Inside the Investments of Warren Buffett: Twenty Cases
ISBN: 9780231541688
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / Columbia University Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Buffett Warren; Capitalists and financiers -- United States; Investments; Portfolio management;

Warren Buffett's investment acumen is frequently celebrated but less often analyzed, and those analyses are rarely as thorough or dispassionate as this one from debut author Lu, a portfolio manager at Shareholder Value Management. Lu has selected 20 companies-some obscure (the Sanborn Map Company), some household names (IBM, Coca-Cola)-in which Buffett obtained an interest between 1958 and 2011. Through historical research and financial statement analysis, Lu has attempted to divine what Buffett saw in them. Some common themes emerge. Buffett preferred, as he quipped, to buy a wonderful company at a fair price rather than a fair company at a wonderful price. He also looked for transparency; consistent earnings growth or compounded returns; good management; and opportunities to outperform the stock market through undervalued securities, "workouts," or "control situations." One of Lu's conclusions is that it is indeed possible for ordinary investors to replicate Buffett. She reveals a cautious, methodical investor who sought businesses with structural advantages that grew over time and who also, in demanding a "margin of safety," seldom risked capital. For serious investors and analysts eager to transcend the cult of personality around Buffett and discern what actually makes him great, this study comes highly recommended. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Yefei Lu is a portfolio manager at Shareholder Value Management AG, a value-investment company based in Frankfurt, Germany. Previously, he worked for a single-family investment office in Munich and for McKinsey & Company in Berlin. He holds an MBA from the London Business School and a Bachelor of Science in Economics from Stanford University.
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