The Intelligent Investor: Value Investing-Corporate Finance




The Intelligent Investor: Value Investing-Corporate Finance

[Value Investing] Curtis Carroll faces a group of inmates in San Quentin explaining that the only difference between the wealthy and poor comes from just four steps. Each is simple … 

  1. Save Lots. 

  2. Control Costs

  3. Borrow Prudently. 

  4. Diversify Thoughtfully.

Academic research has shown that families stewarded by people who have made money raise children who are far more likely to thrive financially. Unfortunately, Mr. Carroll was born into an Oakland family more akin to a ‘Breaking Bad’ episode.

His single mother and grandmother suffered addictions to crack. Curtis received little guidance from his elders. He wiggled his way out of homework rendering himself illiterate.

The only thing he learned was that he hated school. Curtis was eventually forced onto the streets with his brother at an early age — homeless.

gang took him in. Then a robbery ended in murder.

Curtis Carroll has lived in jail for two decades since age seventeen. He has thirty-four years left on his sentence. The light at the end of his tunnel is two hundred dollars and a hard shove out of the prison gates.

“Do You Play Stocks?”

… a fellow inmate asked one day. Curtis was baffled. He listened intently as the man explained “This is where white people keep their money.” The conversation ignited Mr. Carroll’s definite major purpose of succeeding in equity investments.

To do so required the ability to read.

He focused his burning desire on deciphering popular t-shirts and wrappers of candy he ate.

As his literacy grew he consumed the financial media. The world of Wall Street came to absorb the attention of every fiber of his being. Curtis studied the market every day until collapse from exhaustion.

He recorded and tracked his stock picks on paper in an envelope stuck to his cell wall.

The San Quentin nickname of Curtis Carroll quickly became “Wall Street.” His following has grown.

Every Thursday night, according to National Public Radio (NPR), about a hundred inmates meet to hear his purely positive message that even though people are in prison that they are on the same ground as Warren Buffet. Inmates working with parents, siblings and spouses on the outside can invest in the same stock Buffet buys and sells.  They can't buy as many shares, but they can buy shares in the same firms.

Warren Buffet’s Top 10 Stock Investing Rules

The San Quentin Freeman Capital financial literacy inmate group of Curtis “Wall Street” Carroll teaches wisdom straight from the lips of the Oracle of Omaha …

1. Save and Persist. Only a burning desire directed persistently at the definite major purpose of succeeding in stocks can carry you through.

2. Live Lavishly Frugal. Focus your attention on each household expense to determine the best use of your funds. When you spend money on anything from a car to household furniture determine the best balance between cost and long-term utility.

3. Minimize Risk. Develop as many alternative scenarios that can play out after you invest your money.

4. Think First. You always have the most choices before you lock up your savings. Think your defensive tactics through before you invest.

5. Cut Losses. Cut your losers, ride your winners. Plan your maximum allowable loss beforehand.

6. Seek High Potential. Invest in companies with proven management at the helm. Follow managers you would be delighted to have in your family.

7. Limit Debt. Don’t buy stocks wallowing in other-peoples-money (OPM). Cash out credit cards each month.

8. Cultivate Fearlessness. Buffett says that he can tell who has been swimming naked when the tide goes out. Buy great stocks on the cheap just after a major market crash.  Act when other investors tremble.

9. Compound Your Gains. Reinvesting your profits is the best way to really get your money working for you.

10. Become Steady As a Rock. An iconoclastic think-for-yourself mentality is the only road to investment success. Shun chit-chat regarding stocks tips, rumors and investment newsletter recommendations that poison your independent thinking and action.

Warren Buffett doesn’t measure success in terms of a lavish lifestyle. He measures success by the degree to which he squeezes every drop of potential profit out of the investment portfolio he stewards.

He follows his own internal score-card. An ever frugal Buffett shuns glossy external displays (score-cards) of wealth commonly projected by Wall Street Fortune 500 CEOs.

Buffett's frugality rings true throughout the history of financial greatness.

Think and Grow Rich

At the turn of the last century the richest man in the world commissioned a young man with the unlikely name of Napoleon to document a universal philosophy of wealth. After decades of unpaid toil ‘Think and Grow Rich’ became an enduring best-seller that has inspired millions.

Case in point is another destitute lad, not unlike Mr. Carroll, who decided to shun poverty after reading a discarded copy of Think and Grow Rich.

W. Clement Stone had tired of throwing rocks at stokers tending steam locomotive coal tenders out of horror of the possible injury of others. He had been doing what he had to do to survive. This action helped his family heat their home in otherwise lethally cold northern winters with lumps of coal boiler-men threw back.

CEO Stone rose to great wealth at the top of the insurance industry teaching others to “Have the courage to say no. Have the courage to face the truth. Do the right thing because it is right. These are the magic keys to living your life with integrity.

Curtis Carroll follows the same path as W. Clement Stone and Warren Buffett helping inmates guide family members on the outside to wise investment decisions. Mr. Carroll teaches in atonement of past destruction with hope that his paroled friends fall into the loving arms of wealthy families rather than badass gang-bangers.

"I will tell you how to become rich. Close the doors. Be fearful when others are greedy. Be greedy when others are fearful." - Warren Buffett

Do you want to learn how the best investors today make a fortune when everybody else is falling for Wall Street’s latest scam? Investors like Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger?  

Anybody interested in value stock investing is quickly swept up in the Wall Street lead mill.  This machine is designed to sell you subscriptions to advisory services proven not to beat the market.  

Clever newsletter editors and CNN Money talk show hosts move from side-to-side faster than a Mojave sidewinder.   

People end up confused as to what works and what doesn’t.  The only sure thing is a loss. Some give up altogether.   

Others wonder every-time they hear a feature story about famous value investors such as Warren Buffett.  “Is it true?” they think. Do you ever feel like you have been hit with a data fire-hose? Does the vocabulary of finance make reading even the Wall Street Journal difficult at best?  

This unique Udemy course on Value Investing is just for you!  

This value stock investing course teaches you the underpinning of corporate finance that Warren Buffett learned under professor Benjamin Graham at Columbia University. All that is known of his “top-secret” strategies is disclosed in detail from actual reports to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders Buffett himself penned.   

Other courses are based on hearsay and conjecture, this explores the subject of value investing in the most intimate detail with an extensive ebook, quizzes, guideposts and intuition to train you into an intelligent investor.   

The curriculum starts with the most basic concepts of corporate finance, so that you build your knowledge in progressive layers. Warren Buffett value investing is a low-risk strategy where Berkshire Hathaway investors have enjoyed a 20% return on average over 30 years.    

This allowed Donald and Mildred Othmer to accumulate a fortune of $210,000,000 in 1996 from an initial investment of $25,000 in 1960.   

 Upon successful completion of this course you will be able to:  

Know when to look for value stocks.

Find 5-10 good Buffett stocks like a fine art collector  

Invest in Wall Street “risky” stocks Buffett considers safe  

Set yourself up for the possibility of consistent high returns by following Buffett’s writings  

Safeguard your retirement investing in value  

Understand why Buffett says that an indexed fund may be best for your family  

✔ This is just the tip of the iceberg!  

Enroll in this Value Investing course that actually teaches what Buffett has written.   

I am not just a successful stock investor with 4 decades of proven experience but I also happen to hold a doctorate in the subject. -Doc Brown  

Dr. Scott Brown, Associate Professor of Finance of the AACSB Accredited Graduate School of Business of the University of Puerto Rico.  

Master all the same material you would in a Ivy League course on Principles of Corporate Finance and value investing.

Url: View Details

What you will learn
  • Employ value investing strategies of Warren Buffett
  • Determine the value of any stock with simple certainty equivalent cash-flows.
  • Avoid “dumb money” diversification strategies Buffett decries.

Rating: 3.5

Level: Expert Level

Duration: 4 hours

Instructor: Scott Brown


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