Offshore
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Finding Compounders
This man runs the biggest sovereign wealth fund in the world

Nicolai Tangen

And he gave a Ted Talk, highly recommended you go listen to it https://t.co/kz5Ko1ntsq
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Hidden Value Gems
Another set of data suggesting current market sentiment is at about historical average level. https://t.co/YTtdg1NIzm

Market sentiment seems to be cautious with 61% of respondents seeing the market as overvalued (vs 43% avg for 1998-2023).

Not in a bubble from this point of view. https://t.co/rvVQUcOCHi
- Hidden Value Gems
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Offshore
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Finding Compounders
Warren’s World https://t.co/I1Lyiv0Z1n
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Capital Employed
Definitely worth it if you can find a copy. Trading at a $100+ on Amazon.

Book https://t.co/1yMFdL81ar
- Bill Huang
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Capital Employed
Interesting article...

How Relevant is Graham’s Philosophy Today in Hong Kong?

Inspired by Ben Graham’s, we screen the HK broad market using a set of 7 criteria to identify a basket of value stocks.

Full PDF is here👇https://t.co/YzHv8lf6it
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Hidden Value Gems
There is always something to worry about. Personally doubt that CNY plays a similar role to Yen, which is much more liquid and is easier to borrow. https://t.co/5mnCZ0IghN
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Hidden Value Gems
RT @HiddenValueGems: Just saw this really interesting piece by Bridgewater Associates on the Top 10 companies in each decade and their subsequent performance.

One thing to note is that many stocks stayed in the Top10 for 30-40 years, so just becoming one of the largest companies doesn't mean it is a bad stock going forward.

More points below 🧵👇

1/10
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Hidden Value Gems
Howard Marks’ memo “You can’t predict. You can prepare”, written back in 2001, is a must-read today. Here are the key quotes 🧵👇

“Seen through the lens of human perception, cycles are often viewed as less symmetrical than they are. Negative price fluctuations are called "volatility," while positive price fluctuations are called "profit." Collapsing markets are called "selling panics," while surges receive more benign descriptions (but I think they may best be seen as "buying panics"; see tech stocks in 1999, for example).”

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Invest In Assets 📈
RT @InvestInAssets: ROIC by industry is a useful way of identifying what sectors will provide long-term returns https://t.co/e4RP7AtgxV
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