🧠 Ben Graham Was No Value Investor


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Welcome to Long-Term Mindset, the Wednesday newsletter that helps you invest better.

Today's Issue Read Time: <2 minutes

  • Lesson: Breaking the rules
  • Timeless Content: Morgan Housel on Independence
  • Stock Dive: A full breakdown of Spotify Technologies
  • Resource: There's No Substitute for Thinking​
  • And more!

Which stock should we research live next?​

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Next Tuesday (December 23rd) at 12:00 PM (Noon) EST, we'll research a stock live, and we want you to pick the stock.

We'll announce the winner on Friday, December 19th.

Friends,

At the outbreak of the U.S. Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant was down on his luck. He was only able to support his family by manning his father's tannery in a sleepy town on the Mississippi River.

William Tecumseh Sherman was enduring a similar fate, trying to find his way in St. Louis by manning a streetcar company. Both attended West Point; both were heroes of the Mexican-American War.

But that glory had long passed; they were struggling.

Henry Halleck also attended West Point and "fought" in the Mexican-American War. But unlike the other two, he thrived in civilian life -- becoming a wealthy California lawyer. His battle experience was almost entirely theoretical -- having spent most of his time on a boat translating military texts.

By 1862, Sherman and Grant were under the command of Halleck. It didn't take long to see the stark divide between Halleck's book smarts and the real-world instinct of the other two.

Grant and Sherman broke all the rules. They ruthlessly chased down the enemy until its spirit broke instead of being super-cautious. Instead of learning from it, Halleck looked down upon the two Generals.

As Ron Chernow's Grant details:

"Halleck was known as 'Old Brains' ... He was a scholar of war, a bureaucrat, a clerk, but he had no combat experience and no intuition for the fight. He was a man of high intellect but little instinct, whereas Grant [and Sherman] was a man of deep instinct who could not be paralyzed by theory."

It should be no surprise that by the end of the war, Halleck had been relegated to the dustbin of history, while Grant was on his way to serving two terms as President of the United States.

But we shouldn't be surprised by this. History is riddled with the same dynamics: Knowing the rules keeps you out of trouble. Knowing when to break the rules makes you successful.

Consider Benjamin Graham, the father of value investing. Over his career, he averaged a 20% return, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (the benchmark of his day) returned 12% per year. That's enough to put you on Mount Rushmore.

But Graham's outperformance was entirely owed to an investment in a single company: GEICO.

Yet buying GEICO broke just about every single one of Graham's investing rules. If he had followed his rules and stayed away from GEICO, he would have actually lost to the market.

The point is NOT that Graham was a fraud or that rules aren't useful.

It's that Graham discovered -- on purpose or not -- the real lesson: you protect your downside by studying the lessons history gives you.

You gain the upside by remaining forever vigilant to opportunities and keeping an open mind.

It's a great approach to investing...and life.

Wishing you investing success,

Brian Feroldi, Brian Stoffel, & Brian Withers

Long-Term Mindset

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P.S. It's Official, we are splitting up our YouTube Channel. Brian Stoffel is starting a new channel that will cover earnings, his portfolio moves, and more. Subscribe to his new channel by clicking here.

One simple graphic

One piece of timeless content

Morgan Housel shares a "simple formula for a pretty nice life is independence plus purpose" -- and dives into whether you are truly seeking independence or following someone else's dream.

One resource

Nick Maggiulli, COO for Ritholtz Wealth Management LLC, is frustrated with the proliferation of AI. Not AI specifically, but the practice of using AI to write for you. It's spurred him to pen his latest piece: "There is No Substitute for Thinking."

One Stock Dive

​Fiscal.ai has introduced a new feature for premium users that enables them to generate AI-powered stock research reports. This week, we're highlighting Spotify Technology S.A. (NYSE:SPOT), a podcast and music streaming app. Click the button below for free access:

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Brian Feroldi

Brian Stoffel

Brian Withers

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Long-Term Mindset

I teach investors how to analyze businesses. Each Wednesday, I share six pieces of timeless content that can be read in less than 2 minutes. Read by 100,000+ investors from a16z, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and more.

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