Author: Raoji
Linkfest:Dec 07,2012
Some stuff I am reading today morning:
Indian stocks amongst the world’s costliest (BS)
Don’t want my shadow hanging over the group:Ratan Tata (Mint)
Forthcoming tax changes (Subramoney)
Sree Rayalseema Hypo and other updates (DalalStreet)
Why the rich immolate themselves (DailyReckoning)
Deutsche Bank ignored some losses till they went away (Dealbreaker)
Time horizon confusion creates both loss and opportunity (NASTrading)
The shale revolution is changing the global energy landscape (BusinessInsider)
Stock values and earnings may bamboozle buyers (MarketWatch)
The Rules for investment bankers (EpicureanDealmaker)
Linkfest:Dec 06, 2012
Some stuff I am reading today morning:
Why Al-Qaeda finds no recruits in India (BBC)
For guar gum, a bubble goes pop (WSJ)
Why realty exhibitions don’t make a difference to a buyer (Firstpost)
Local investors ignore high FII flows (Mint)
Gujarat-Breaking rules Part 2 (Mediacrooks)
Dan Gertler earns billions of $ from Congo (Bloomberg)
10 trading tips from the trenches (DynamicHedge)
Overheard at the Bloomberg hedge fund summit (TRB)
Insider trading secrets revealed (Nihoncassandra)
The most powerful images of 2012 (Buzzfeed)
Why did Warren Buffett succeed?
Yes, the halo is justified regarding his ability to create wealth. No one else has ever made so much money for investors through capital allocation. There is plenty of public information (and a lot of information in The Snowball that is new) that if considered thoughtfully shows that Buffett’s performance came from a combination of relentless drive, ruthless self-interest, boundless curiosity about a narrow subject, record-breaking parsimony, social climbing, complex financial maneuvers, occasional bullying, a keen understanding of the tax code, ceaseless study of financial and business arcana, the critical insight that running a hedge fund created low risk almost zero-cost leverage, the critical insight that insurance float created low risk zero-cost leverage, and the gradual accumulation of personal and institutional advantages from the repeated application of all of these things. I may have left a few things out, but this is the gist. Like most great performances, Buffett’s success is to be admired for its scale, audacity, creativity, and ambition — although not necessarily emulated in every respect.
-by Alice Schroeder, Author “The Snowball”