of 4 - Business Cycle Indicators, Prof. Krassimir Petrov
1:02:32 - 3 years ago
The lecture explains the behavior of 18 different procyclical leading or lagging macroeconomic variables/indicators throughout the business cycle.


http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5546452117626581217#
Business Cycles, Part 3 of 4 - The Austrian Boom,
Prof. Krassimir Petrov
1:12:14 - 3 years ago
Explaining the Boom - what happens and why; characteristics of booms; why booms cannot last forever; why they inevitably turn to bust. The next part,part 4 is devoted to the "Bust".






BusinessCycles, Part 4 of 4 - The Austrian Bust, Prof. Krassimir Petrov
1:06:20 - 3 years ago
Crisis, Bust, Deflationary Depression, Stagflation, and other fundamental Austrian School concepts.

Introductory Lectures to Technical Analysis

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6926061697255437758&hl=en&emb=1#docid=3236390700554076825
Investment Analysis, Lecture 01 - The Essentials of Investments

Introductory lecture covering Chapter 1 from the Bodie, Kane, Marcus "Essentials of Investments". The course will continue with Technical Analysis in next 4-5 lectures.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6926061697255437758&hl=en&emb=1#docid=3522828464732950634
Investment Analysis, Lecture 02 - Technical Analysis, Introduction

Introduces important concepts in technical analysis necessary to understand and read charts.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6926061697255437758&hl=en&emb=1#docid=2468906696139555918
Investment Analysis, Lecture 03 - Technical Analysis

Continues the discussion of basic concepts in technical analysis and proceeds with various charts and chart formations.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8845215362536133716#
Investment Analysis, Lecture 04 - Technical Analysis

Provides many real-world examples of applying technical analysis with proper interpretations.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8845215362536133716#docid=3573708715720331479
Investment Analysis, Lecture 05

Continues with real world examples of technical analysis.


Investment Analysis, Lecture 06 - Technical Analysis cont.
1:00:48 - 2 years ago
Continued with practical interpretations of charts.http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2688538007524052761#

Introductory Lecture on Real Estate Finance

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6594160744367916447&hl=en&emb=1#




Krassimir Petrov

Introductory Lecture to Portfolio Theory

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8694846935046925487&hl=en&emb=1#docid=4234873094754328164
Investments - Lecture 01 - Portfolio Theory 01


http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5661465017176597915&hl=en&emb=1#docid=8694846935046925487
Investments - Portfolio Theory 02


http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5661465017176597915&hl=en&emb=1#
Investments - Portfolio Theory 03


http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5661465017176597915&hl=en&emb=1#docid=5497259751608833266
Investments - Portfolio Theory 04


http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5661465017176597915&hl=en&emb=1#docid=6247815643869225195
Investments - Portfolio Theory 05



Investments - Portfolio Theory 06
53:18 - 1 year ago
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), Part 2.http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6988926808213550755#



Investments - Portfolio Theory 07
1:04:18 - 1 year ago
Efficiency, efficient markets, the efficiency hypothesis, random walk, implications of market efficiency.http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6988926808213550755#docid=-9063491810101872769