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7 Lesson’s You Can Use From Investor Guy Spier

What comes to our minds when I mention the name Guy Spier?

Guy Spier is a Value Investor, Fund Manager, Investment Banker, Harvard Graduate, Talented Skier, Father, Husband and also Mr. Spier is a Community leader of VALUE X.

Here are Seven lessons I have learned from Guy Spier that I would like to pass on to you. It doesn’t matter if your a Professional Investment Fund manager or Company Executive. You will find calmness and wisdom from Guy’s wisdom.

Investing Without Emotions

Guy teach’s his followers like myself that we should always invest without emotions. First we must break down what this means. 1. Breaking down what are our personal Behavior Biases truly are? 2. Be aware of common behavioral biases we may resort to without thought. 3. Defining your goals and time horizon can help you avoid emotional biases. 4. Bucketing or Achieving Milestone’s helps your clearly see your progression. Discipline can help you keep to a plan of action.

You may feel that watching CNBC or Bloomberg as a Retail Investor is good to gather the latest information on the market. It will feel like this gives you an investing edge in the market. However your are dead wrong! It’s simply a media outlet meant to deliver news and entertainment in the business world. That’s all. It’s smart not to allow this Television content to cloud your judgment and emotions while Investing. We as Value investor’s have a checklist, and a sophisticated skill set that includes Due Diligence and valuation processes before Investing in a Opportunity. We use these skills and our personal research before deciding if this would a good investment opportunity. Having the discipline to say no to things or investments does have tremendous value. Survival is everything. Protecting Capital is your duty. These are all ways to help you as a individual keep thing in focus and Invest without Emotions.

Resist Rebalancing

Many Retail Investors are being taught by the Traders on Youtube and it’s also standard practice for many Financial Advisors to Rebalance your Portfolio of securities when it looks like the market is overvalued. This looks like this. Your standard Retail investor has twenty securities positions. And if you place Five Percent of your Capital in to twenty positions this equals a hundred percent of your capital. However if history is a teacher? And if you were to just allow your portfolio grow organically? You may have a few positions see substantial growth and you will see a mixed bag of performance of mediocrity. And then you will see a few positions perform poorly earning you no returns or possibly loosing money. However with Guy’s approach of just allowing your portfolio to grow organically without rebalancing? You will see your small set of high performers account for most of your growth in your portfolio. While at the same time limiting the loss’s of the poor performers. In other words? Investing is very forgiving if you adhere to using long term time horizons as a strategy for your portfolio.

Learning From Your Mistakes Early in Your Career

This is truly a important lesson that Mr. Spier has shared publicly that I feel has a ton of merit for other Investors and Entrepreneurs like myself. Bottom line up front? You will make mistakes. You will make many mistakes. You will embarrass yourself. Making Mistakes and learning from them is just apart of the Human Experience. And if your a Entrepreneur? You will likely find that your failing your way forward. Now let’s learn about a big Mistake most Investors encounter when they begin investing as Retail Investors. You just don’t know what you don’t know. There are three different types of Entrepreneurs. Small Business Boutique Entrepreneurs, Enterprise Operator Entrepreneurs, and the Decentralized Investment Entrepreneurs. All has their own unique world. However they all encounter one mistake after another. It’s truly important to share your mistakes so that others may learn from your mistakes in business. Let’s be honest! Sometimes they make for great stories when your successful in the end. LOL

Defining Your Circle of Competence

Defining your circle of Competence means “What are you trained to do and what are you professionally knowledgeable about?” This important question can give you direction and confidence when evaluating Investment Opportunities. And if we are being honest if you can fix your Car’s Engine when it fails on you. I wouldn’t expect to see Guy Spier turning wrench’s in his Driveway in Switzerland when his car suddenly has a failure. No He would dispatch a Automotive technician or just buy a new car. Why spend the time on something of this caliber when you have options. Expert Networks operate in the same manner. There are Business professionals who do not have backgrounds in all things related to technology, manufacturing and and so many more topics of interest.

GLG Insights is a company any Investor or Business Professional can access and speak to Experts in their respective fields about a topic and answer difficult questions you may have about their respective professions and expertise. If you don’t have a Background in Softdrink manufacturing it’s likely you would seek out Softdrink Manufacturing experts. This is what we mean by saying, “Define your circle of competence.” You know what you know. And leave the hard questions to the experts of their fields.

Risk and Downside

Investing is a activity that involves Risk. Risk is the thing that acts as barrier or is the Downside of Investments. Some investments are relatively safe like Investing in US Treasuries. Then their are Investments like for example investing in to High Risk opportunities that may not return your capital and may not give you a return like New Startups and Junk Bonds. It all comes down to What is your Risk threshold. The lesson we can take from Guy’s lesson’s on Risk directly is communicated by his friend Warren Buffett. Warren spends a lot of time thinking about the Downside of an Investment. If you are comfortable investing your money into a company with a proven track record? Then it’s highly likely the downside of risk will be lower than investing into a unproven company that has not been in business for long. Your appetite for Risk is a personal comfort level. And I must mention that your comfort with risk directly correlates with what your circle of competence is!

Interestingly Mr. Guy Spier’s father was a Sapper in the Israeli Army. And the reverence and love that he speaks about his Father and how his Father is able to calm the environment with his presence and ability to listen while bringing calmness to the situation. Sounds to me like the Man you want next to you in a Fox Hole while your being bombarded with Bombs and all out War. This touches on the Topic of Risk and Downside because you want to be able to keep your cool during stressful situations. Id love to learn more about Mr. Spier’s Father. He sounds like a real Bad Ass. I can respect that.

Did you catch my latest Article on Bill Ackman’s Investing Principles Here.

Courageous Integrity

While watching or rather Listening to Guy Spier and his fellow writer Mr. William Green it was very refreshing to hear these two community leaders speak about having the Courage to share your thoughts and feelings in real time. While filming a episode of the Podcast Surviving and Thriving recently. They were sharing a point in time when they were collaborating and writing Guy’s first Hit Book “The Education of a Value Investor”. I found it utterly Courageous that Mr. William Green had the fortitude to hone in and selectively ask hard questions and seek difficult answers to personal situations that occurred to Mr. Spier during the very stressful weekend of the Great Financial Crisis of 2008. The Video is below. Furthermore during the weekend of the Great Financial Crisis Guy’s Aquamarine Fund was hanging in the balance and held hostage during the Bankruptcy of Bear Stearns. However Jamie Dimon and JP Morgan came to his Funds rescue by making a Bid and buying Bear Stearns. It’s truly a fascinating look at how two very good friends of 30 years can open eachother up and allow mutual trust. A lesson definitely worth the watch.

Keep a Professional Journal | Annual Reports

William Green and Mr. Guy Spier touch on the very important topic of keeping and committing to writing a Professional Personal Journal or even servicing your Funds Annual Reports. Some in our space of Investing, do diligently keep Annual Reports detailing their Thoughts, Decisions, and the reasoning behind the exposures in the Market within their Portfolio’s. How many times have we as individuals forgotten why we did this or that or forgotten our split of the moment thoughts and reasoning while explaining our actions to others who were not present? Keeping track of professional actions is vital to our success as Professionals. So understandably It makes since to keep a journal. However it’s also important to keep a Personal Journal to allow the reader or you back into your Decision making process. We are all humans. We are all imperfect. So keeping a Personal and Professional Journal can make a ton of sense for Professionals like myself and Guy who do openly and admittedly have ADHD.

Mr. William Green’s advocacy of writing throughout your career stems from his professional life as a Author and writer. He is always selflessly adding value in the Investment Space. Mr. Green is a professional writer within the Value Investor community. And his speech’s and guidance and journal suggestions are always pure gold. I genuinely appreciate Mr. Green sharing thoughts publicly as it has helped me in my writing.

Annual Reports

Why keep a Journal for a Annual Report? As Professional Investment Advisors and Investment Fund Managers or Partnerships it’s not only smart to keep a Annual Report, but also it’s required by Securities Regulators. When Investors read your Annual Reports it’s wise to let them in to see how your decisions and actions led to you choosing to build a Professional Portfolio.

After all the Investment Returns or Failures need to be accounted for. An annual report is a document that public corporations must provide annually to shareholders that describes their operations and financial conditions. At the end of the year when Annual Reports are drafted and published this keeps all involved in the Profession Accountable and demonstrates Public Transparency. I hope you found something in this post useful and insightful from Mr. Spier’s content.

Godspeed
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